Last Updated on June 25, 2026 by Joy Editors
Quick answer: A marriage planner manages the whole planning process from engagement to wedding day — vendor sourcing, budget tracking, design, logistics. A day-of coordinator (more accurately called a “month-of coordinator”) takes over 4 to six weeks before the marriage to execute the plan you’ve already built. Planners cost $2,500 to $10,000+. Day-of coordinators cost $800 to $2,500. Most couples who plan their very own wedding still profit from a coordinator.
The terminology in the marriage industry is genuinely confusing. “Day-of coordinator,” “month-of coordinator,” “partial planner,” “full-service planner” — these titles overlap and vendors use them inconsistently. This guide cuts through the noise and tells you exactly what each role does, what it costs, and which one matches your situation.
The Core Difference
The best method to give it some thought: a marriage planner builds the plan. A day-of coordinator executes it.
A full-service wedding planner is involved from the moment you get engaged. They assist you find and book vendors, negotiate contracts, manage your budget, develop the design concept, and coordinate every detail through the marriage day. You’re handing off the whole planning process.
A day-of coordinator (the industry is shifting toward “month-of coordinator” since the work starts sooner than the marriage day) steps in when the planning is generally done. They review your vendor contracts, construct the ultimate timeline, run the rehearsal, and manage execution on the marriage day itself. You’ve done the planning — they be sure that it actually happens.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Task | Full-Service Planner | Partial Planner | Day-of Coordinator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vendor sourcing and vetting | Yes | Yes (chosen vendors) | No |
| Contract review and negotiation | Yes | Yes | Review only |
| Budget management | Yes | Partial | No |
| Design and aesthetic direction | Yes | Sometimes | No |
| Venue selection | Yes | Sometimes | No |
| Timeline creation | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Vendor communication (final weeks) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Rehearsal management | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Wedding day execution | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Problem-solving on the day | Yes | Yes | Yes |
What a Wedding Planner Actually Does
A full-service wedding planner typically starts working with you 12 to 18 months before the marriage. Here’s what that engagement looks like in practice:
Months 12-9: Foundation
- Establish budget and priorities
- Develop the general vision and aesthetic
- Source and book venue (often the primary and most crucial booking)
- Construct the seller shortlist for every category
Months 9-6: Vendor booking
- Attend vendor meetings with you or in your behalf
- Review and negotiate contracts
- Book photographer, caterer, florist, band/DJ, officiant
- Manage deposits and payment schedules
Months 6-3: Design and logistics
- Develop floor plans and seating arrangements
- Coordinate rentals (linens, furniture, lighting)
- Construct the master timeline
- Manage stationery and invitation logistics
Final weeks and wedding day
- Confirm all vendors with final details
- Run the rehearsal
- Manage setup, ceremony, cocktail hour, and reception
- Handle any problems that arise
What a Day-of Coordinator Actually Does
Despite the name, a day-of coordinator typically starts working with you 4 to six weeks before the marriage. The “day-of” label is misleading — good coordinators need time to know your plan before they will execute it.
4-6 weeks out
- Review all vendor contracts
- Discover gaps or potential conflicts
- Take over vendor communication
- Construct the ultimate wedding day timeline
1-2 weeks out
- Confirm all vendors with final logistics
- Distribute timeline to all parties
- Conduct a venue walkthrough
Rehearsal day
- Run the ceremony rehearsal
- Walk the marriage party through positions and cues
- Confirm setup details with venue
Wedding day
- Arrive early to oversee setup
- Manage vendor arrivals and setup
- Keep the timeline on target
- Handle problems before the couple notices them
- Coordinate ceremony cues (music, processional, recessional)
- Manage the transition from ceremony to cocktail hour to reception
- Oversee breakdown at the top of the night
Cost Comparison
| Type | Typical Cost Range | What Drives the Price |
|---|---|---|
| Full-service planner | $3,500 – $10,000+ | Market, experience, wedding size |
| Partial planner | $1,800 – $4,500 | Scope of services included |
| Day-of / month-of coordinator | $800 – $2,500 | Hours, market, experience level |
| Venue coordinator (included) | $0 (bundled) | Venue-focused only, not your advocate |
Note on venue coordinators: Most venues include a coordinator of their package. This person manages the venue’s staff and operations — not your wedding. They’ll not manage your photographer’s timeline, wrangle your wedding party, or handle problems with outside vendors. A venue coordinator will not be an alternative to a day-of coordinator.
