Most couples book their wedding videographer 6 to 8 months before the wedding. About a quarter book earlier, in the 8 to 12 month range. Another quarter wait until 3 to 4 months out. Anything inside 2 to 3 months is cutting it close, not impossible, but close.


If you take one thing from this post: book sooner rather than later, not because of availability panic, but because of your budget. More on that below.


Here's what the timeline actually looks like across the weddings I've filmed:

  • 8 to 12 months out: about 25% of couples, usually the ones who booked their venue early and started locking in vendors right after
  • 6 to 8 months out: the most common window
  • 3 to 4 months out: another 25%, often couples who handled photography first and treated video as an afterthought
  • 2 to 3 months or less: possible, but you're working with a compressed version of the full experience


Wedding videographers tend to get booked after photographers. That's normal. But it means video often gets pushed later in the planning timeline than it should, even though the actual production and prep work benefits just as much from lead time.


What happens when you book inside the 2 to 3 month window

  • I've had couples book this close to their date. The day still gets captured beautifully. That part doesn't change. What changes is everything around it.
  • There's no time for an engagement session, which means no chance to meet beforehand, get comfortable with how I work, or see how the day-of workflow actually feels before it's the actual wedding day.
  • There's no trailer to share at the wedding or to announce the engagement with.
  • Consultations and questionnaires get compressed into whatever time is left, and the planning timeline feels rushed instead of intentional & considered.
  • The fix on my end is staying calm, staying flexible, and adapting in real time instead of forcing a rigid process onto a compressed timeline. It works. But it's a noticeably different experience than a couple who booked with breathing room.


Why summer and fall dates need even more lead time

If your date falls in summer or fall, the standard 6 to 8 month window shrinks. These are the highest-demand months for Baltimore weddings, and limited number of popular venues fill up fast.


Do popular venues need to be booked earlier?

Yes. For in-demand venues, 12 months out is the realistic benchmark. There's typically a line of other couples eyeing the same date and time slot, especially for sought-after Baltimore venues.


If your venue and your season are both high-demand, that's the scenario where waiting until the 3 to 4 month mark genuinely risks losing the date altogether.


What extra lead time actually buys you

Here's something that surprises people: booking at 6 to 8 months versus 8 to 12 months doesn't change the quality of your final film. The difference isn't in the output. It's in the process getting there.


Once a date is booked, with a 25% retainer down, the remaining balance breaks into equal monthly payments. The earlier you book, the longer that payment period stretches, and the lower each monthly payment becomes. That's the practical advantage of early booking that has nothing to do with availability fears.


The engagement session planning process

After booking, the next step is engagement session planning. This starts with a personal consultation and an in-depth questionnaire to figure out the most meaningful time and location for your session, not just a generic photo op.


Whenever possible, I coordinate directly with your wedding photographer so we can all meet and work together before the wedding day itself. This does two things. It means you and I get real time together before the day that matters most, and it means you're not stuck scheduling a second engagement session that doesn't match your photographer's style or timeline.


Booking 6 or more months out is usually what gives this process enough room to actually happen.


Should you really book 9 to 12 months out?

The common advice floating around is to book your wedding videographer 9 to 12 months in advance. I agree with it, but most of that advice frames it as a deadline to avoid panic. That's not the real reason.


The real reason is your budget.


Wedding videography tends to get treated as an afterthought, booked after the photographer, after the venue, after everything else feels locked in.


But if you book sooner instead of treating it as a late addition, you spread the cost into smaller monthly payments instead of facing it as one large expense closer to the wedding. It's not about beating a clock. It's about giving your wedding budget room to breathe.


Take a look at my current pricing page with sample payment plan option.


Ready to lock in your date?

If you have a date, even a rough one, the earlier we talk, the more room you'll have for a real engagement session, a manageable payment plan, and a planning process that never feels rushed.


Schedule your discovery call and let's figure out your timeline together.

Got a question?