The best wedding day timelines share one thing in common: margin. Not every minute is accounted for. There's breathing room between events. Buffers exist for the things that inevitably run long — hair and makeup, the ceremony, toasts that go overtime.
This is especially true for Colorado weddings, where mountain distances, unpredictable weather, and multi-venue logistics add complexity that a city wedding never encounters. A 15-minute delay at the hotel becomes a 30-minute delay at a mountain venue after factoring in drive time — unless your timeline anticipated it.
The Building Blocks
Every wedding day timeline is built from the same core elements. Here they are in order, with realistic time allocations for Colorado weddings:
Getting Ready (3–4 hours)
The most commonly underestimated block. Hair and makeup for a bridal party of 6 (bride + 5) takes 4–5 hours with two artists working simultaneously.
Sample timeline:
- 8:00 AM — Breakfast (eat before makeup starts)
- 8:30 AM — Hair and makeup begins (bridesmaids)
- 10:30 AM — Bride's hair begins
- 11:30 AM — Bride's makeup begins
- 12:30 PM — Bride gets dressed, final touches
- 1:00 PM — Ready for first look / departures
Groom's timeline runs parallel and is shorter:
- 10:00 AM — Groom and groomsmen gather
- 11:00 AM — Get dressed
- 12:00 PM — Pre-ceremony photos (groomsmen)
- 1:00 PM — First look (if doing one)
First Look & Couple's Portraits (45–60 minutes)
If you're doing a first look (increasingly popular in Colorado, where the outdoor light matters), schedule it before the ceremony. This gives your photographer the best light and removes post-ceremony time pressure.
Time needed: 45–60 minutes for first look + couple's portraits
Location consideration: If your first look is at a different location than the ceremony, add travel time. Arion can coordinate this transfer seamlessly.
Wedding Party & Family Portraits (30–45 minutes)
These are the "must-have" group shots. Create a shot list in advance with your photographer so no combination is forgotten.
Pro tip: Have your wedding planner or a designated coordinator gather people for group shots. Photographers shouldn't be chasing down bridesmaids.
Guest Arrival (30 minutes)
Guests should arrive 15–30 minutes before the ceremony. Your timeline should account for:
- Shuttle arrival time — When do shuttles leave the hotel? When do they arrive?
- Parking — If guests are driving, how long does it take to walk from parking to the ceremony site?
- Seating — Ushers seat guests; this takes time
Ceremony (20–45 minutes)
- Short ceremony: 20 minutes (vows, rings, kiss, recessional)
- Standard ceremony: 30 minutes (processional, readings, vows, rings, kiss, recessional)
- Full religious ceremony: 45–60 minutes
Cocktail Hour (60 minutes)
This isn't just social time — it's the buffer that allows the events team to flip the room from ceremony to reception, the photographer to capture sunset portraits, and the couple to have a private moment.
Colorado-specific: Plan cocktail hour outdoors (weather permitting) with a covered or indoor backup. Mountain evenings cool quickly — have blankets or heat lamps available.
Reception Dinner (90 minutes)
- 10 minutes: Grand entrance and first dance
- 20 minutes: Toasts (cap at 4 speakers, 3–5 minutes each)
- 60 minutes: Dinner service (plated) or 45 minutes (buffet/stations)
- Factor in blessing/grace if applicable
Dancing & Celebration (2–3 hours)
The emotional release. This is where the energy peaks and the party happens.
