I got a message last spring from a bride in Nashville.
She had spent two weeks researching Mexico destination weddings and still had no idea what it would actually cost her. She had seen $3,500 on one site and $40,000 on another. Both were technically accurate. Neither helped her make a decision.
That gap is what I want to close for you right now.
The destination wedding in Mexico cost is not one number. It is a combination of your resort tier, your guest count, the add-ons you choose, and the contract terms you agree to. I am going to break every piece of that down so you can build a real budget before you ever pick up the phone with a resort.
The Three Numbers That Make Up Your Total Cost
Most brides only focus on the wedding package. That is the smallest part of the picture.
Your real total has three layers.
The first is the wedding package itself. This covers the ceremony setup, basic florals, cake, and coordinator. It may be complimentary or purchased outright, depending on your group’s room production.
The second is add-ons. Photography, upgraded floral arrangements, a private dinner reception, DJ or live music, hair and makeup. These are quoted separately and are usually where the budget grows fastest.
The third is guest accommodation. Your guests pay for their own rooms. But because their room nights build your group production, the number they collectively book directly affects what perks and upgrades you receive as the couple. The two are connected.
Most couples plan all three together. That gives you an honest total from the start.
What the Free Package Actually Means
You will see this term everywhere. Free wedding package. Complimentary ceremony. $0 for the couple.
Here is what that actually means in practice.
All-inclusive resorts offer a base wedding package at no charge when your guest group meets a minimum room night requirement. The resort recovers the cost through room revenue, not through a direct wedding fee. You do not write a check for the package. Your guests’ bookings earn it.
At Hyatt Ziva Cancun, for example, the minimum is typically around 5 room nights. If your 25 guests each stay 3 nights, that is 75 room nights — well above threshold. The base package is yours at no additional cost.
The base package usually includes:
- Ceremony setup — chairs, basic arch or altar, and aisle decor
- Bridal bouquet and groom’s boutonniere
- One-tier wedding cake in a standard design
- Champagne toast for the couple
- A dedicated on-site wedding coordinator
That is a real starting point. Most couples build up from there. The question is how much you add and where.
Destination Wedding in Mexico Cost by Resort Tier
Your resort choice is the single biggest variable in your budget. Here is what you should realistically expect across tiers.
| Resort Tier (Example Properties) | Wedding Package Range | Guest Room Rate per Night | Typical Group Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget (Sunscape Akumal, Breathless Cancun) | $3,500 to $6,000 | $120 to $180 | Under 40 guests |
| Mid-Range (Dreams Playa Mujeres, Now Jade) | $6,000 to $12,000 | $180 to $280 | 30 to 60 guests |
| Luxury (Secrets Maroma, Excellence Playa Mujeres) | $10,000 to $20,000+ | $280 to $450 | 20 to 80 guests |
| Ultra-Luxury (Finest Playa Mujeres, Nizuc Resort) | $20,000 to $40,000+ | $400 to $700+ | Boutique, 20 to 50 guests |
These are wedding package costs only. Guest accommodation is in addition to this and is usually the larger number once your group grows past 30 people.
For most brides I work with — 25 to 50 guests at a mid-range Mexican resort — the total wedding package plus add-ons lands between $10,000 and $18,000.
Cancun Wedding Packages Prices: What You Are Actually Buying
Cancun is the most requested destination in our portfolio. Let me give you the real line-item breakdown.
Cancun wedding packages prices vary based on whether you purchase the package outright or earn it through room production. Beyond the base package, here is what most couples end up spending:
| Add-On Item | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Base ceremony package (purchased, room minimum not met) | $3,500 to $5,500 |
| Base ceremony package (complimentary, room minimum met) | $0 |
| Professional photography — 6 to 8 hours | $2,500 to $7,000 |
| Upgraded floral package — centerpieces, arch, additional bouquets | $800 to $5,000+ |
| Private dinner reception — per guest | $80 to $180 per person |
| DJ or live music | $1,000 to $3,500 |
| Open bar extension for private event | $500 to $2,000 |
| Symbolic ceremony officiant | $400 to $800 |
| Bridal hair and makeup | $400 to $900 |
| Extra guests beyond package limit (per person) | $50 to $150 per adult |
A realistic mid-range Cancun wedding with 30 guests — photography, upgraded florals, private dinner, and DJ — typically lands between $13,000 and $19,000 in total couple costs.
Add the $180 per-night room rate for those 30 guests over 4 nights and the group collectively spends around $21,600 in accommodation. That is what earns your complimentary package and your suite upgrade.
The two budgets work together. Understanding how helps you negotiate smarter.
What the All-Inclusive Plan Does and Does Not Cover
What the Base Package Includes
- Ceremony space and basic setup — chairs, arch or altar
- Standard linen and chair covers
- Bridal bouquet and boutonniere
- One-tier cake in standard design
- Champagne toast for the couple
- On-site coordinator for your wedding day
What Almost Always Costs Extra
- Professional photography and video
- Upgraded florals — centerpieces, arch florals, extra bouquets
- Private reception space, especially a terrace or specialty venue
- Live music, DJ, or audio-visual equipment
- Spa and salon services for the wedding party
- Legal ceremony fees and documentation if marrying legally in Mexico
- Extra guests above the package headcount limit
Most couples I work with spend $4,000 to $9,000 on add-ons beyond the base package. Some spend more. Some spend less. It depends entirely on your priorities.
Photography is non-negotiable for most brides. Florals and the private reception are where you have the most flexibility.

How Much Does a Destination Wedding Cost Compared to a US Wedding?
The short answer: usually less for the couple. Here is why.
