# Wedding Dress Shopping Timeline: A Month-by-Month Countdown

> The 12-to-18 month framework every bride needs: production lead times by designer tier, order cut-off dates, sample-sale windows, rush-order rules, and a step-by-step alteration schedule — focused entirely on the gown, not whole-wedding logistics.

*Published 2026-06-24 · Updated 2026-06-24 · By Eleanor Whitford*

In short
Most brides should begin shopping 12–18 months before their wedding and place a final gown order no later than 8–9 months out — this window covers made-to-order production (4–12 months depending on designer tier), dress delivery, and the 8–10 week alteration schedule that every bespoke gown requires. Designer tier is the single biggest driver of how early you must act: budget off-the-rack styles are same-day, while luxury couture requires up to a full year of production time alone.

The wedding dress has its own timeline logic, separate from every other vendor booking. Caterers, photographers, and venues can often be confirmed six months out with minimal consequence. The dress cannot: a made-to-order gown from a mid-range designer needs 4–6 months of production time before it ever arrives at the salon, and a further 8–10 weeks of alterations before it is ready to wear. Collapse that window and you are paying rush fees, accepting limited size options, or compromising on the gown altogether.

The framework below organizes the dress journey into five phases, with concrete month-by-month checkpoints, designer-tier lead time data, sample-sale windows, and the alteration benchmarks that bridal consultants at salons from [Kleinfeld Bridal](https://kleinfeldbridal.com/blogs/advice/shopping-early-for-wedding-dress) in New York City to Fifi's Bridal in Chicago apply in practice.

## What Does the Full Wedding Dress Shopping Timeline Look Like?

The dress journey spans five distinct phases. The table below maps each phase to a time window and the primary action required. Everything that follows expands on these phases with tier-specific detail.

  Wedding Dress Shopping Timeline: Five-Phase Framework

      Phase
      Months Before Wedding
      Key Action
      Who It Applies To

      1 &mdash; Research & inspiration
      18&ndash;12 months
      Build a style file; set a realistic budget including alterations ($400&ndash;$800)
      All tiers; mandatory for couture

      2 &mdash; Active boutique shopping
      12&ndash;9 months
      Book 2&ndash;3 appointments; attend trunk shows; narrow to a final choice
      All tiers; mid-range and above

      3 &mdash; Order placement
      9&ndash;8 months
      Place the order; sign contract; pay deposit
      Made-to-order designers

      4 &mdash; Dress arrival & accessories
      5&ndash;4 months
      Confirm delivery; inspect the gown; purchase shoes and undergarments for fittings
      All

      5 &mdash; Alterations
      3&ndash;0 months
      Complete 2&ndash;4 fittings; final pickup 1&ndash;2 weeks before the wedding
      All made-to-order gowns

## How Long Does It Take to Make a Wedding Dress, by Designer Tier?

Production lead time is the number most brides underestimate. The designer tier chosen determines not just cost but the minimum runway required before a wedding date. Here is what each tier realistically demands.

**Budget tier ($200&ndash;$1,000):** Brands including Azazie, Lulus, and The Dress Outlet carry ready-to-ship styles in standardized sizes. Off-the-rack orders ship in days to two weeks. Azazie also offers made-to-measure in this price band, which adds 2&ndash;4 weeks. No meaningful production lead time. This tier is the lifeline for brides with under four months until their wedding.

**Mid-range tier ($800&ndash;$3,000):** Designers including Maggie Sottero, Allure Bridals, Morilee, and Stella York (sister label to Essense of Australia) produce made-to-order at volume. Standard production is 4&ndash;6 months from the order date. Stella York offers a paid rush-cut with delivery in 10&ndash;12 weeks. Maggie Sottero has reported availability in as few as 9 weeks for certain priority styles, though fees and style selection are limited. BHLDN (Anthropologie&rsquo;s bridal division) ships many styles within 2&ndash;6 weeks from its ready-to-ship inventory, with custom-order styles requiring 4&ndash;5 months.

**High-end designer tier ($3,500&ndash;$10,000+):** Labels such as Pronovias, Monique Lhuillier, and the Vera Wang Bride collection &mdash; now produced and retailed by David&rsquo;s Bridal beginning spring 2026, with pricing from under $500 to approximately $2,299 &mdash; carry production times of 6&ndash;9 months. The David&rsquo;s Bridal vertical integration of the Vera Wang Bride line is specifically designed to compress lead times at more accessible price points, but the archival styles at $1,699&ndash;$2,299 still require the standard window.

**Luxury couture tier ($10,000&ndash;$25,000+):** Fully custom atelier gowns &mdash; such as those from Vera Wang HAUTE, a separate and independently operated business whose clients have included Ariana Grande, Hailey Bieber, and Kim Kardashian &mdash; require 9&ndash;12 months of production time alone. At this tier, the 18-month start is not a recommendation; it is a requirement. Shopping 12 months out leaves almost no margin if a style decision takes longer than expected or if production runs long.

