Tuesday 26 July 2022

Demand for Weddings at would be there, say Travel Agents

Demand for Weddings at would be there, say Travel Agents

Agents believe there would be demand for cruise ship weddings should the law be changed to broaden the range of venues where weddings can take place.

Couples in England and Wales could soon be free to tie the knot onboard cruise ships under new recommendations to reform wedding law put forward by the Law Commission.

The commission has branded the current legislation "confusing, out-of-date and restrictive", and stressed it is preventing people from getting married in “more meaningful” settings.

Asked by the government to review the law, the commission on Tuesday (18 July) recommended focusing regulation on the officiant responsible for the wedding rather than the venue.

"This reform would open up a wider range of locations for couples to get married," said the commission. "Permitted venues would include gardens, beaches, forests, parks, village halls and cruise ships."

Bolsover Cruise Club sales manager Helen Moore told TTG that demand for weddings at sea was “definitely there”. “It offers an affordable alternative to land-based ceremonies, and all the stress of the planning and logistics is taken care of,” she said.

“Family and friends can embark on the ship together, but don’t need to be in each other’s pockets throughout the duration of the cruise. For the bride and groom, there is the option to book a suite on board to make their trip extra special."

Moore added: “There’s no more romantic setting than being at sea, and the honeymoon is also taken care of at the same time.”

Travel Counsellor Emma Otter, who has already booked a couple to get married on Princess Cruises’ Sky Princess next year, described the possibility of being able to tie the knot at sea as an “exciting addition” to the cruise.

“Couples may have considered a wedding abroad but the flying or the addition of elderly relatives may have stopped them,” she said. “A cruise ship wedding would mean nobody is excluded, especially those that can’t or don’t want to fly.”

Otter added the reforms, should they go ahead, would likely introduce cruising to wedding guests who may never have cruised before, which she said would come as a “boost” to the industry.

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