Costa Rica Wedding Planning Guide: Beachfront Villas, Budget & Legal Requirements (2026)

Quick Navigation
- Seasonal Guide: When to Go
- Best Regions for Your Costa Rica Wedding
- What a Costa Rica Wedding Actually Costs
- The WedStay Costa Rica Properties
- Unique Costa Rica Wedding Elements
- The Legal Requirements (Surprisingly Simple)
- The Wedding Weekend Itinerary
title: "Costa Rica Wedding Planning Guide: Beachfront Villas, Budget & Legal Requirements (2026)"
meta_description: "Plan your Costa Rica wedding with this complete guide. Legal requirements, 4 beachfront villa venues with real pricing, seasonal tips, and a full destination wedding weekend itinerary."
tags: ["Destination Weddings", "Wedding Planning", "venue pricing", "Wedding Tips", "Featured Wedding Venues"]
I need to share something with you, and I promise it's going to change how you think about destination weddings entirely.
Last year, I coordinated a celebration at a private beachfront estate in Costa Rica. Forty-four guests, four days, howler monkeys providing the morning alarm clock. The couple had originally been planning a ballroom wedding in Manhattan that was going to cost them north of $80,000. Their Costa Rica celebration? Under $30,000, and honestly, it was one of the most stunning events I've ever been part of.
Here's what gets me about Costa Rica: it's one of those rare places where a $15,000 wedding genuinely feels like a $50,000 one. The tropical florals are abundant and affordable. The sunsets are absurdly photogenic (no filter required, I promise). And the sense of adventure, this collective "we're all doing something extraordinary together" energy, transforms a standard wedding into an experience your guests will reference for years.
I've planned destination celebrations across three continents, and Costa Rica consistently delivers the highest value-to-experience ratio I've seen. So let me walk you through everything, from the legal paperwork to the perfect itinerary, with the kind of specific detail that other guides conveniently leave out.
The Legal Requirements (Surprisingly Simple)
Okay, here's the part that terrifies most couples about international weddings, and where Costa Rica immediately sets itself apart. Getting legally married here is remarkably straightforward compared to, say, Italy or France (trust me, I have stories about French bureaucracy that would make you cry).
What you actually need:
- Valid passports for both partners (not expiring within 6 months)
- Apostilled birth certificates translated into Spanish by an authorized translator
- A sworn statement confirming you're both legally free to marry
- Two witnesses (your guests count, obviously)
The ceremony is performed by a notary public, which sounds unromantic until you realize this means you can get married literally anywhere, on the beach at sunset, in a jungle clearing, by the pool at your villa. No church requirement. No government office visit. The notary comes to you.
Same-sex marriages have been legal in Costa Rica since May 2020, making it one of the most progressive countries in Central America for LGBTQ+ couples. This matters, and I'm genuinely proud to recommend it for this reason.
The notary handles all the Civil Registry paperwork after the ceremony. Your marriage certificate gets registered officially, and it's recognized internationally, including in the US, Canada, and throughout Europe. Most couples work with a local wedding planner who coordinates the notary, which typically costs $500 to $800 for the legal ceremony portion.
Timeline tip: Start your paperwork at least 90 days before your wedding date. The apostille process alone can take 4 to 6 weeks depending on your home state or country.
Best Regions for Your Costa Rica Wedding
Not all Costa Rica is created equal when it comes to celebrations, and choosing the right region matters more than most guides let on.
Guanacaste Province (Northwest Pacific)
This is where most destination weddings happen, and for good reason. Guanacaste is the driest province in the country, with a true dry season running December through April. The landscape here is more golden savanna meets pristine coastline, think dramatic sunsets over the Pacific rather than dense jungle. The Liberia airport (LIR) puts guests just 30 to 45 minutes from most Guanacaste venues instead of the 4-hour drive from San Jose.
The Nicoya Peninsula
Quieter, less developed, and absolutely breathtaking. Beach towns like Playa Carrillo and Santa Teresa attract couples who want that "undiscovered paradise" feeling. The roads can be challenging (I'm being diplomatic), but the payoff is worth every unpaved mile.
Central Pacific Coast (Playa Hermosa, Jaco)
Where most of the WedStay Costa Rica properties are concentrated, and with good reason. The Central Pacific strikes a balance between accessibility (under 2 hours from San Jose airport) and authentic tropical atmosphere. Playa Hermosa is guard-gated, gorgeous, and far enough from the tourist buzz to feel private.
