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Micro Weddings Singapore: Intimate Guide (2026)

Planning a micro wedding with 15-50 guests? Best intimate venues in Singapore, realistic budgets from S$3K and tips to make your small celebration special

Vows.sg Editorial15 Mar 2026Updated Mar 202610 min read
An intimate micro wedding celebration at a garden restaurant in Singapore with close friends and family

There's a quiet shift happening in Singapore's wedding scene, and honestly? It's about time.

More couples are ditching the 300-guest hotel banquet in favour of something smaller, more personal, and — dare we say — more them. We're talking about micro weddings: intimate celebrations with just 15 to 50 of your closest people, where you can actually have a real conversation with every single guest.

If that sounds like your kind of wedding, you're in the right place. Here's everything you need to know about planning a micro wedding in Singapore in 2026.

What Exactly Is a Micro Wedding?

A micro wedding in Singapore is an intimate celebration with typically 15 to 50 guests — keeping all the meaningful elements of a traditional wedding (ceremony, meal, first dance, speeches) while eliminating the obligation tables. Unlike a full hotel banquet (which averages 150–300 guests and S$30,000–$80,000), micro weddings typically cost S$8,000–$25,000 and allow couples to spend more per guest on food, décor, and experiences that actually matter.

Let's clear this up because the term gets thrown around a lot. A micro wedding isn't an elopement (that's typically under 10 guests) and it's not just a "small wedding." It's an intentionally intimate celebration — usually 15 to 50 guests — that keeps all the meaningful elements of a traditional wedding but strips away the excess.

Think of it this way: you still have a ceremony, a meal, a first dance, maybe even a march-in. You just don't have Table 22 full of your parents' colleagues whom you've never met.

What makes a micro wedding different:

  • Guest count: 15–50 people (immediate family + closest friends)
  • Personalisation: More budget per guest means elevated food, décor, and experiences
  • Atmosphere: Conversational, warm, and relaxed — not a production
  • Timeline: Often shorter and more flexible than a traditional wedding day

Why Singapore Couples Are Going Small

It's not just a post-COVID hangover. There are real, practical reasons why micro weddings make sense here.

The ang bao maths doesn't lie. A typical hotel banquet in Singapore runs S$1,500 to S$5,500 per table. Even with generous ang baos, you're rarely breaking even past Table 15. Every additional table of distant relatives is a net cost — financially and emotionally.

Venue options explode when you're under 50 pax. Suddenly you're not limited to hotel ballrooms. Gardens, restaurants, rooftops, yachts, heritage houses, galleries — the list of stunning spaces that can host 30–50 guests is genuinely exciting.

You actually enjoy your own wedding. Ask any couple who had 200+ guests: "Did you get to eat?" The answer is almost always no. With a micro wedding, you sit down, you eat, you talk to every guest. Novel concept, right?

Quality over quantity — in everything. The money you save on 15 extra tables can go toward a Michelin-starred menu, a stunning floral installation, or a honeymoon upgrade. Your guests notice the difference.

How Much Does a Micro Wedding Cost in Singapore?

Let's talk real numbers. A micro wedding doesn't automatically mean cheap — it means differently allocated. You're spending less overall but often more per head.

Realistic budget ranges for a 30-guest micro wedding:

CategoryBudget Range (SGD)
Venue & catering$5,000–$20,000
Photography & videography$2,500–$5,000
Attire & grooming$2,000–$5,000
Floral & décor$800–$3,000
Solemniser$300–$600
Stationery & invitations$100–$400
Miscellaneous (transport, favours, AV)$500–$1,500
Total$11,200–$35,500

Compare that to the Singapore average of S$30,000–$85,000 for a traditional wedding with 150–250 guests, and the savings are significant. Even at the higher end, you're getting a premium experience for less than a mid-range hotel banquet.

Pro tip: Always check if venue prices are nett or "++". That innocent-looking ++ means 10% service charge plus 9% GST — nearly 20% more than the sticker price.

Best Intimate Wedding Venues in Singapore

This is where micro weddings really shine. Here are our top picks across different vibes and budgets.

Garden & Nature Venues

The SummerHouse — Nestled in the Seletar Aerospace area, this farm-to-table restaurant has a dreamy conservatory-style glass house and lush garden lawn. Perfect for couples who want greenery without leaving Singapore. Capacity: up to 60 pax.

Open Farm Community — In the heart of Dempsey, surrounded by an urban farm concept with beautiful greenery everywhere you look. Accommodates 40 pax outdoors or 70 indoors. The rustic-meets-modern vibe is effortlessly photogenic.

Vineyard at HortPark — A hidden gem with gorgeous garden views and a relaxed, botanical setting. Their micro wedding packages are specifically designed for smaller groups, which means you're not paying for space you don't need.

Wheeler's Estate — Seletar's charming black-and-white bungalow with fairy-lit gardens. The Bambi caravan space fits 30 pax perfectly for something truly unique. Picture your first dance under string lights in the garden — yeah, it's that kind of place.

Restaurant & Fine Dining Venues

Tower Club (Republic Plaza, Level 62–63) — If "intimate but impressive" is your brief, this is it. 360-degree skyline views from the penthouse level, choice of Chinese banquet (Ba Xian) or Western fine dining (Atlantic). They only host 25 weddings per year. Lunch from S$96+/pax, dinner from S$138+/pax.

Violet Oon at National Gallery — Peranakan fine dining in one of Singapore's most stunning buildings. The private dining room is ideal for 20–40 guests who appreciate heritage cuisine and beautiful interiors.

