Brits Reveal Their Biggest Wedding Disasters
Married Brits have been describing their nightmare wedding days – with one couple revealing their big day was ruined when the Bride's father suffered a stroke and was rushed away in an ambulance. One bride was shocked when their ex arrived at the ceremony uninvited, while another respondent said the DJ played 'You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' to 'celebrate' their first dance.
Thirty per cent of married Brits said something went wrong on their wedding day and almost four in 10 would like to do their whole wedding day again – so they could do it better.
Commissioned by Barclays and conducted by OnePoll, the research of 2,000 married UK adults found 36 per cent blame poor financial planning for their wedding nightmares.
Clare Francis, Savings and Investments Director at Barclays, said: "Although key events such as weddings, honeymoons and special holidays abroad are often ruined by unforeseen occurrences, our research has shown that poor financial planning is also to blame.
"We recommend that savers plan well in advance for key events, and that they're realistic about how much they can afford.
"Consumers need to stay in control of their money to not only avoid compromising what should be a joyous event, but to also avoid leaving themselves in long-term financial debt."
The choice of venue is the number one thing Brits would change about their big day if they could do it all over again – followed by being able to spend more on it and getting hitched abroad. One respondent said their wedding was tarnished when the church bells didn't ring, while another said the organist had a stroke during the ceremony.
Almost half of those polled said their wedding proposals weren't what they'd expected – with one female respondent admitting they were proposed to at the top of a multi-storey car park. And a fifth of Brits admit their honeymoon wasn't what they hoped for – with a quarter blaming it on their hotel and 24 per cent attributing it to their partner falling ill.
While a fifth regret spending so much on their wedding and wish they'd put some of it aside for their retirement. A third of married 25-34 year-olds wished they'd put some of their savings towards a house deposit instead of using it all for their wedding.
TOP 10 EVENTS MARRIED BRITS WOULD MOST LIKE TO DO AGAIN:
Wedding day
Seeing the birth of their first child
First journey abroad
21st Birthday
First kiss
University
First watch of Star Wars and Lord of the Rings
First trip to Disneyland
Last day at school
Passing their driving test
Did you have any disasters on your wedding day? Let us know on Twitter @theladymagazine