Caribbean Side (Limon Province)
Completely different vibe. Reggae culture, Afro-Caribbean cuisine, wilder beaches. The weather pattern is actually opposite to the Pacific coast, which means Caribbean dry season runs September through October and February through March. Ideal for couples who want something totally unexpected.
What a Costa Rica Wedding Actually Costs
Let me give you real numbers, because vague "budget-friendly" promises help nobody.
Venue/Accommodation (the biggest variable):
A private villa through WedStay ranges from $7,500 to $12,500 for a 2-night minimum, and that includes exclusive use of the entire property plus accommodations for 13 to 44 guests. Compare that to a resort wedding package in Mexico or the Caribbean, which often starts at $15,000 before you've fed a single person.
Catering:
Local Costa Rican catering runs $35 to $75 per person, depending on whether you're doing passed appetizers on the beach or a full plated dinner. Imported ingredients (think specific wines, specialty cheeses) push costs up significantly. My advice? Lean into the local cuisine. Ceviche stations, tropical fruit displays, fresh-caught fish. Your guests will love it, and your budget will thank you.
Florals:
This is where Costa Rica truly shines. Tropical flowers (heliconias, orchids, birds of paradise, anthurium) are locally grown and wildly affordable. A full floral package that would cost $5,000 to $8,000 in the US typically runs $1,500 to $3,000 here. Let the landscape do the work, darlings.
Photography:
Quality destination wedding photographers in Costa Rica charge $2,500 to $5,000. Many are expats from the US or Europe who know both the light and the logistics.
Flights:
Direct flights from major US cities to San Jose (SJO) or Liberia (LIR) typically run $350 to $600 round trip. From the East Coast, expect the higher end. West Coast often gets better deals.
Guest accommodations:
Beyond your villa, nearby hotels and rentals for overflow guests run $80 to $200 per night. Many areas have a range of options within a short drive.
💰 Real Budget Breakdown: 50-Guest Costa Rica WeddingVilla venue (2-night minimum): $8,000Catering + bar (50 guests): $3,500Florals: $2,000Photographer: $3,000Wedding planner + legal fees: $2,500Decor + rentals: $1,500Music/entertainment: $1,000Total: approximately $21,500
That same wedding in a US ballroom? You're looking at $45,000 to $60,000 minimum.
The WedStay Costa Rica Properties
Here's where it gets exciting. Four properties, each with a completely different personality. I've studied these extensively, and I want to give you the insider perspective on what makes each one work.
Jungle Wedding Villa, Playa Carrillo
This property made me catch my breath the first time I saw the photos. Forty-four guests sleeping on site, capacity for 150 at events, and the pièce de résistance: a rooftop deck with four bars and sweeping views of the jungle canopy meeting the Pacific Ocean.
This 44-guest jungle villa starts at $8,000 for a 2-night minimum. For a property that sleeps 44 people and hosts 150, the math is extraordinary. That's under $200 per overnight guest for two nights in a private jungle estate.
My take: Best for larger celebrations where you want everyone under one roof. The rooftop setup is essentially a built-in reception venue. The Playa Carrillo location on the Nicoya Peninsula means quieter beaches and that authentic "off the beaten path" feeling. Just factor in that the drive from Liberia airport is about 3 hours, so definitely arrange shuttle transfers.
Beachfront Estate, Playa Hermosa
I wrote an entire feature on this property because it genuinely impressed me. Thirteen guests on site, but capacity for 100 at events. Walk-out beach access (not "10-minute walk through resort grounds" access, actual sand-between-your-toes access), infinity pool overlooking the Pacific, and a guard-gated community that provides security without isolation.
This beachfront estate starts at $7,500 for a 2-night minimum. The Central Pacific location means you're under 2 hours from San Jose airport, which your guests will appreciate enormously.
My take: Best for couples who want the beachfront ceremony experience without sacrificing convenience. The Hermosa Palms community includes a beach club with oceanfront pool, which gives you flexible space for welcome cocktails, morning-after brunches, really the entire wedding weekend programming.
Rare Beachfront Sister Villas
Now this is interesting. Two connected villas that together sleep 32 guests, with event capacity for 100. The "sister villa" concept means you can dedicate one villa to the bridal party and one to the groom's side (or however you want to divide it), while still sharing the celebration spaces.
