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Home / Lifestyle

Italian destination weddings are having a moment — again

By Tammy LaGorce
New York Times·
26 Jun, 2025 08:27 PM5 mins to read

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Lauren Sánchez and Jeff Bezos are getting married in Venice, Italy. Photo / Arnold Jerocki, FilmMagic, Getty Images

Lauren Sánchez and Jeff Bezos are getting married in Venice, Italy. Photo / Arnold Jerocki, FilmMagic, Getty Images

Emanuela Giangreco, a wedding planner, tells clients her home city of Venice is “delicate”, a description that fits uneasily into accounts of how the wedding of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez is expected to unfold there this week.

In March, Sánchez’s brother, Paul Sanchez, told TMZ the wedding, with about 200 guests expected to attend, would rival the pageantry of Princess Diana’s nuptials at St Paul’s Cathedral in London. (The London firm Lanza & Baucina, known for its discretion, is planning the event.)

Speculation about its cost has soared to the multiple millions, according to tabloid reports.

People magazine has declared the couple are planning “the wedding of the century”.

And Bezos, whose arrival has spurred protests, is expected to dock his US$500 million superyacht, Koru, in the Venice lagoon.

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The spectacle has prompted Giangreco, a wedding planner who once planned weddings exclusively in Venice, including her own, to reflect on how her business has expanded across Italy in the past decade.

When she launched Ema Giangreco Weddings in 2015, she organised about eight American weddings in Venice each year.

Now, she works with US couples throughout Italy, where requests for ceremonies in Tuscany and the Amalfi Coast have tripled.

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Convention Bureau Italia, a private national authority that promotes tourism, documented a double-digit surge in American weddings in 2024, which also recently found that 30% of all weddings held in the country are now American.

The trend is also supported by data from the Virginia-based travel agency Journeys Inc., whose president, Kim Goldstein, said that Italy consistently ranks among the top five countries for US weddings abroad.

“Since the pandemic, we’ve seen a 10% increase in American couples choosing Italy as their destination wedding location,” Goldstein said.

Though Venice remains a picturesque location for weddings, with more than 600 weddings each year, according to city hall officials, Giangreco said that she has noticed a shift to other parts of Italy that satisfy American couples’ desire for novelty.

“What’s happening now, what’s changing, is that 10 years ago, every other inquiry we were getting was about Lake Como,” said Lynn Easton, owner of Easton Events LLC, a Charleston, South Carolina, luxury destination wedding planning company.

John Legend and Chrissy Teigen got married in Lake Como in 2013; George Clooney’s wedding to Amal Alamuddin took place in Venice in 2014.

“Now, like anything else in life, people are looking for new ideas,” Easton said.

A current client is scouting the Dolomites, a mountain range in northeastern Italy, with her help. Sicily and Puglia have also been booming.

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“Nobody wants things to be farther and harder to get to,” Easton said.

But “what they do want is ‘unique’ and ‘different.’”

For her, the search for little-known Italian palazzos and villas is ongoing.

“We as an industry are constantly pushing the boundaries,” she said.

In Italy, that means “more and more regions are being explored.”

Diana Sorensen, the owner and creative director of Sugokuii Events, an event design and production company in Rome that takes on only two US$5 million-plus weddings per year, said American couples who can spend that amount are seeking not just exclusivity but seclusion.

“They may want a tiny island somewhere, or a location that has no noise limitations and offers ultra privacy,” she said.

Her background — she was born in New York but has lived in Rome most of her life — reassures clients she knows where to look, she said.

“We can pinpoint some of the places that haven’t been used before,” she said, adding that she can get access to these venues, which owners and preservation boards only open up to a few individuals.

“That’s attractive to a certain clientele.”

So are bragging rights to experiences that can’t be duplicated in other parts of the world, like picking olives in Puglia, Easton said, or taking a helicopter over Mount Etna, Sorensen said.

The desire to explore new locations does not always add up to trampling local charm, or Americans wearing out their benvenutos in Italy, planners say.

According to several planners, Americans tend to favour three-day events that consist of a welcome party, the wedding and a farewell brunch on the final day.

Residents in many regions now count on foreign extravaganzas, with their influx of visitors and dollars.

“It’s a huge industry that has such importance for locals,” said Marianna Di Paolo, an owner of La Calla Events on the Amalfi Coast, a current hot spot for weddings.

When La Calla started orchestrating weddings for foreigners 25 years ago, most of its clients were British and Australian couples who were booking intimate events. Now, 80% are Americans who lift local economies with larger celebrations.

“People are very happy when they see American weddings here,” Di Paolo said.

Goldstein, of Journeys, said American couples spend an average of US$50,000 on an Italian wedding for 50 guests, depending on the setting, elaborateness, and guest count.

Suita Carrano, the president of the International Wedding Planners and Travel Agents Association and founder of the Italian planning company Prestige & Luxury Weddings, pointed out that destination weddings often allow for spending more per guest, because head counts tend to be lower.

“If you live in New York and invite 500 people to Italy, 250 won’t be able to come,” she said.

It is likely they will want to attend, though.

Americans flock to Italy to marry for reasons that extend beyond the Old-World charm and romantic ambience, planners say.

According to Carrano, “it’s all about the wine and the food”.

Sorensen said Instagram has also been a factor in Italy’s allure.

“Americans are seeing a lot of the nature and beauty and fashion and parties they associate with Italy on social media,” she said.

“It helps them to dream.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Written by: Tammy LaGorce

©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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