Intimate Wedding in Spain: When Elopement Feels Too Small and a Big Wedding Feels Too Much

Local Photographer Guide

today we will talk about:

01.

Why choose an intimate wedding

02.

Planning and budget

03.

How the day flows

04.

Making the right choice

Couples often come to Spain thinking they want a big wedding. Then the guest list politics get exhausting, the budget grows past comfort, and the original 120-guest plan starts to feel like a logistical performance rather than a wedding.

What often happens next: they shrink it. 28 people. A Marbella finca. Half the cost. Less stress. And almost universally, the report afterward is they had a better time than their friends who threw the bigger version.

The intimate wedding is a real category. Not elopement. Not full wedding. The middle ground.

I am Justina, a photographer based in Marbella. This is an honest guide to small weddings in Spain. When they work, when they do not, what they actually cost, and how the planning differs from both elopement and big wedding logistics.

What Counts as a Small Wedding in Spain

The honest definition: 15 to 40 guests. Big enough for a real ceremony and dinner with multiple toasts. Small enough that everyone there is genuinely close to you.

Above 40 guests, it stops being small in a meaningful sense. The vendor coordination becomes wedding-scale rather than dinner-party-scale. Below 15, it is closer to elopement territory, where the day structure is different.

The middle zone has its own logic that is neither elopement nor wedding.

How small weddings differ from elopements

Elopement. 2 to 10 people. Often single day. Photographer is the main vendor. Minimal logistics. Often spontaneous in tone.

Small wedding. 15 to 40 people. Often spans 2-3 days. Multiple vendors (planner, florist, catering, photographer, music). Structured day with timeline.

The shift happens when guest count crosses about 12-15. Below that, you can hand-coordinate everything. Above that, you need a real wedding structure.

How small weddings differ from full weddings

Full wedding. 60+ guests. Detailed timeline with many transitions. Large vendor team. Significant infrastructure (catering capacity, sound system scale, restroom facilities, transportation).

Small wedding. 15-40 guests. Simpler timeline. Smaller vendor team. Infrastructure scales down to dinner party levels.

The shift in the other direction happens around 40-50 guests. Below 40, vendors can give you intimate restaurant or small finca treatment. Above 50, you need event-scale infrastructure.

Why Couples Land Here

Consistent patterns for couples who end up in the intimate wedding format.

Reaction to wedding industrial complex

Couples who started planning a 100-guest wedding, hated the politics of the guest list, and downsized.

Often these couples report relief once they made the choice. The guest list politics is one of the biggest stress points in wedding planning, and a small wedding sidesteps most of it.

Cultural compromise

One partner wants elopement, the other wants real family present. Small wedding solves both.

The most common version: one partner has small family or distant family who would not travel anyway. The other partner has close family who genuinely needs to be there. A 20-30 guest wedding accommodates both.

Second marriages

Couples who already had a big wedding. They want something different this time.

Second weddings tend to skew small naturally. The pressure to perform a “real wedding” is lower because they already did one. The emphasis shifts to the relationship and the people most invested in it.

Multi-cultural families spread across countries

Getting everyone to one place is hard. Inviting only the closest people simplifies logistics.

When you have family in three or four countries, the question of who gets to come becomes complicated regardless of total size. Limiting to 20-30 keeps it manageable.

Privacy preferences

Some people genuinely hate being the center of a 100-person event. Small lets them have the wedding without the performance.

This is more common than couples expect. Introverted brides and grooms often find big weddings exhausting rather than celebratory.

Budget reality

Real wedding for 100 guests in Spain runs €50,000 to €120,000. Small wedding for 30 runs €18,000 to €45,000. Half the cost.

For couples whose budget is real but limited, the small format provides a great wedding within a manageable budget.

Travel friction

Destination weddings inherently filter the guest list. The people who fly to Spain for you are the people who really want to be there.

This works well for small weddings specifically because the geographic filter naturally produces the smaller, more close group you wanted anyway.

Best Venues for 15-40 Guests

The right venue for small is different from the right venue for big.

Boutique hotels with private function spaces

El Lodge Boutique Hotel, Marbella. Private gardens, restaurant for 30, intimate hotel rooms. €8,000 to €18,000 venue plus catering.
La Bobadilla Hotel, Granada. Andalusian estate, hilltop position, can do 30 in private dining. €12,000 to €25,000.
Hotel Hacienda Na Xamena, Ibiza. Cliffside, breathtaking, expensive. €18,000 to €40,000.
Hotel Cap Rocat, Mallorca. Former fortress, dramatic location. €15,000 to €35,000.
Anantara Vilamoura, Portugal. If you want a slightly different Iberian option. €12,000 to €25,000.

