Build a timeline that reduces last-minute pressure
Use this page to turn a vague countdown into a sequence of actions with sensible timing.
Timeline mistakes usually do not feel serious until the final month, when fittings, RSVPs and supplier confirmations all collide.
Wedding Week Checklist Guide works best when it leads to a clear next action, whether that is choosing a supplier, revising the guest list, setting a budget cap or downloading a more structured planning file.
What this page should help you decide
- How to prioritise tasks by stage
- Which jobs should be bundled together
- How to keep checklists useful in the final month
How to use it well
- Anchor the big deadlines first: venue, key suppliers, stationery, RSVPs and final balances.
- Build backwards from the wedding day so fittings, menu choices and transport planning have breathing room.
- Keep the week-of version shorter than the full planning timeline so it stays usable under stress.
Use separate timeline layers
- Long-range timeline: bookings, fittings, stationery, RSVP date, final payments.
- Week-of timeline: confirmations, packing, welcome-event logistics and rehearsal details.
- Day-of timeline: hair, makeup, arrivals, ceremony, photos, meal service, speeches and transport.
Common mistakes
- Making a timeline that is visually neat but too ambitious for real life.
- Leaving supplier confirmations until the final few days.
- Mixing long-term planning tasks with day-of movement in the same list.