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Wedding Venues

Every wedding venue you need is here. Browse barn, estate, beach, vineyard, ballroom, and garden venues across the country. Filter by location and style, then get in touch directly

Buckethead Ranch
Outdoor
Buckethead Ranch
Hayden, COLORADO

Buckethead Ranch offers a private setting for an unforgettable wedding celebration for up to 500 guests amidst the breathtaking beauty of the Yampa Valley. With 16K acres of ranch land at your disposal, the possibilities are endless.

Minimum $25,000 USD
Private Guest Rancg
On-site Lodging
Hyatt Regency Hill Country Resort & Villas
Resort & Hotel
Hyatt Regency Hill Country Resort & Villas
San Antonio, Texas

Nestled in the Texas Hill Country, our newly renovated resort offers a variety of romantic venues for weddings. Choose from elegant ballrooms with iron chandeliers, charming pavilions with twinkling lights, and breathtaking outdoor spaces with panoramic views. Each venue provides a stunning backdrop for all wedding events, ensuring unforgettable…

Minimum $25,000 USD
Vecoma at the Yellow River
Waterfront
Vecoma at the Yellow River
Snellville, GA

Premier Outdoor Wedding Venue in AtlantaNestled along the scenic Yellow River in Snellville, Georgia, Vecoma at the Yellow River offers a breathtaking setting for romantic, all-inclusive weddings. Our award-winning venue features stunning waterfront views, a charming forest backdrop, and a picturesque reception hall perfect for both intimate…

Weddings Over Waterfalls
Event Space
Weddings Over Waterfalls
Hot Springs, North Carolina

Near Asheville, Weddings Over Waterfalls is a secluded, nature-immersed wedding and elopement venue tucked into the mountains near Hot Springs, North Carolina. Our property is defined by cascading waterfalls, moss-covered trails, natural rock formations, and an illuminated forest that comes alive after sunset.  We specialize in micro-weddings,…

Minimum $1,500 USD
Waterfall Weddings
Waterfall Elopements
Diamond Cross Ranch
Mountain
Diamond Cross Ranch
Moran, WY

Diamond Cross Ranch is a barn-style wedding venue in Jackson Hole, WY. Situated on a beautiful property with lush pastures, snow-capped mountain views, and ample wildlife, it provides a picturesque backdrop for your special day. Their team strives to ensure your wedding day is extraordinary by offering world-class services and…

2 Weddings
Minimum $18,000 USD
Horse Release
Private Ranch
Juniper Preserve, Golf & Wellness Resort
Resort & Hotel
Juniper Preserve, Golf & Wellness Resort
Bend, Oregon

Celebrate in a 1,000-year-old juniper forest—where nature, wellness, and grounded luxury come together. Unique venues like a lava cave and private island, elevated cuisine, and intentional service create unforgettable weddings and transformative events at Juniper Preserve.

1 Wedding
Minimum $2,200 USD
Onsite Natural Cave
Indoor & Outdoor
Montage Big Sky
Resort & Hotel
Montage Big Sky
Big Sky, MT

\Write the next chapter of your love story at Montage Big Sky, where your big day is as breathtaking as our eponymous big skies. A true mountain retreat with the welcoming ambiance of a classic ski lodge, Montage Big Sky nestles into the majestic Spanish Peaks range—at the western gateway to the rarefied wonders of Yellowstone National Park.…

Finding the right wedding venue is the first real decision of wedding planning — and the one every other decision follows from. The guest count, the budget, the aesthetic, the vendor list: all of it flows from where you decide to get married. The venue directory at Carats & Cake draws from over a decade of real wedding editorial work. Browse thousands of venues across every style and setting, filter by location, and contact the ones that fit your vision.

Types of Wedding Venues

The venue landscape covers more ground than most couples expect when they start looking. Barns and estates anchor the rustic and garden ends of the spectrum. Ballrooms and historic hotels serve formal and glam aesthetics. Vineyards, ranches, and mountain properties draw couples who want landscape as a primary design element. Restaurants and galleries work well for intimate guest counts where atmosphere matters more than square footage.

