American couple at destination wedding abroad
← Journal·May 2, 2026·11 min read

Where to Get Married Abroad: The 2026 Guide for American Couples

Mexico still dominates the numbers, but the couples producing the most extraordinary wedding photographs are going somewhere else. Here is where — and why.

I photograph destination weddings for a living. I travel internationally for them. And every year, the most visually extraordinary weddings I shoot are in the places that do not appear on the first page of a Google search for "destination wedding ideas."

Mexico and the Caribbean are excellent choices for many couples — I am not going to pretend otherwise. The logistics are sound, the resorts are experienced, and the all-inclusive model removes a significant amount of planning complexity. But if what you are after is photographs that look genuinely unlike anything you have seen on Pinterest, the conversation has to go further.

Here is where I have photographed, what the light does in each place, and what American couples specifically need to know before they book.

Mexico — Why It Dominates (and Its Limits)

Direct flights from virtually every major American city to Cancún, Los Cabos, and Puerto Vallarta run daily and inexpensively. The resort infrastructure is extraordinary: dedicated wedding coordinators, established vendor networks, all-inclusive packages that keep guest costs predictable. For couples whose primary concern is logistical simplicity and guest accessibility, Mexico is a rational choice.

The photography is where I want to be honest. Resort beach weddings in the Riviera Maya produce a very specific kind of image: warm, blue water, white sand, sunset light. That image is beautiful. It is also the same image produced at a hundred other resort weddings that weekend. If you want photographs that are specifically, uniquely yours, the resort beach is a starting point rather than a destination.

The exception is the Yucatán interior: the cenotes, the colonial architecture of Mérida, and the Maya ruins. These environments produce genuinely extraordinary photographs — and they are available to couples willing to move forty minutes from the coast. If you are marrying in Mexico, spend at least half your portrait time away from the resort property.

Los Cabos, at the tip of Baja California, offers a dramatically different visual environment: desert landscape, dramatic rock formations, Pacific light that is harder and more dramatic than the Caribbean side. Photographically it is more interesting. Logistically it is equally accessible from the US West Coast and Southwest.

Colombia — The Place Couples Are Discovering

For American couples, Colombia has become accessible in a way it simply was not a decade ago. Direct flights from Miami, New York, and Houston to Bogotá and Medellín run daily on American, Avianca, and Copa. The flight from Miami to Medellín is three hours — shorter than flying from New York to Los Cabos.

Medellín is where I spend most of my working life, and I will tell you plainly: the light here is the best I have found anywhere in the world. Altitude, equatorial sun angle, mountain-reflected evening warmth — the combination produces imagery that feels like it was shot on a film set. The haciendas and fincas outside the city are breathtaking. The flowers, for which Colombia is the world's second-largest exporter, are extraordinary and affordable. The food is exceptional.

Cartagena's Walled City offers a completely different visual vocabulary: colonial architecture, bougainvillea, Caribbean light bouncing off 500-year-old stone walls. For couples who want something visually specific and distinctive, Cartagena produces some of the most striking wedding images in the Americas.

The dollar goes significantly further in Colombia than in Mexico, Italy, or Spain. The wedding vendor infrastructure in Medellín and Cartagena is fully developed for international couples. The US Department of State's current travel advisories should be reviewed — specific regions carry elevated risk, while Medellín, Cartagena, and Bogotá's tourist districts are routinely visited safely by American travelers.

Italy — Why It Remains the Benchmark

There is a reason Italy hosts more destination weddings than almost any other country: it delivers on the promise consistently. Tuscany's October light, the Amalfi Coast's vertiginous drama, Lake Como's manicured elegance, the architectural richness of Rome and Venice — every one of these environments has a quality that rewards a skilled photographer in a way that resort settings simply do not.

For American couples, the logistics are more involved than Mexico: transatlantic flights from East Coast cities run direct, but from the Midwest or West Coast expect connections. Most American couples complete the US legal marriage before or after the Italian ceremony, which is operationally simpler than Italian civil registration. Budget at a premium: Italy is meaningfully more expensive than Latin American destinations across every vendor category.

The return on that investment, photographically, is significant. If you want images that you will print large and display for the rest of your life, Italy delivers that more reliably than almost anywhere else.

Spain — Italy's More Accessible Cousin

Spain is emerging as the fastest-growing destination wedding country in Europe for good reason: comparable architectural beauty to Italy, a slightly more relaxed legal process for symbolic ceremonies, and in many regions a lower vendor cost structure. Andalusia — Seville, Granada, Ronda — offers Moorish architecture that is completely unlike anything in Italy: azulejo tiles, internal courtyards, geometric shadow patterns that are extraordinary to photograph. The Basque Country around San Sebastián offers a completely different aesthetic: dramatic Atlantic coastline, green Pyrenean foothills, one of the best food cultures in the world.

Spanish golden hour light in September and October has a particular quality — warm, long, and horizontal in a way that makes portrait photography almost effortless. If you are choosing between Italy and Spain primarily for the photographs, the answer depends entirely on the visual aesthetic you are drawn to. Both deliver.

Greece — The Rising Alternative to Italy

According to industry data, Greece has seen the fastest year-over-year growth in destination wedding bookings among American couples since 2022. Santorini is the obvious reference point — the caldera views, the whitewashed buildings, the sunset from Oia — and it is genuinely as beautiful as it looks in photographs. The challenge is that it also looks exactly like it does in every other photograph from Santorini. For couples who want something more specific to them, Crete, Paros, and the Peloponnese offer extraordinary settings with significantly less visual saturation in the wedding market.

The light in Greece in late September and October is some of the most beautiful I have encountered in Mediterranean Europe: clean, directional, and with a particular clarity that comes from the combination of altitude and sea air. Photography in Santorini specifically requires significant advance planning — the popular viewpoints are crowded from April through October, and portrait sessions need to be timed carefully around both sunset crowds and fading light.

Portugal — The Smart Choice in 2026

Portugal offers everything that draws American couples to Europe — old stone, exceptional food, warm and directional light — at a meaningfully lower cost than Italy or France, and with a legal marriage process that is among the more straightforward in the EU. The Douro Valley wine region in the north rivals Tuscany visually, with steep terraced vineyards above the river and a quality of harvest-season light in October that is extraordinary. The Alentejo region offers vast cork and olive landscapes with hilltop villages that feel completely unchanged from centuries ago.

Direct flights from New York (JFK) to Lisbon run daily on TAP Air Portugal. The flight is seven hours — shorter than flights to Rome or Athens. From other US cities, connections through Lisbon or Madrid keep the journey manageable. For American couples who have been considering Italy but are concerned about cost or logistical complexity, Portugal is the answer worth looking at seriously.

What I Tell Every Couple Who Asks

Choose the destination the way you would choose a collaborator: based on whether their particular quality — their light, their architecture, their culture — aligns with what you want to feel in the photographs. Not what looks good in a search result, but what will feel true when you are sixty, showing these images to people you love.

The best destination wedding photographs are the ones that could not have been taken anywhere else. That specificity does not happen by accident. It happens because you chose the right place, at the right time of year, with the right person behind the camera.

Start with that intention. The logistics will follow.

Arman

Destination Wedding Photographer

Medellín · Vancouver · Worldwide

If something here resonated, I would love to hear about your wedding.