The short answer: what does bridal makeup cost in the UK?
In 2026, bridal makeup in the UK (for the bride alone, on the wedding day) costs roughly £150 to £600. That is a wide range, and it is intentional: the price reflects the artist's experience, your location, travel requirements, and whether a trial is included.
Here's what the range looks like split by region:
| Region | Bride (wedding day only) | Trial (separate) |
|---|---|---|
| London (central) | £250 – £600 | £120 – £200 |
| South East England | £200 – £450 | £100 – £175 |
| Midlands & North | £150 – £350 | £75 – £150 |
| North East UK | £150 – £320 | £75 – £130 |
| Scotland | £175 – £375 | £80 – £160 |
| Europe / Destination | From £1,199 | Varies |
These are the realistic ranges for a competent, experienced, portfolio-backed makeup artist. You can find cheaper on Instagram or wedding Facebook groups, but you are taking a risk on the most photographed day of your life. More on that below.
Gessica Freire is currently offering a heavily discounted £49 bridal trial for new clients in the North East UK (Newcastle, Durham, Sunderland, Middlesbrough, Leeds). The £49 is credited back in full when you book your wedding package. See full details and book →
What you are actually paying for
A bridal makeup quote is not just "a face of makeup." Here is what the price should cover:
- Professional product kit: High-performance foundations, concealers, and setting products that photograph correctly and last 12+ hours. A professional kit costs thousands of pounds to maintain.
- Skin preparation: Any good bridal artist spends meaningful time on skincare prep before any colour product touches your face. This is part of what makes the difference between makeup that photographs beautifully and makeup that doesn't.
- Time: Bridal makeup should never be rushed. Expect 60–90 minutes for the bride alone. An artist who books back-to-back at 45 minutes per person is cutting corners.
- Experience: A makeup artist who has worked on 200+ brides has seen skin conditions, lighting, heat, nervous brides, time pressure, and tight schedules. That is what you are buying.
- Travel: Most artists include travel within a certain radius and charge mileage or a flat travel fee beyond that. Make sure you know exactly what's in and out of your quote.
- Insurance and hygiene standards: A professional artist has public liability insurance and works to strict hygiene standards. This matters more than most brides realise.
Does the trial cost extra?
Almost always yes, and it should be. A trial is a full session in its own right, not a quick peek at a few products. It typically runs 1.5 to 2 hours and uses the same products as your wedding day. The trial is where you discover what works and what doesn't, before it matters.
Common trial pricing approaches:
- Separate flat fee: The most common. You pay for the trial upfront, and it is entirely separate from the wedding-day booking. Trials typically run £75–£200.
- Trial fee credited back: Some artists (including Gessica Freire) deduct the trial cost from your total when you proceed to book the full wedding package. This is the most bride-friendly model.
- Trial included in the package: Less common. Where this is offered, the total package price is often higher to reflect it. Verify exactly what "included" means.
- No trial option: A serious red flag. Any artist who does not offer or recommend a trial is not thinking about your best interest.
Walk away. There is no responsible bridal makeup artist who does not believe in trials. A trial protects you and it protects the artist. If a cheap artist is not offering one, they are either too busy to care or not experienced enough to understand why it matters.
What affects the price?
1. Location and travel
London prices are higher because London overheads are higher and demand is greater. If you're in the North East, the Midlands, or Scotland, you will generally pay less, but the range of quality is broader too. A higher price in your region often signals someone whose work is in demand.
Travel cost structures vary widely. Watch out for:
- A per-mile charge on top of the quoted price (can add £40–£120 for rural venues)
- Early-morning surcharges (common if the wedding day starts before 7am)
- Overnight accommodation requirements for destination or very early starts
2. The artist's experience level
There is a meaningful difference in skill between an artist with 20 weddings under their belt and one with 200+. The more experienced artist has handled sweat, tears, humidity, camera flashes, anxious bridesmaids, and difficult lighting. Their pricing reflects that. If you want a specific artist whose work you've followed on Instagram, book early and expect to pay their rate.
