By Guest Count
Classic Weddings (50–150)
A classic wedding of 50–150 guests is the most common royal-wedding scale. MyTripMyTravel matches it to palace hotels or heritage estates with full multi-event choreography across the wedding days, room-block management, and convoy. Specifics confirmed by the weddings wing.
50–150 guests is the classic band — large enough for the full sequence of mehndi, sangeet, ceremony, and reception, small enough that a palace hotel or heritage estate can host it without buyout-scale complexity.
The defining work is multi-event choreography. Across two to four days, each function has its own setup, decor, timing, and guest flow, and the production sequences them so transitions are seamless and the venue resets invisibly between events.
Accommodation is a coordinated room block at a single property or tight cluster, with arrival manifests, key pre-allocation, and luggage operations so a 120-person check-in is not a bottleneck.
A fleet convoy handles guest movement between accommodation and event venues, and decor and dining are curated per function through the heritage-dining wing — different registers for the sangeet and the reception, not one repeated setup.
The whole multi-day production runs under a single accountable lead with a documented run-of-show and formal contingency, so the family moves through their own wedding rather than managing it.
The Detail
Palace hotels or heritage estates — full sequence without buyout-scale complexity.
Mehndi/sangeet/ceremony/reception choreographed with invisible venue resets.
Coordinated room block, manifests, key pre-allocation, luggage operations.
Fleet convoy for accommodation↔venue guest movement.
Curated per function via heritage-dining wing — distinct registers, not one setup.
Single lead, documented run-of-show, formal contingency.
Intelligence
CLASSIC WEDDINGS (50–150) FAQWhat venue suits 100 wedding guests?
A palace hotel or heritage estate — the classic 50–150 band — which hosts the full mehndi-to-reception sequence without buyout-scale complexity.
How are multiple wedding functions handled?
Through multi-event choreography: each function has its own setup, decor, and timing, with the venue resetting invisibly between events across the wedding days.
How is a 120-person check-in managed?
Coordinated room blocks with arrival manifests, pre-allocated keys, and luggage operations so it is not a lobby bottleneck.
Is dining the same across functions?
No — decor and dining are curated per function (the sangeet and reception are distinct registers), not one repeated setup, through the heritage-dining wing.