The Knot&rsquo;s 2026 Real Weddings Study, which surveyed 10,474 U.S. couples married in 2025, found the national average wedding dress spend is approximately $2,100 &mdash; placing most brides squarely in the mid-range to high-end tier and within a 6&ndash;9 month production window. Mid-Atlantic brides averaged $2,200; brides planning international destination weddings averaged $2,900.

## When Should I Start Shopping at Each Stage of the 12-Month Countdown?

**Months 18&ndash;13 &mdash; Research phase.** Gather inspiration via Pinterest boards, designer lookbooks, and bridal magazine editorials. Set a budget that explicitly includes alterations (nationally averaging $150&ndash;$600, broken down as hemming $150&ndash;$400, bodice adjustment $100&ndash;$200, bustle addition $75&ndash;$175) and accessories (veil, shoes, jewelry). One practical note for 2026: tariff pressures on imported gowns have pushed some designer prices up approximately 20%, meaning a gown formerly priced at $2,000 may now retail closer to $2,400. Build in a 15&ndash;20% buffer above your target price.

**Months 12&ndash;9 &mdash; Active shopping phase.** Book boutique appointments. Most respected salons, including Kleinfeld Bridal, require advance booking and recommend visiting no more than 2&ndash;3 boutiques to avoid decision fatigue. This window is also the prime season for **trunk shows** &mdash; limited-weekend events where a designer sends a broader collection to an authorized retail partner. Monique Lhuillier, for example, hosts scheduled trunk shows at boutiques including L&rsquo;elite Bridal in Boston, Massachusetts; Ultimate Bride in Chicago, Illinois; and Collections by MJ in Denver, Colorado. Trunk shows offer access to styles not normally stocked in-store and often include the option to meet a brand representative for a customization consultation.

**Months 9&ndash;8 &mdash; Order placement.** This is the non-negotiable window for mid-range and high-end made-to-order gowns. Ordering later is possible with rush options but carries cost and selection penalties. Sign your boutique contract, pay the required deposit (typically 50%), and confirm the estimated delivery window in writing.

**Months 6&ndash;5 &mdash; Dress arrival.** The boutique will contact you when the gown arrives. Schedule a try-on appointment promptly to inspect for any damage incurred during shipping. This is also the moment to purchase your wedding shoes at their actual heel height and any specialized undergarments &mdash; both are essential for accurate alteration measurements at the first fitting.

**Months 4&ndash;3 &mdash; Begin alterations** (see the dedicated section below). Finalize accessory selections: veil length, jewelry, and headpiece should all be confirmed before the first fitting so the seamstress can account for them in the hem length and overall silhouette decisions.

## When Are Bridal Sample Sales Held, and Is a Sample Sale Gown Right for Me?

Bridal boutiques rotate inventory twice a year, timed to the industry&rsquo;s seasonal collection cycle. Designer collections debut at bridal market in April and October, so boutiques receive fresh floor samples in July&ndash;August and January&ndash;February and simultaneously sell off their existing floor samples at reduced prices.

The peak sample sale windows are:

  - **January:** The largest clearance window after the holiday season; deepest selection of discounted floor samples.

  - **June&ndash;July:** Mid-year turnover ahead of fall collections arriving in August.

  - **November (&ldquo;White Friday&rdquo;):** Some boutiques hold sample events timed to Black Friday, particularly in major metropolitan markets.

  - **December:** Designer-direct sample sales; Monique Lhuillier&rsquo;s annual Los Angeles event (held in Vernon, California) offered gowns from its Platinum, Signature, and Bliss collections at 40&ndash;90%+ off retail in December 2025, with prices ranging from $25 to $3,000 on a first-come, first-served basis.

According to [Poppy Bridal&rsquo;s sample sale guide](https://poppy-bridal.com/blog/sample-sale-series-sample-sales-101/), discounts at bridal sample sales range from 20% to 70% off retail, with some boutiques discounting floor samples as deeply as 90%. The critical caveat: sample sale dresses are sold as-is, in the size and condition available on the floor. Factor in alteration costs before concluding that a steep discount makes financial sense &mdash; a gown purchased at 20% off that requires $800 in alterations may not outperform a fresh order at full price.

## What Are the Rush Order Cut-Offs for a Wedding Dress?

Brides with fewer than six months until their wedding still have well-defined options, though cost and selection narrow significantly at each threshold:

  - **4&ndash;6 months out:** Rush programs are available at most mid-range designers. Stella York (Essense of Australia) delivers in 10&ndash;12 weeks via paid rush-cut. Maggie Sottero can fulfill certain styles in as few as 9 weeks. Rush premiums are typically 20&ndash;30% above the gown&rsquo;s retail price, or a flat fee of $100&ndash;$300.