Marguerite — Tucked away at Flower Dome, this one-Michelin-starred restaurant offers a truly unique setting surrounded by flowers. Intimate by design, and the food is exceptional.

PS.Cafe — Multiple locations with gorgeous garden settings. The Dempsey outlet is particularly popular for its lush, Instagram-worthy interiors and relaxed fine-dining feel.

Unique & Unconventional Venues

Royal Albatross — Get married on a tall ship. Yes, an actual four-masted sailing vessel docked at Sentosa. Up to 50 guests can join you for a sunset sail ceremony that your guests will literally never forget.

Singapore Flyer — For the ultra-intimate (think just-the-two-of-you-plus-parents), a private capsule solemnisation 165 metres above the city is hard to beat for sheer romance.

Faber Peak — Cable car weddings are surprisingly popular for micro celebrations. The mountaintop restaurant also works beautifully for a small reception with panoramic views.

Little Island Brewing Co — Changi's hidden brewery with waterfront views. Craft beer, wood-fired pizzas, and a chilled-out vibe that's perfect for couples who want their wedding to feel like the best party they've ever thrown.

Heritage & Boutique Spaces

Alcove at Caldwell House (CHIJMES) — A gorgeous Gothic chapel setting for your ceremony, with an intimate reception space for 50–79 pax. Fully indoor, fully air-conditioned, and dripping with historic charm. Packages from around S$8,200++.

Lloyd's Inn — This minimalist boutique hotel in the Orchard area offers clean lines, white spaces, and a tranquil pool area. It photographs beautifully and feels like a private retreat right in the city.

Food For Thought at National Museum — Heritage architecture meets casual-fine dining. The museum setting gives your photos incredible character, and the food is genuinely good.

Planning Your Micro Wedding: A Practical Checklist

6–9 Months Before

  • Set your budget and guest list (be ruthless — this is the whole point)
  • Book your venue (intimate spaces get snapped up fast)
  • Engage a photographer and videographer
  • Start dress/suit shopping

3–5 Months Before

  • Confirm your menu with a tasting session
  • Book your solemniser and file ROM paperwork
  • Plan your ceremony flow — with fewer guests, you can personalise more
  • Arrange florals and décor (less space = more impact per dollar)

1–2 Months Before

  • Send invitations (for micro weddings, a beautifully designed e-invite or even a personal phone call works perfectly)
  • Finalise your day-of timeline
  • Confirm all vendor details
  • Plan any personal touches (custom vows, curated playlist, handwritten notes for each guest)

Week Of

  • Final headcount to venue
  • Prepare ang bao for vendors and helpers
  • Pack an emergency kit (sewing kit, plasters, breath mints, phone charger)
  • Relax. You've got this.

Tips That Actually Matter

Handling the Guest List Conversation

This is the hardest part, full stop. When you tell your parents it's 30 guests, brace yourself for "But what about Uncle Richard?" Here's how to navigate it:

  • Set the number first, then fill it. Don't start with names — start with a firm cap. "We have 30 seats" is easier to defend than "we don't want to invite Uncle Richard."
  • The table test: If you haven't shared a meal with someone in the past year, they probably don't need to be at your wedding.
  • Offer alternatives: A separate celebration lunch with extended family after the wedding keeps everyone happy without blowing up your guest list.

Making It Feel Special (Not "Small")

A micro wedding should feel curated, not cut down. Here's how:

  • Upgrade the food. With 30 guests instead of 200, you can afford a tasting menu from a top restaurant. Your guests will remember a five-course meal far longer than a hotel banquet.
  • Personalise everything. Handwritten place cards, a custom cocktail named after your dog, a playlist you actually curated together — these details shine when they're not lost in a crowd.
  • Invest in the experience. Live acoustic music hits different when your guitarist is three metres away, not on a stage across a ballroom. A wine-pairing dinner feels luxurious. A dessert table with your favourite local kueh feels personal.
  • Create moments, not itineraries. Skip the 47-point programme sheet. Let conversations flow. Have your best friend give an unscripted speech. Dance when the mood strikes.

Don't Skip the Coordinator

Even a small wedding has moving parts. A day-of coordinator (from around S$2,800) is worth every cent — they handle the timeline, wrangle vendors, and make sure you're not texting your florist on your wedding morning. For a micro wedding, a coordinator is arguably more valuable because there's less room for things to go unnoticed.

What About Traditions?

Going small doesn't mean skipping traditions. Here's how to keep what matters:

  • Tea ceremony: Works beautifully with a small group. In fact, it's even more meaningful when it's truly just family in the room.
  • Guo da li (过大礼): Completely separate from guest count. Do the full exchange — your micro wedding has nothing to do with the betrothal gifts.
  • Gate crash: With fewer groomsmen and bridesmaids, make the games harder. Quality over quantity applies to wedding games too.
  • March-in: Absolutely still do this. Walking into a room of 30 people who genuinely love you is actually more emotional than a 300-person ballroom.

The Bottom Line

A micro wedding isn't about spending less or doing less. It's about doing better — better food, better conversations, better memories, better use of your money and your energy.

In a city where wedding culture can sometimes feel like a competition of table counts and banquet tiers, choosing to go small is quietly radical. It says: we know what matters to us, and we're building our celebration around that.

And honestly? That's the most romantic thing you can do.


Planning a micro wedding in Singapore and need venue recommendations tailored to your style? Browse our complete venue guide or check out our wedding budget breakdown for detailed cost planning.

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