Wedding Day Emergency Kit: What to Pack
TLDR
Pack your wedding day emergency kit the night before and give it to your maid of honor or day-of coordinator — not someone in the wedding party who'll be busy with their own prep. The kit should cover fabric emergencies, personal comfort, technology, and the small logistics items you'll inevitably need and not have.
- Wedding Party
- The full group of attendants involved in the wedding — bridesmaids, groomsmen, flower girls, ring bearers, and sometimes the officiant. Not to be confused with the bridal party, which sometimes refers specifically to the bride's attendants.
DEFINITION
- Day-of Coordinator
- The person responsible for managing wedding day logistics — vendor arrivals, timeline adherence, and handling problems as they arise. If you've hired a professional day-of coordinator, the emergency kit goes to them. If not, designate a trusted non-wedding-party person.
DEFINITION
What Goes in the Kit
Pack the night before — not the morning of. Morning-of packing leads to forgotten items.
Fabric and wardrobe
- Safety pins in multiple sizes (pack more than you think you need)
- Small sewing kit with thread matching your wedding colors
- Fashion tape (double-sided, for fabric gaps and dress adjustments)
- Stain remover pen (Tide To Go works for most fabric stains)
- Clear nail polish (seals runs, loose button threads, small fabric snags)
- Fabric shaver (for pulls on formalwear)
- Hem tape (iron-on or peel-and-stick)
Hair and beauty
- Bobby pins and hairpins in your hair color
- Travel-size hairspray
- Compact mirror
- Blotting papers (oil control throughout a long day)
- Clear deodorant (won’t show on dark fabrics)
- Makeup touch-up kit matching what you’re wearing
- Eye drops (for contact lens wearers or for dry eyes from stress and emotion)
- Nail file and clear nail polish
Personal comfort
- Ibuprofen or acetaminophen (pain reliever for headaches and sore feet)
- Antacids (champagne and nerves are a common combination)
- Breath mints or gum (small container)
- Granola bar or protein bar per person
- Blister cushions or moleskin (for new shoes)
Technology
- Phone charger (with your cable type) and a portable battery pack
- Earbuds (for a quiet moment if needed)
Logistics
- Small amount of cash ($40-60) for unexpected tips or parking
- Vendor contact list (backup copy in case your phone dies)
- Marriage license (if it needs to go to the officiant on the day of the ceremony)
- Any prescription medications needed during the day
Venue-specific additions
- Heel stoppers (small caps that prevent stilettos from sinking into grass at outdoor weddings)
- Sunscreen if any outdoor portion is planned
- Umbrella (a clear one for photos if rain is possible)
- Hand warmers if it’s a cold-weather wedding
Who Gets the Kit
Designate one keeper for the kit — your day-of coordinator, your maid of honor, or your chosen day-of logistics person. Make sure they know where the kit is and that they’re responsible for keeping it accessible throughout prep, ceremony, and early reception.
Don’t split the kit between multiple bags. One kit, one person, consistently accessible.
Give your maid of honor a heads-up about what’s in it and where it is. The kit is most useful when the keeper knows what they’re working with before the emergency arrives.
The Kit Isn’t Meant to Cover Everything
The emergency kit handles the predictable problems — the category of things that go wrong on most wedding days: a wardrobe malfunction, a headache, a phone that needs charging.
It’s not meant to handle vendor no-shows, venue problems, or serious medical situations. Those require different responses. The kit handles the things that a safety pin and a stain remover pen can fix in two minutes so the day moves forward.
Source: WeddingWire Planning Survey
Q&A
What should be in a wedding day emergency kit?
The essentials: safety pins (multiple sizes), a stain remover pen, clear nail polish (for runs and loose threads), a small sewing kit, pain reliever, antacids, a granola bar, blotting papers, clear deodorant, breath mints, a phone charger, and a small amount of cash. Add items specific to your wedding — heel stoppers for outdoor weddings, extra veil pins, eye drops.
Q&A
Who should carry the wedding day emergency kit?
Your day-of coordinator if you have one. If not, your maid of honor or a non-wedding-party point person whose only job is logistics. Don't split it between multiple people — one kit, one keeper, easy to find.
Like what you're reading?
Try Kaiplan free — $79 one-time, no subscriptions.
Want to learn more?
- One-time fee — no subscriptions
- No vendor ads or paid placements
- Budget, guests, vendors, and seating in one place
Frequently Asked Questions
How big should a wedding day emergency kit be?
Do I need a wedding day emergency kit if I have a day-of coordinator?
What is the most important item in a wedding day emergency kit?
What should the groom's emergency kit include?
Should I pack food in my wedding day emergency kit?
Go deeper
Wedding Day Timeline Guide: How to Build Your Wedding Schedule
How to build a wedding day timeline from hair and makeup through the end of the reception — with buffer time built in so a single delay doesn't cascade into the whole day.
Wedding Morning Schedule: Hour-by-Hour Timeline for Getting Ready
A detailed hour-by-hour schedule for wedding morning — hair and makeup order, when to eat, first look timing, and how to build buffer into the schedule so you're not rushing.
Wedding Planning Checklist: Everything to Do and When
A complete wedding planning checklist organized by timeline — from 12+ months out to the week of the wedding. Know exactly what to do and when so nothing falls through the cracks.
Best Wedding Planning Apps in 2026
The best wedding planning apps ranked by planning completeness, pricing, and absence of vendor advertising. Includes The Knot, Zola, Joy, Aisle Planner, Appy Couple, Bridebook, and Kaiplan.
wedding planning software