Which One Do You Need?
Get a full-service planner if:
- You could have a demanding job and limited time to plan
- Your wedding has 150+ guests or a fancy multi-day format
- You’re planning a destination wedding
- You don’t benefit from the planning process and wish handy it off
- Your budget is $75,000+ and you would like skilled oversight
Get a day-of coordinator if:
- You’ve done your individual planning and just need someone to execute it
- You desire to actually enjoy your wedding day without managing logistics
- Your venue coordinator is venue-focused, not couple-focused
- You could have an in depth plan but worry about things falling through the cracks
- Your budget is restricted but you would like skilled support on the day
You’ll be able to skip each if:
- Your wedding is under 50 guests with an easy format
- You’re using an all-inclusive venue that handles every part
- You could have a highly organized friend or member of the family willing to administer the day (though this can be a significant ask)
Inquiries to Ask When Hiring
For a full-service planner
- What number of weddings do you are taking per 12 months?
- Will you personally be at my wedding, or will it’s an associate?
- How do you handle vendor relationships — do you could have preferred vendors?
- What does your contract say about communication response times?
- Can I see a sample budget you’ve managed?
For a day-of coordinator
- When do you truly start working with me — not only “day of”?
- What number of hours are included on the marriage day?
- Do you could have an assistant or backup if something happens to you?
- What number of other weddings do you could have on my date?
- What’s your process for reviewing vendor contracts?
Staying Organized And not using a Planner
Whether you hire a planner or coordinate yourself, keeping your wedding details organized is important. A marriage website helps you share your schedule, venue details, and travel information with guests. A web-based RSVP system replaces spreadsheet tracking, and hotel room blocks allow you to hold rooms at a bunch rate for out-of-town guests.
Arrange a marriage website to share your venue, schedule, travel info, and RSVP link in a single place.
Ceaselessly Asked Questions
Is a day-of coordinator value it?
For many couples who plan their very own wedding: yes. The fee ($800 to $2,500) is low relative to the overall wedding budget, and the worth is high — you truly get to be present in your wedding day as an alternative of managing logistics. Probably the most common regret from couples who skip a coordinator is that they spent their wedding day answering vendor questions and solving problems.
What’s the difference between a marriage planner and a marriage coordinator?
A marriage planner manages the complete planning process from engagement through the marriage day. A marriage coordinator (or day-of coordinator) takes over in the ultimate weeks to execute the plan you’ve built. Planners are involved for 12 to 18 months; coordinators for 4 to six weeks. The fee difference reflects this: planners charge $3,500 to $10,000+, coordinators charge $800 to $2,500.
Can my venue coordinator function my day-of coordinator?
No. A venue coordinator manages the venue’s staff and operations — they make sure the kitchen is running, the tables are set, and the venue’s policies are followed. They are usually not your advocate. They’ll not manage your photographer, handle your florist’s late arrival, or keep your wedding party on schedule. You wish a separate day-of coordinator who works for you, not the venue.
How do I find a great day-of coordinator?
Start with referrals out of your venue and other vendors — photographers and florists work with coordinators commonly and know who’s reliable. Ask for references from recent weddings. Confirm that they begin working with you at the very least 4 weeks before the marriage, not only on the day itself. Confirm they’ve a backup plan in the event that they’re sick or have an emergency.
Do I would like a marriage planner if I’m having a small wedding?
For weddings under 75 guests with a simple format, a full-service planner is normally unnecessary. A day-of coordinator remains to be value considering even for small weddings — the worth isn’t about managing complexity, it’s about letting you be a guest at your individual wedding. For very small weddings (under 30 guests), a highly organized friend or member of the family can sometimes fill this role, though it’s a major ask.













