Why Tuscany is Perfect for Your Italian Wedding | Click Travel Tips
Travel Tips
Getting Married in Italy: Why Tuscany Tops the List
Say "I do" in the enchanting landscapes of Tuscany! Discover why this Italian gem is the ultimate destination for a roma...
Oct 3, 2025
Nat C
Thinking about saying “I do” in Italy? You’re not alone. From the Alps to Apulia, the country is a patchwork of dreamy backdrops. But when couples (and planners) rank the best regions for a destination wedding, Tuscany keeps ending up at the top. There’s a reason — actually several — why this saffron-hued corner of central Italy steals hearts and, quite often, the whole show.
Why Italy works for destination weddings
Ease of access: Two international hubs (Florence and Pisa) plus fast train links from Rome and Milan. Your guests won’t need three layovers and a prayer.
Reliable vendors: Italy’s wedding industry is mature, creative, and multilingual. You’ll find planners, celebrants, photographers, florists, and caterers used to destination briefs.
Scenery density: Mountains, vineyards, medieval towns, coastline — often within 2 hours of each other.
Food & wine: If your wedding memories live on one thing, make it shared plates under olive trees and Chianti in proper glassware, not plastic.
Why Tuscany, specifically?
The look you’re imagining
Sun-washed farmhouses, cypress-lined lanes, golden hills (the Val d’Orcia truly glows), stone borgos, and frescoed salons. Tuscany is basically a Pinterest board that learned to speak Italian.
Truffle hunts in autumn, hot springs near Montecatini, Uffizi and Duomo in Florence, biking the Lucca walls, wine tasting in Chianti… it’s easy to turn your wedding into a mini-holiday for everyone.
Golden hour & weather
Spring and late summer deliver gentle light, warm evenings, and long civil-ceremony windows. July–August can be hot inland but ideal for late starts; May, June, and September are basically perfect.
That is why so many couples choose to work with experienced local professionals like Emozioni Wedding, a team of Tuscany-based wedding planners who specialize in creating smooth, elegant, and unforgettable celebrations.
Best time of year (and what it feels like)
April–May: Fresh greens, wildflowers, shoulder-season rates. Occasional showers, so have a plan B for alfresco dinners.
June: Peak roses, long evenings, high demand. Book early.
July–August: Hot inland (35°C+ possible), but spectacular late-night outdoor parties; coastal or hilltop venues are cooler.
September–early October: Harvest vibes, mellow sun, excellent produce; arguably Tuscany at its best.
Late Oct–March: Cozy fireplaces, lower venue fees, candlelit palazzo dinners. Fewer blooms, more atmosphere.
Ceremony types & paperwork (short and clear)
You can marry in Tuscany three main ways:
Civil ceremony (legally binding)
Takes place in a town hall or at approved venues (some villas are licensed). Documents depend on nationality; for many couples, it’s a Nulla Osta (certificate of no impediment), passports, and translations with apostilles. A local planner or interpreter is legally required in some municipalities.
Religious ceremony
Symbolic ceremony
No legal paperwork; craft the script you want, anywhere you like (vine rows, villa lawn, olive grove). Many couples do the legal part at home, then celebrate freely in Tuscany. Honestly, it’s the least stressful route.
What it costs (ballparks to budget with)
Costs vary wildly by guest count, venue category, and styling, but for a 60–80 guest wedding:
Venue hire (private villa/castello): €6,000–€18,000 (often includes two nights of on-site rooms).
Full-service planner: 10–15% of total budget (or €4,000–€12,000 fixed).
Catering (aperitivo + dinner + open bar): €120–€220 per person.
Florals & décor: €3,000–€10,000+ (tablescapes and chuppahs/arches swing this).
Place cards: Simple deckle-edge paper or local ceramic tags your guests can pocket.
Favour idea: Tiny bottle of local olive oil or a custom biscotti bag. Avoid heavy stuff — guests are flying.
Menu ideas guests still talk about next year
Aperitivo stations: Tuscan salumi and pecorino, pappa al pomodoro shots, fried sage leaves, cecina (chickpea flatbread).
Firsts: Handmade pici with ragù or cacio e pepe; truffle tagliatelle if in season.
Secondi: Bistecca alla fiorentina to share, or salt-baked sea bass on the coast.
Dolci: Millefoglie built live, cantucci with Vin Santo.
Late-night bite: Porchetta panini or mini arancini — keeps the dancefloor alive and the prosecco friendly.
Planner or no planner?
If your guest count is 40+ or you’re going legal in Italy, hire one. A local planner navigates municipal offices, curfews, vendor contracts, and those tiny rural roads where the bus driver swears they definitely can turn around (he can’t). For micro-weddings with a symbolic ceremony, a month-of coordinator might be enough, but you’ll still want an Italian-speaking point person on the day.
Timeline you can trust (count back from your date)
12–14 months: Secure venue and planner; hold a back-up date if you can.
9–12 months: Book photographer/video, caterer, band/DJ; start paperwork if going civil or religious.
6–9 months: Send invites with travel tips; reserve guest rooms/blocks and shuttles; lock your rain plan.
Starting too early in peak summer. Aim for 5:30–6:30 pm ceremonies; your older relatives will thank you.
Under-budgeting lighting. Tuscany looks magical after dark when you invest in candles and string lights.
Skipping transport. Don’t let guests self-drive on unfamiliar rural roads at night.
Over-styling. Let the venue shine; choose one or two “wow” moments, not five. There’s less is more here.
Quick FAQ
Can we have a legal ceremony at our villa?
Sometimes. Only certain venues are licensed; your planner can help secure a civil officiant or arrange a town-hall ceremony plus symbolic vows on-site.
Is August a bad idea?
Not if you plan for it: later timeline, shaded ceremony, hand-fans, cold towels, gelato cart. Coastal or hilltop venues help a LOT.
How far in advance should we book?
Prime Saturdays in June/September can go 12–18 months out. If you’re flexible on weekday dates, you’ll find more options (and often better pricing).
Are there noise restrictions?
Yes, many. Confirm outdoor/indoor cut-offs in your contract and plan the after-party accordingly.
Final word
Italy is full of extraordinary places to marry, but Tuscany has an almost unfair combination of looks, logistics, and lived-in romance. It’s the rare region where your ceremony backdrop, your menu, and your guest weekend all feel effortlessly aligned. Plan with intention, respect the local rhythms, and remember: you’re not throwing a show — you’re hosting a beautiful meal and moment for the people you love. The rest takes care of itself, mostly.
About the Author
Nat C
Natalia has traveled the globe with a backpack and a budget, visiting over 50 countries to date. Now, she has swapped her backpack for a babypack and is enjoying the world of family-friendly travel.