Muslim · Ceremony · Guide · Updated 5 May 2026
The complete Muslim wedding ceremony guide
A Muslim wedding runs on a rhythm you cannot rush. This guide covers the full ceremony sequence, what each ritual means, how long each takes, and the photography and planning choices that either honour the moment or ruin it.

Ritual order
A Muslim wedding traditionally runs across 2–4 days with these anchor rituals: Mehndi, Nikah, Walima. Each has a specific meaning — miss the order and the family notices immediately.
The single most important moment to preserve is the Qubool Hai and signing of the Nikah Nama.
Attire and styling
Traditional attire: gharara or lehenga in jewel tones, sherwani with a stole. Jewellery follows the culture — heavy for Punjabi and Gujarati, temple gold for South Indian, minimal and elegant for Malayali.
Music and soundscape
The soundscape of a Muslim wedding is qawwali and dhol. Live musicians for the ceremony, DJ for the reception — never blend them.
Photography moments not to miss
Mehndi, Nikah, Walima — every one of these is a portrait moment. The Qubool Hai and signing of the Nikah Nama is the frame that goes in the family album for generations.
Frequently asked
How long does a Muslim ceremony take?
The main ceremony runs 90 minutes to 3 hours. Full sequence across 2–4 days.
Can non-Muslim guests participate?
Yes — brief them on shoes off, no meat/alcohol in temple/gurdwara/mosque areas, and dress modestly.