- Parent dances typically happen after the first course or between courses
- Cake cutting can happen before or after dinner
- Bouquet/garter toss (if included) usually mid-dance floor session
Send-Off & Departure (15–30 minutes)
The final moment. Whether it's sparklers, a confetti shower, or a quiet departure, plan the logistics:
- Guest shuttles should have their final departure time 30 minutes after the music stops
- The couple's private departure vehicle should be staged and ready
- End-of-night transportation is the most safety-critical moment of the entire day
Sample Colorado Mountain Wedding Timeline
| Time | Event | Transportation Note |
|---|---|---|
| 8:00 AM | Breakfast for bridal party | — |
| 8:30 AM | Hair & makeup begins | — |
| 10:00 AM | Groomsmen gather at hotel | — |
| 11:00 AM | Groom & groomsmen get dressed | — |
| 12:30 PM | Bride dressed, ready | — |
| 1:00 PM | Bridal party departs hotel → venue | Arion luxury SUV for bride; Sprinter for bridesmaids |
| 1:15 PM | Groom departs hotel → venue | Arion SUV for groom/groomsmen |
| 1:30 PM | First look at venue | — |
| 2:00 PM | Couple's portraits | — |
| 2:30 PM | Wedding party portraits | — |
| 3:00 PM | Family portraits | — |
| 3:30 PM | Break / hidden from guests | — |
| 4:00 PM | Guest shuttle #1 departs hotel | Arion shuttle bus |
| 4:15 PM | Guest shuttle #2 departs hotel | Arion shuttle bus |
| 4:30 PM | VIP family shuttle departs | Arion SUV |
| 4:45 PM | Guest seating begins | — |
| 5:00 PM | Ceremony | — |
| 5:30 PM | Ceremony ends / receiving line | — |
| 5:45 PM | Couple departs for sunset photos | Arion private vehicle for couple + photographer |
| 5:45 PM | Cocktail hour begins | — |
| 6:45 PM | Cocktail hour ends | — |
| 7:00 PM | Grand entrance & first dance | — |
| 7:15 PM | Toasts | — |
| 7:30 PM | Dinner service begins | — |
| 8:30 PM | Parent dances | — |
| 8:45 PM | Cake cutting | — |
| 9:00 PM | Dance floor opens | — |
| 10:30 PM | Last dance | — |
| 10:45 PM | Send-off | — |
| 10:45 PM | Guest shuttle #1 departs → hotel | Arion shuttle bus |
| 11:00 PM | Guest shuttle #2 departs → hotel | Arion shuttle bus |
| 11:15 PM | Couple departs → hotel/suite | Arion private vehicle |
Common Timeline Mistakes
Not Enough Travel Time
The #1 timeline mistake for Colorado weddings. Mountain drives take longer than Google Maps says — especially on weekends, in construction season, or in weather. Add 30–50% buffer to any estimated drive time.
Too Many Photos Between Ceremony and Reception
Guests get restless during a 2-hour cocktail hour. Cap the post-ceremony photo session at 45 minutes and do as many portraits as possible before the ceremony (first look + couple's photos).
No Buffer After Hair/Makeup
Something always runs long. Build a 30-minute buffer between the end of beauty services and the first event that requires the bridal party to be ready.
Unrealistic Toast Expectations
"It'll just be two short toasts" turns into 45 minutes when Aunt Margaret takes the mic. Communicate time limits clearly, or have your DJ/MC manage transitions.
Forgetting Vendor Meals
Your photographer, videographer, DJ, and planner all need to eat. Build vendor meals into the dinner timeline — they should eat during guest dinner, not after.
Sharing the Timeline
Your master timeline should be distributed to:
- Wedding planner — The master copy keeper
- Photographer and videographer — Their own version with photo-specific notes
- Entertainment — DJ/band needs ceremony music cues, dinner music timing, dance floor open time
- Caterer — Service timing is everything
- Transportation provider — Arion needs departure times, pickup locations, vehicle assignments, and real-time communication with the planner
- Wedding party — A simplified version with "be ready by" times
- Parents/VIPs — Key times only
The more aligned your vendor team is on timing, the smoother the day runs. The best wedding planners create a shared timeline document that every vendor accesses — and Arion reviews this timeline to build a transportation plan that supports every transition.
Arion provides luxury wedding transportation across Denver and the Rocky Mountain region. Learn more → | (970) 703-4995
This article is part of Arion's Wedding Season series. Return to the Complete Guide →
For the complete picture, see our The Complete Guide to Planning a Colorado Wedding: Every Detail, Every Vendor, Every Moment.
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