A traditional US wedding bundles food, alcohol, and venue into one invoice that the couple pays entirely. A Mexico all-inclusive wedding shifts most of that cost to your guests through their room rate. You still pay for wedding-specific items. But the venue, the food, and the open bar for your guests are absorbed into what they pay to stay.
| Cost Category | Typical US Wedding | Mexico All-Inclusive Wedding |
|---|---|---|
| Venue | $5,000 to $15,000 | Included in resort stay |
| Catering and food | $8,000 to $20,000 | Covered by guest all-inclusive |
| Bar and alcohol | $3,000 to $10,000 | Covered by guest all-inclusive |
| Florals | $2,000 to $8,000 | $800 to $5,000+ |
| Photography | $3,000 to $7,000 | $2,500 to $7,000 |
| Total couple cost (average) | $35,000 to $60,000+ | $10,000 to $22,000 |
I have had brides come back from Mexico with a final couple bill of $11,000. Their Midwestern venue alone would have cost that.
The trade-off is transparent: your guests pay for their own travel and accommodation. For guests who want to come, that cost is reasonable. For guests who cannot make the trip, they simply send a gift. No one is surprised.
Most couples find the budget comparison is the one thing that finally convinces skeptical family members.
The Costs Nobody Tells You About Until You Read the Contract
These are the ones that catch couples off guard. I want you to see them before you sign anything.
Mexico IVA Tax on Wedding Services
Mexico charges a 16% IVA (value added tax) on wedding services purchased through the resort. This applies to photography add-ons, upgraded florals, private venue fees, and reception costs. On a $10,000 wedding invoice, that is $1,600 you were not expecting.
It is legal, it is standard, and resorts are required to charge it. Ask for your quote with IVA included before you budget.
The Coordinator Meeting Upsell
About six to eight weeks before your wedding, the resort coordinator schedules a final planning call. This is when the upgrades get presented. The enhanced centerpiece package. The upgraded chair covers. The specialty cocktail hour.
These are real options that couples genuinely want. But the timing is strategic. You are emotionally invested and the wedding is close. Decisions get made quickly.
Know your budget before that call. Not after.
Per-Person Fees for Extra Guests
Most base packages cover 20 to 25 guests. Every additional adult is typically $50 to $150 per person. A 60-guest wedding at a property with a 25-person base means 35 additional guests. At $100 each, that adds $3,500 to your total.
This is one of the first things I check when reviewing a resort contract for a client.
Day Pass Fees for Off-Site Guests
If any of your guests book at a different hotel and plan to attend your wedding at the resort, the property will charge them a day pass. These run $150 to $350 per person at most Mexican all-inclusives.
The easiest solution is keeping your whole group at one resort. That is exactly what the room block is designed to do.
Attrition Clauses in Room Block Contracts
Your room block contract may require a minimum number of rooms to be booked. If your guests fall short, you may owe the difference in room revenue to the resort.
Attrition clauses are negotiable. I negotiate them on behalf of every couple I work with. But only before the contract is signed.
These five line items can easily add $3,000 to $8,000 to a budget that looked clean on paper. Knowing they exist is the first step. Having someone review your contract before you commit is the second.
This Is Why Working With a Travel Specialist Changes the Math
You just read about attrition clauses, IVA tax, coordinator upsells, and per-person fees. None of that is designed to be easy to find. It is in the contract because couples sign before they know to look for it.
Our Destination Weddings reviews every resort contract before our clients sign. We negotiate attrition terms, flag add-on fee structures, and make sure the room block is set up correctly from day one.
We do all of this at no charge to the couple. The resort compensates us when your group books. That model means our entire service — contract review, room block setup, guest booking coordination, and wedding logistics support — costs you nothing.
We are not a wedding planner charging a percentage of your budget. We are a travel agency that specializes in destination weddings, and we have seen every version of these contracts across every major Mexican resort.
Book a Free Consultation
Ready to find out what your destination wedding would actually cost? Our Destination Weddings will provide real resort quotes based on your travel dates, guest count, and priorities — so you can understand the full picture before making any decisions.
Schedule Your Free CallFrequently Asked Questions About Mexico Destination Wedding Cost
How much does a destination wedding in Mexico cost on average?
For the couple, plan for $8,000 to $18,000 in wedding costs at a mid-range Mexican all-inclusive. That covers the package and typical add-ons. Guest accommodation is paid separately by your guests at $150 to $300 per person per night.
What does a free all-inclusive wedding package actually include?
The base package covers ceremony setup, a bridal bouquet, boutonniere, one-tier cake, champagne toast, and on-site coordinator. It is complimentary when your group meets the resort’s room night minimum. Photography and upgrades cost extra.
What are Cancun wedding packages prices in 2026?
Base packages start at $3,500 to $5,500 if purchased outright. A fully upgraded wedding with photography, florals, and a private reception at a mid-range Cancun resort typically runs $13,000 to $19,000 in direct couple costs.
What is not included in an all inclusive destination wedding cost?
Photography, upgraded florals, private reception venue, DJ or live music, spa services, extra guests above the package headcount, and legal ceremony fees are almost always quoted separately. Ask for an itemized add-on menu before you sign.
Is Mexico cheaper than a US wedding?
For the couple, yes. Venue, catering, and open bar costs are absorbed into guest room rates at an all-inclusive. Most couples spend $10,000 to $22,000 in direct costs versus $35,000 to $60,000 for a comparable US wedding.
Does using a travel agent cost extra for a Mexico destination wedding?
No. Our Destination Weddings is completely free to couples. The resort compensates us when your group books. Contract review, room block setup, and guest coordination are all included at no charge.