Small fincas (country estates)

Cortijo del Mar, Estepona. Andalusian finca with garden and private chef. Beautiful for 20-35 guests. €6,000 to €18,000.
Cortijo Bravo, Velez-Malaga. Small farmhouse with vineyard. €7,000 to €22,000.
Villa Cisne, Marbella mountains. 6-bedroom villa with garden, private chef setup. €5,000 to €15,000.
Finca La Concepción, Marbella. Historic finca with mango trees. €8,000 to €25,000.
Cortijo San Rafael, near Seville. Working olive farm with renovated event space. €5,000 to €15,000.

Restaurant takeovers

Skina in Marbella. Privately renting the Michelin starred restaurant for the night. €8,000 to €18,000 including dinner for 25.
Bardal in Ronda. Michelin starred mountain restaurant. €6,000 to €15,000.
Canabota in Seville. Seafood-focused Michelin restaurant. €5,000 to €12,000.
Disfrutar in Barcelona. If you go north. €15,000 to €30,000.

Why these venues work for small weddings

Specific qualities that matter for the format:

  • Personal attention to detail (you are not the venue’s only event but you have their focus)
  • Real food (chef can pay attention to a smaller party)
  • Privacy and acoustic intimacy
  • Photographer can work without crowd management
  • The setting feels like dinner with friends rather than event production

Venues to avoid for small weddings

  • Large hotel ballrooms feel empty with 25 guests. Avoid.
  • Mega resorts treat small weddings as small jobs. Service quality dips.
  • Beach clubs designed for 100-guest parties feel sparse for 25.
  • Wineries with set wedding packages designed for 80+ are inflexible for smaller groups.

How the Day Actually Flows

A standard small wedding day in Spain.

Morning, 9am: Couple and immediate family at the villa or hotel. Slow coffee. Photographer arrives for getting-ready coverage. Different from big wedding where the day feels rushed from morning.

11am: Hair and makeup. Bride in robe. Mother and bridesmaids around. Quieter than a big wedding because the room is not 30 people deep.

1pm: Light lunch with family. Casual. Often outdoors on a terrace. Photos happen naturally during conversation rather than as a separate session.

4pm: Final preparations. Outfit on. First look if planned. Often couples in small weddings do first looks because the day has space for them.

5:30pm: Ceremony. 30 guests in a circle or two rows. Officiant speaks for 25 minutes. Vows are short. Photos happen as part of the ceremony, not as a separate event after.

6pm: Champagne toast. Group photo. Everyone moves to a different part of the property for cocktail hour.

6:30pm: Couple’s portrait session. 20 minutes. Just the two of you with photographer. The window is real but feels less rushed than a big wedding.

7:30pm: Dinner begins. Long table for 30 to 40. Multiple courses. Toasts happen between courses, not all at the end. Everyone speaks because everyone knows the couple.

10:30pm: Dancing on a small floor. Live trio or DJ. Everyone is involved because there are only 30 of you. Nobody can hide in the back of a room.

1am: End. Couples often skip the all-night party because the energy from 30 close people is different from 100 acquaintances. Quality of time matters more than length.

What is different from a big wedding day

The pace is slower. The energy is more conversational. There are fewer transitions and less timeline pressure. Photos feel less staged because there is more time for everything.

What is different from an elopement day

There is real structure. The ceremony has formality. Dinner is multi-course. Speeches happen. Dancing happens. It feels like a wedding, just smaller.

Real Budget Ranges

Honest numbers for Spain in 2026.

Lower small wedding: €18,000 to €30,000 for 20-30 guests

What this includes:

  • Small venue or villa
  • Standard catering with wine pairings
  • Single shooter photographer
  • DJ or small live music
  • Modest floral (bridal bouquet, ceremony arch, table flowers)
  • Bride hair and makeup
  • Casual welcome dinner

This is where most foreign couples land for the small wedding format.

Mid small wedding: €30,000 to €55,000 for 30-40 guests

What this includes:

  • Strong venue or private restaurant takeover
  • Premium catering with menu tasting
  • Photo plus videographer
  • Live music for ceremony, DJ for reception
  • Real florist with arch and table arrangements
  • Welcome dinner plus post-wedding brunch
  • Multi-day event structure


Upper small wedding: €55,000 to €100,000 for 30-40 guests

What this includes:

  • Premium venue or rented villa for the week
  • Custom catering with named chef
  • Editorial photo and video team
  • Live band for reception
  • Full floral design including custom installations
  • Multiple events across 2-3 days
  • Welcome bags, custom signage, premium stationery
  • Pre-wedding rehearsal events


What blows up small wedding budgets

The “just one more couple” trap. A 30 guest wedding becomes 50 guests because you “could not exclude” specific people. Suddenly you are paying for a 50-guest wedding without the budget for one.

