Why Fredericton is a great wedding city
Fredericton is small enough that all your vendors will likely know each other, big enough to have real depth in venue and vendor options, and beautiful enough that the photos do the heavy lifting on aesthetic. The Saint John River runs through downtown, Victorian architecture lines the historic streets, and the fall foliage in September and October is some of the best in Canada.
The wedding industry here is small but tight. Photographers, MUAs, florists, planners — most people who work weddings know each other, recommend each other, and have seen each other under pressure. That ecosystem benefits brides.
The marriage license process in New Brunswick
To get married in New Brunswick:
- Both parties apply in person at Service New Brunswick or online via the SNB portal
- Marriage license currently costs $137 (subject to change — check SNB)
- You can apply up to 3 months before the wedding
- You must apply at least 5 business days before the wedding
- Both parties need government-issued ID and birth certificates
- The license is valid for 90 days from issue
Have your officiant chosen before you apply. They sign and return the license after the ceremony.
The wedding season in Fredericton
Most outdoor and venue weddings in Fredericton happen between late May and early October. The breakdown:
- Mid-May to late June: Spring beauty, lower humidity, lilacs and apple blossoms peak. Weather is variable.
- July: Warm, sometimes humid. Most consistent weather but high mosquito season for outdoor.
- August: Peak wedding month. Warm, often humid, longest days. Most outdoor weddings happen here.
- September: Peak fall wedding month. Cooler, golden light, beginning of foliage. Many consider it the best wedding month.
- October: Foliage colour peak. Cooler, sometimes wet, but stunning visually. Indoor receptions essential.
- November-April: Off-season. Indoor weddings only. Easier to book vendors. Beautiful for couples wanting winter aesthetics.
Weather realities
- August humidity hovers 70-80% — affects makeup, hair, dress comfort
- September can have unexpected rain — outdoor weddings need contingency plans
- October frost arrives mid-month most years
- Winter weddings (Dec-Feb) are gorgeous photographically but logistically tougher
Venue types in and around Fredericton
Hotel venues
- Crowne Plaza Fredericton (Lord Beaverbrook): Riverside, classic, downtown-central
- Delta Hotels Fredericton: Modern, riverfront, large reception spaces
- Hilton Garden Inn Fredericton: Newer, polished, near the airport
- The Garrison Inn: Boutique, historic, intimate weddings
Outdoor and rural venues
- Hartt Island Resort: Riverside, waterfront ceremony spaces
- Mactaquac Provincial Park: Natural settings, lakeside ceremonies
- Various private estates and barns in the surrounding rural area — Burton, Kingsclear, Stanley
Historic and unique venues
- Government House: Historic estate, formal aesthetic
- King's Landing Historical Settlement: Recreated 19th-century village, unique backdrop
- The Fredericton Convention Centre: Larger weddings, downtown
See the venues guide for detailed breakdowns.
The vendor ecosystem
Fredericton has roughly 8-12 working bridal MUAs at any time, 15-20 wedding photographers, similar numbers of florists, and a strong officiant pool. The market is small enough that:
- Top vendors fill peak Saturdays 12-14 months out
- Most vendors will refer to each other when booked
- The same names appear across multiple weddings in a season
- Reviews and referrals carry significant weight
Pricing realities for Fredericton weddings
Average wedding budget in Atlantic Canada sits at $25,000-$45,000 for a 60-100 guest wedding. Roughly:
- Venue + catering: $12,000-$22,000
- Photography: $3,500-$6,500
- Attire (dress, suits, accessories): $2,500-$5,500
- Flowers and decor: $2,500-$5,000
- Music/DJ/band: $1,500-$3,500
- Bridal hair and makeup: $700-$1,500
- Officiant, rings, transport, miscellaneous: remainder
What's special about Fredericton weddings
- Walkable downtown. Ceremony at Government House, photos along the river, reception at a downtown hotel — all within blocks.
- River and trail backdrops. The Saint John River, the trails along the riverfront, the historic green spaces all photograph beautifully.
- Year-round options. Some of the loveliest weddings are mid-winter at historic venues with snow as backdrop.
- Small-town hospitality. Vendors actually communicate with each other. Coordination feels less chaotic than larger-city weddings.
Tips for out-of-town brides
If you're returning to Fredericton for a wedding from elsewhere in Canada:
- Plan a long-weekend visit 6-8 months out for vendor meetings
- Use a local planner for coordination if your wedding is large
- Hotel block bookings — most hotels do 10+ room blocks happily
- Welcome bags reference local — chocolate from Ganong, maple from local producers
The honest downsides
Things to know:
- Limited high-end florist options compared to larger cities — book early
- Live band selection is smaller — most weddings use DJs
- Specialty rental items (specialty linens, unique furniture) may need to come from Moncton or Halifax
- Weather contingency required for outdoor weddings — Fredericton weather is genuine variable
"Fredericton weddings have a specific magic — small enough that everyone is genuinely paying attention, big enough to give you real choice. The brides who plan with the city's pace, not against it, end up with weddings that feel uniquely Atlantic."
Where to start
- Pick a date and season
- Book the venue (this anchors everything)
- Book the photographer and MUA in the same week (both fill fast)
- Officiant, flowers, music in the following month
- Smaller details across the year
- Marriage license 3 months before the wedding
The short version
Peak season May-October. Marriage license from Service NB, 5 business days notice. Venue options from riverfront resorts to downtown hotels to historic estates. Tight vendor ecosystem where everyone knows everyone. Book early for peak Saturdays. Plan for weather contingency. Embrace what makes the city specific.