
Big weddings are beautiful. But they’re not for everyone.
Not every couple dreams of a guest list longer than a Tesco receipt, a cake the size of a toddler, or a day orchestrated down to the minute.
Some dream of… less.
Less stress. Less expectation. Less performance.
And in that space, something else emerges. Something smaller — but no less meaningful.
💍 Why do couples skip the big day?
The reasons vary, but here are a few we’ve heard again and again:
- “We just wanted to focus on each other.”
- “We didn’t want to spend £20,000 to impress people we hardly see.”
- “We’re not great in big crowds.”
- “We wanted something more real.”
For many, skipping the big wedding is about taking back the narrative. It’s about doing things on their terms — even if those terms look a bit different from what people expect.
🎒 So what do they choose instead?
Here’s where it gets fun:
- Tiny ceremonies with just their parents and dog.
- Registry office vows followed by fish and chips on the beach.
- Weddings abroad with ten close friends in a villa.
- Post-wedding parties months later, when they’ve saved up or settled in.
- Elopements where no one knew until the photos showed up on Instagram.
Some still wear the dress. Some don’t. Some hire a car. Some walk. Some throw a party a year later. Others never do.
There are no rules. And that’s kind of the point.
🥂 The rise of personal over perfect
For couples choosing this route, it’s not about cutting corners. It’s about focusing on what matters. They still want it to feel special — but not pressured. Beautiful — but not performative.
They want memories, not stress.
Moments, not formalities.
💡 Thinking of skipping the big wedding?
Do it. Or don’t. But make it yours.
This day should feel like the two of you — however that looks. Whether that’s 100 guests and a seven-tier cake, or two people and a sunset.
There is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to love. And there’s no such thing as doing it “wrong.”
Brought to you by The Electric Wedding Car Company — here for the just-married, the nearly-weds, and the just-doing-it-our-way types.