Underestimating per-head food cost. Real catering for 30 guests at premium quality is €120-€180 per person. Couples often budget for €60-€80 and get surprised.

Premium catering without premium venue. If you book an expensive chef for a basic venue, the value proposition does not work.

Forgetting welcome events. Most small weddings include welcome dinner the night before. Adds €1,500 to €3,500 to budget.

Travel costs for vendors. If you bring a London photographer to a Spanish wedding, you pay their travel and accommodation on top of their fee.

Common Mistakes I See


Pricing it like a big wedding

Small weddings have different cost ratios. Photography becomes a higher percentage of total budget (because per-guest costs are lower). The right way to budget is by category, not by per-head math.

Inviting just one more person, then another, then another

The 30-guest wedding becomes 45 because you “could not leave out” three people from each family. Now it is not small. Now it is a small medium wedding that lost its original intent.

Forgetting the day-of flow is different

Small weddings move slower. The whole day is more conversation-led. If you plan it like a big wedding, you end up with awkward gaps where the timeline expects energy that does not exist.

Underestimating food cost

Real food for 30 guests at a restaurant is €4,000 to €7,000. Couples often budget like it is a small dinner party (€1,500) and get blindsided.

Hiring vendors who do big weddings

A florist used to 200-table events does not always do well with 4 tables. Hire vendors who specialize in small. The work is different even if the skills overlap.

Forgetting that photography matters more

With 30 guests, every photo includes someone you love. The percentage of your wedding gallery you will care about is higher than at a big wedding. Pay for a good photographer.

Mistreating the venue

The intimate venue feels like dinner with friends. Treating it like a corporate event reception ruins the energy.

Forgetting the music

Live music or quality DJ matters more at small weddings because the dance floor is the whole party. A bad music decision affects everyone, not just the people closest to it.

Who Small Weddings Work For

You probably want a small wedding if

  • Your real friend group is under 30 people
  • You hate the political guest list
  • You want everyone there to be someone you would call on a Tuesday
  • You like the idea of a wedding but not the production scale
  • You want a real ceremony, not just an elopement
  • Your partner has different priorities about guest count and small is the compromise
  • Your budget is real but not luxury-scale

You probably do not want a small wedding if

  • You have a big extended family who all expect to come
  • You enjoy being the center of a large celebration
  • You want a wedding that “looks like a wedding” in dramatic photos
  • Your partner has different priorities about guest count and big is what they want
  • Your friend group is large and active and you would feel guilty excluding


What Works and What Does Not

Patterns that consistently show up in intimate weddings done well.

What works

Multi-day structure. Welcome dinner Friday, ceremony Saturday, brunch Sunday. The 30 guests bond over multiple events and the wedding feels like a real gathering.
Hosting at a single property. Villa rental where guests stay onsite. Reduces transportation, increases bonding.
Pre-set menu rather than choice. Easier for catering, eliminates last-minute changes, often produces better food because the chef can focus.
Speeches by everyone. With 30 people, everyone can speak briefly. With 100, only the obvious people speak.
Single live music act through the night. A trio that handles ceremony, cocktail hour, and dance music. Cheaper than separate vendors and more cohesive feel.

What does not work

Pretending it is a big wedding. Decorations that work for 200 look sparse for 30. Timelines that move fast for 100 feel rushed for 30.
Hiring vendors who do not specialize in small. Their pricing structure does not work, their menus do not flex, their service standards do not match the format.
Skipping a real photographer. Some couples think small wedding means cheap photographer. But the photo gallery is more important when every photo includes someone significant.
Trying to please family who wanted big. If you compromise small wedding plans because parents want bigger, you end up with a medium wedding that pleases no one.

A Quick Test for Whether Intimate Is Right for You

First question worth asking yourself: name the 15 people who absolutely must be there.
If you cannot name 15 without struggling, you might want elopement.
If your list goes past 40 without effort, you might want a real wedding.
The middle zone (15 to 40) is the right answer for couples who feel exactly like that.

If you are in that zone and want help planning, send me an email with your rough guest count, where you are thinking, and what date. I will tell you what venues and vendors fit your specific shape of day.

Intimate weddings photograph beautifully. The room is warmer, the guests are the closest people in your life, and every photo includes someone who actually matters to you. That is a good standard for a wedding.

Having a Wedding in Spain?

Send me an inquiry with your date and what you’re looking for. I’ll come back with availability and thoughts on how we’d work together.

Send inquiry | See more info about elopements

Justina Kris is a wedding and elopement photographer based on the Costa del Sol, shooting in Nerja, Marbella, Malaga, Ronda, Tarifa, and across Andalusia.

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