Resort and hotel venues deserve particular attention for couples with a significant number of out-of-town guests. The logistics of keeping a wedding party and guest list housed, fed, and transported become considerably easier when the venue handles multiple pieces of that puzzle. For couples planning a destination wedding, beach wedding venues and castle wedding venues are strong starting points for narrowing down a location.

Indoor vs. Outdoor Wedding Venues

Outdoor venues produce some of the strongest wedding photography, particularly in the golden hour window around ceremony time. The tradeoff is logistical: weather contingency planning, temperature management, bathroom and kitchen access, and permitting all require more coordination than an indoor space demands.

Indoor venues remove most of those variables. Climate control, existing infrastructure, and a built-in rain plan make indoor spaces easier to execute — particularly for larger guest counts or weddings in markets with unpredictable weather. The best of both tend to be venues that offer a hybrid setup: ceremony or cocktail hour outside, reception inside. That structure captures the photography upside of an outdoor setting without taking on the full logistical exposure.

How to Choose a Wedding Venue

Start with three constraints: guest count, geography, and date. Those three filters will narrow the field faster than any aesthetic preference. A venue that can't hold your guest count or isn't available on your date isn't a real option regardless of how well it photographs.

Once the logistical filter clears, work from aesthetic. Look at real weddings held at each venue — not the venue's own marketing photography, but editorial coverage from actual wedding days. How a space performs under real wedding conditions, with real lighting and real crowds, is a more reliable guide than a professionally staged shoot. Couples who want a deeper look at how venue style connects to overall wedding design can reference unique wedding venues for editorial perspective across a range of settings.

Wedding Venue Style Guide

Barn and farm venues suit rustic, bohemian, and outdoor-leaning aesthetics. They photograph well in natural light and pair naturally with organic florals and relaxed dress codes. Estate venues offer architectural detail and manicured grounds — strong for garden parties, formal receptions, and couples who want a sense of history in the setting.

Ballroom venues are the default for formal weddings with large guest counts. The infrastructure is built for it: staging, lighting rigs, catering capacity. Historic hotels and private clubs operate similarly but add an inherent exclusivity to the setting. For something further outside the standard categories, minimalist wedding venues and industrial wedding venues cover the gallery, loft, and warehouse end of the spectrum.

Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance should you book a wedding venue?

Book as early as possible — 12 to 18 months out is standard in most markets, and popular venues in high-demand cities or destination locations fill significantly faster. If your date is flexible, you have more options. If the date is fixed, start the venue search before anything else.

What questions should you ask a wedding venue before booking?

Ask about capacity, what's included in the rental fee, catering restrictions, noise ordinances, parking, and what the rain plan looks like for outdoor spaces. Ask to see photos or footage from actual weddings held there, not just promotional material. Confirm whether there's a venue coordinator included, and whether they stay through the event or hand off at a certain point.

What is the difference between a wedding venue and a wedding vendor?

A venue is the physical space where the wedding takes place. Vendors are the service providers who work within that space — photographers, florists, caterers, musicians, and planners. Some venues include vendors as part of an all-inclusive package. Others operate as a blank slate and require couples to source every vendor independently.

Do you need a wedding planner if your venue has a coordinator?

A venue coordinator manages logistics specific to the venue: setup, catering, staffing, and day-of operations within the property. A wedding planner manages the full scope of vendor coordination, timeline, and decision-making across every category. The two roles don't overlap as much as couples often assume, and having both is common for larger or more complex weddings.

How do you find wedding venues with real wedding photos?

The most reliable way is to look at editorial wedding platforms where venues are credited within actual wedding features. That gives you a real-world view of how a space looks on a wedding day — lighting, crowd, décor, and all — rather than the idealized version a venue's own marketing presents.

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