These beachfront sister villas start at $12,500 for a 2-night minimum. Yes, it's the highest price point, but you're getting two full properties and accommodations for 32 people. Per person, that's under $400 for two nights of beachfront luxury with exclusive use of the entire compound.
My take: Best for mid-size weddings where most guests staying on site matters to you. The dual-villa setup is a logistical gift, separate getting-ready spaces, separate morning routines, then everyone converges for the ceremony. Very European in its approach, and I mean that as the highest compliment.
Lux Villa with Pool, Playa Hermosa
Fifteen guests on site, 100 at events, and that classic infinity pool setup where the water seems to dissolve into the Pacific horizon. This property is what most people picture when they imagine "Costa Rica villa wedding."
This luxury pool villa starts at $7,500 for a 2-night minimum. Similar location to the Beachfront Estate, same Playa Hermosa area, similar accessibility.
My take: Best for intimate celebrations where the venue itself becomes the visual centerpiece. That pool is going to dominate your wedding photos in the best possible way. If you're planning a sunset ceremony with cocktails flowing directly into a poolside reception, this is your property.
The Wedding Weekend Itinerary
After coordinating hundreds of multi-day celebrations, I've found that four days is the sweet spot for a destination wedding. Enough time to decompress, bond, and celebrate without exhausting everyone's vacation days.
Day 1 (Thursday): Arrival + Beach Sunset Welcome
Guests arrive throughout the day. Keep it low-pressure. Set up a casual welcome station at the villa with local beer, tropical snacks, and a "survival kit" (sunscreen, bug spray, local SIM card info). Evening: sunset gathering on the beach or pool deck. No structure, just togetherness. Ceviche and cocktails.
Day 2 (Friday): Adventure Activity
This is what makes Costa Rica weddings different from every other destination. Morning: zip-lining through the canopy, waterfall hike, surfing lessons, or a boat tour. Afternoon: recovery time at the pool. Evening: rehearsal dinner at a local restaurant (many can accommodate groups of 30 to 50 at incredible price points).
Day 3 (Saturday): The Main Event
Morning: spa services at the villa (many local aestheticians will come to you). Late afternoon: ceremony as the light turns golden. Reception flows from cocktail hour by the pool into dinner and dancing. The beauty of a private villa is there's no curfew, no noise ordinance, no hotel manager knocking on your door at 10 PM.
Day 4 (Sunday): Farewell Brunch
Late morning brunch at the villa. Gallo pinto (the national breakfast dish, rice and beans done right), fresh tropical fruits, strong Costa Rican coffee. Guests depart at their own pace. Some will extend their trip for additional adventure activities, which is exactly the kind of organic vacation extension that destination weddings should inspire.
Guest Travel Logistics
Let's talk airports, because this trips up more couples than almost anything else.
San Jose (SJO) - Juan Santamaria International
The main hub. Most international flights route through here. Located in the Central Valley, it provides access to Central Pacific properties (Playa Hermosa area) in about 1.5 to 2 hours by car.
Liberia (LIR) - Daniel Oduber International
The Pacific coast airport. Smaller, less chaotic, and dramatically closer to Guanacaste and Nicoya Peninsula properties. If your venue is in Playa Carrillo, guests flying into LIR save themselves a 4-hour drive versus flying into San Jose.
What to tell your guests:
Include a travel info card with your invitations. Specify which airport to fly into (this is critical). Arrange group shuttles from the airport, most hotels and villa managers can coordinate this for $40 to $80 per person each way. Remind guests to bring their passport (obvious, but you'd be surprised), and suggest they bring cash in small US bills since tipping in USD is standard and ATMs can be unreliable in beach towns.
⚠️ Important Travel Note
Wedding financing options can help guests manage travel costs. Many couples set up a group flight booking or share a document with recommended flights and shuttle times. The logistics coordinator role (often your wedding planner) is worth every penny for destination weddings.
Seasonal Guide: When to Go
Dry Season (December through April)
Peak wedding season, and for good reason. Expect sunshine, minimal rain, and temperatures in the mid-80s. The downside: higher prices, busier beaches, and limited vendor availability. Book 10 to 12 months ahead if you want dry season dates.
Green Season (May through November)
This is my insider secret, and I share it selectively. Green season means brief afternoon showers (usually 1 to 2 hours, typically between 2 and 4 PM), followed by spectacular cloud formations and the most photogenic skies you've ever seen. Everything is lush, green, and alive. Prices drop 20 to 40%. Vendor availability opens up. And honestly? Those brief showers rarely affect evening celebrations at all.