3. Bridal party size
Bridesmaids, mothers of the bride and groom, and flower girls all add to the total. Typical per-person rates for bridesmaids run £80–£150, and for mothers, slightly more due to greater skincare complexity. Be realistic about how many people need professional makeup and factor this into your overall budget early.
4. Complexity of your look
A soft, natural makeup look and a full-glam editorial bridal look take different amounts of time and different levels of product. If your inspiration images lean heavily editorial or dramatic, discuss this in your trial — some artists charge slightly more for high-complexity looks.
5. Destination and travel
If you are getting married abroad, expect to pay significantly more. Not because the makeup itself changes, but because you are also covering the artist's flights, accommodation, and time away from other bookings. UK-based destination wedding packages typically start from £1,199 for the bride, before travel costs are added.
How to compare quotes fairly
When you're looking at two or three quotes side by side, it's tempting to go straight to the bottom line. Before you do, make sure you're comparing the same thing. Ask each artist:
- Is the trial included, or is it quoted separately?
- What travel costs will apply to my venue?
- How many weddings have you done as lead artist?
- Can I see the full-day timeline you'd recommend for my party size?
- What products do you use, and are they long-wear and camera-ready?
- Are you fully booked as lead artist, or might you send an assistant?
That last point matters more than people realise. Some agencies and studios book you in under a senior name but dispatch a junior artist on the day. If you're booking a named artist, put it in writing that that specific artist will be there on your wedding day.
Gessica Freire is currently offering a limited-availability £49 bridal trial for new North East UK brides. The fee is credited back in full when you book your wedding package. If you don't love the result, you don't pay a penny.
Book the £49 trial →What does "cheap" actually cost you?
A £100 makeup artist might be perfectly skilled. But before you choose on price alone, ask yourself what you are giving up. With a less experienced or lower-priced artist, you are more likely to encounter:
- Products that don't last through a long day and evening
- Makeup that looks good in person but photographs differently under flash
- A rushed morning if they've over-booked
- No insurance or hygiene protocol in place
- Difficulty handling last-minute changes or unexpected skin issues
None of these things will ruin your wedding — but they may affect how you feel in your photos for the rest of your life. The makeup in those photographs is permanent. The saving is temporary.
If budget is a real constraint, consider: fewer bridesmaids with professional makeup (the bride always takes priority), booking your artist earlier in the week when rates may be lower, or looking for a talented newer artist whose portfolio you love but whose pricing hasn't caught up with their skill yet. A good portfolio is a more reliable signal than a price point.
Questions to ask before you book
- ✓Have you seen their actual bridal work — full wedding-day coverage, not just portrait shots?
- ✓Have you read recent reviews specifically mentioning the wedding day, not just events?
- ✓Is the quoted artist the one who will be there on the day?
- ✓Are travel costs included or extra?
- ✓Is the trial fee deducted from your total?
- ✓Do they have public liability insurance?
- ✓What is their cancellation and illness policy?
- ✓Have they worked at your venue or a similar one before?
Summary: what should you budget in 2026?
Here's a realistic planning guide based on typical UK weddings in 2026:
| Budget item | Typical UK cost |
|---|---|
| Bridal makeup trial | £75 – £200 |
| Bride — wedding day makeup | £150 – £600 |
| Bridesmaid (per person) | £80 – £150 |
| Mother of the bride/groom | £100 – £175 |
| Flower girl (if applicable) | £40 – £75 |
| Travel (rural / outside radius) | £20 – £120 |
| Destination wedding package (bride) | From £1,199 + travel |
For a typical UK wedding (bride + 3 bridesmaids, within 30 miles of the artist), budget £400–£900 for the wedding day and £75–£200 for the trial. This is not the place to save aggressively — it's one of the most captured moments of your life.
New North East brides can book a full bridal trial with Gessica for just £49, credited back in full when you book the wedding package. If you don't love the result, you don't pay a thing.
Reserve my trial →