  - **3&ndash;4 months out:** Fewer designer options remain available. The most reliable route is a boutique with strong ready-to-ship inventory &mdash; BHLDN ships most styles within 2&ndash;6 weeks. Azazie&rsquo;s made-to-measure service adds 2&ndash;4 weeks to standard shipping.

  - **Under 3 months out:** Off-the-rack purchase is the most reliable path. David&rsquo;s Bridal carries a wide selection of in-store inventory from its own labels and the Vera Wang Bride line that can be purchased and altered in the same visit. Lulus ships bridal-adjacent styles in 3&ndash;5 business days.

  - **Absolute minimum:** Fifi&rsquo;s Bridal and other multi-label boutiques advise a 4&ndash;5 month minimum from first appointment to wedding day when combining any rush production option with the required alteration schedule. Below 4 months, the alteration window compresses to the point where a single dress emergency (damage, late delivery) has no recovery time.

## How Does the Alteration Schedule Nest into the Dress Timeline?

Alterations are not optional for made-to-order gowns &mdash; they are structural. Most designers produce gowns to the bride&rsquo;s largest measurement per their size chart, then the seamstress tailors the excess fabric away to achieve a precise fit. This means every made-to-order gown will require at least one, and typically two to four, alteration appointments.

**Standard three-fitting sequence:**

  - **First fitting (8&ndash;10 weeks before the wedding):** Major structural work &mdash; setting the hem at the correct height in your actual wedding shoes, adjusting the bodice, repositioning straps or sleeves, and planning the bustle configuration. This is the longest appointment: 1&ndash;2 hours is standard.

  - **Second fitting (4&ndash;6 weeks out):** Try on with wedding shoes and undergarments (a non-negotiable at this stage); fine-tuning adjustments based on the first session. The seamstress checks that the hem is correct at the exact heel height you will wear and refines the bodice further.

  - **Final fitting (2&ndash;3 weeks before the wedding):** Confirm the hem, practice the bustle mechanism with your maid of honor, final zip check, and steam if needed. The gown typically goes home with the bride within 1&ndash;2 weeks of the wedding.

Total alteration time is 6&ndash;10 weeks, according to [Belle Amour Bridal](https://www.belleamourbridal.com/blog/wedding-dress-alterations-timeline-how-long-it-takes-and-when-to-start) and confirmed by Hallak Cleaners, a specialist in New York City wedding dress alterations and preservation. In peak bridal season &mdash; March through June and September through November &mdash; the best seamstresses at top boutiques book out 10&ndash;12 weeks in advance. The practical implication: schedule your first alteration appointment before your dress arrives at the boutique, not after.

Alteration costs nationally average $150&ndash;$600 for standard work, with complex fabrics &mdash; lace, silk charmeuse, hand-beaded bodices, multi-layer chiffon &mdash; adding both time and cost to the estimate. Budget for alterations at the time of your gown purchase and treat the alteration allotment as a non-negotiable line item, not an afterthought.

One final note on sequencing: the gown timeline does not operate in isolation from the rest of the wedding calendar, but it does have a harder set of deadlines than almost anything else the bride books. A florist can often confirm six months out; a photographer four months out. The dress &mdash; at the mid-range and above &mdash; needs to be ordered before both. Start here first.

## Sources

1. [Your Complete Wedding Dress Shopping Timeline Guide](https://www.fifisbridal.com/blog/your-complete-wedding-dress-shopping-timeline-guide)
2. [Why Order Your Wedding Dress 9-12 Months Early](https://kleinfeldbridal.com/blogs/advice/shopping-early-for-wedding-dress)
3. [The Different Levels of Bridal Designers: From Budget to Luxury Couture](https://www.lovedtwicebridal.com/blogs/news/the-different-levels-of-bridal-designers-from-budget-to-luxury-couture)
4. [This Is the Average Wedding Dress Cost Today](https://www.theknot.com/content/average-cost-of-wedding-dress)
5. [Los Angeles Sample Sale FAQs](https://moniquelhuillier.com/pages/los-angeles-sample-sale)
6. [Sample Sales 101](https://poppy-bridal.com/blog/sample-sale-series-sample-sales-101/)
7. [Wedding Dress Alterations Timeline: When to Start and What to Expect](https://www.belleamourbridal.com/blog/wedding-dress-alterations-timeline-how-long-it-takes-and-when-to-start)
8. [How Long Do Wedding Dress Alterations Take?](https://hallak.com/how-long-do-wedding-dress-alterations-take/)
9. [David's Bridal to Take Over Production of Vera Wang Collection](https://www.pymnts.com/news/retail/2025/davids-bridal-take-over-production-vera-wang-collection/)
10. [When Do Wedding Dresses Go on Sale to Maximize Your Savings](https://theweddingshowcase.net/when-do-wedding-dresses-go-on-sale/)

---
Source: https://brideatlas.com/dress-shopping/wedding-dress-shopping-timeline
Index: https://brideatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://brideatlas.com/llms-full.txt