The months to genuinely avoid are September and October, when rain can be heavy and sustained. But June, July, and August? Absolutely viable for weddings, especially if you schedule your ceremony for morning or late afternoon.
The Guanacaste advantage: This province's dry season stretches longer than anywhere else in the country. Even into May and early June, Guanacaste stays relatively dry while the rest of Costa Rica gets its first serious rains.
Vendor Recommendations
Finding quality vendors in Costa Rica requires either local connections or a good planner. I'd recommend researching planners who specialize in destination weddings and have a portfolio of properties with lodging for destination celebrations.
Wedding Planners: Look for bilingual planners with experience managing local logistics and vendor contracts in Spanish. The Guanacaste and Central Pacific regions have a growing community of planner-coordinator teams who understand both international couple expectations and local infrastructure realities. Budget $2,000 to $4,000 for full planning services.
Photographers: Costa Rica's expat community includes exceptional photographers who combine international editorial style with local expertise. Look for portfolios featuring diverse lighting conditions (jungle, beach, golden hour, overcast green season). Many offer engagement or "day after" sessions at nearby waterfalls or national parks.
Caterers: The best caterers in Costa Rica blend local ingredients with international technique. Ask about their sourcing (local farms, fresh seafood) and whether they can accommodate dietary restrictions. Tastings can sometimes be arranged virtually if you're planning remotely.
Unique Costa Rica Wedding Elements
This is the part that makes me genuinely excited, because Costa Rica offers things no other destination can replicate.
Tropical florals that look magazine-editorial for a fraction of the cost. Heliconia arrangements, orchid cascading bouquets, bird of paradise centerpieces. These aren't imported, exotic special-orders. They're growing in the garden.
Sunset ceremonies that require zero enhancement. The Pacific coast delivers golden hour like nowhere else. Position your ceremony facing west and the sky becomes your most extravagant decor element.
Wildlife encounters that become wedding weekend stories. Howler monkeys, toucans, iguanas sunning by the pool. Your guests will have photos they never expected to take.
The "pura vida" atmosphere. This phrase means "pure life," and it genuinely permeates everything. The pace slows, people connect, the stress that builds around weddings dissolves into something more relaxed. I've seen the transformation happen dozens of times, and it never gets old.
Eco-friendly options that feel natural, not forced. Costa Rica generates over 98% of its electricity from renewable sources. Sustainable choices here aren't aspirational statements. They're just how things work.
FAQ
Do we need a wedding planner for a Costa Rica wedding?
Strongly recommended. A local planner handles vendor contracts in Spanish, navigates permitting if needed, coordinates the notary for legal ceremonies, and manages logistics that are genuinely difficult to handle remotely. Budget $2,000 to $4,000.
Can we have a legal ceremony and a symbolic one?
Absolutely, and many couples do exactly this. The legal notary ceremony can be intimate (just witnesses), and your larger celebration can be entirely personalized with your own officiant, vows, and structure.
What about bugs and humidity?
Real talk: yes, it's tropical. Bug spray is your friend (the villa likely has some). Humidity is real but manageable, especially in Guanacaste's drier climate. Schedule outdoor events for when breezes pick up in late afternoon and evening.
How far in advance should we book?
For dry season (Dec-Apr): 10 to 12 months minimum. For green season: 6 to 8 months gives you excellent options. For specific high-demand dates (New Year's, Valentine's Day weekend): book as early as possible.
Is Costa Rica safe for wedding guests?
Costa Rica is one of the safest countries in Latin America. Guard-gated villa communities add an extra layer of security. Standard travel precautions apply (don't flash expensive items on public beaches), but overall, safety concerns are minimal. The biggest "danger" is your guests wanting to extend their trip and never leave.
Ready to Find Your Dream Venue?
I know how overwhelming venue hunting can be (trust me, I've been there!). That's why I created this free tool to cut through the confusion:
Try Our Free Wedding Venue Cost Calculator
- Wedding Venue Cost Calculator
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More resources you'll love:
- 10 Things Every Couple Should Talk About After Getting Engaged (Before You Pick the Cake)
- Top 10 Things Couples Look For at Your Property for Their Estate Wedding
- A Private Estate Wedding House Just Outside Nashville—Complete with an Event Barn, Scenic Views, and Room to Celebrate All Weekend Long
Happy planning! 💕