Congratulations! You’re getting married. In as much as your wedding is probably the very meaningful event of your relationship together, you’ll most certainly desire it to be memorable time. Why settle for just a run-of-the-mill celebration when you could be enjoying a truly awesome union?
I’ve met several married couples who have had a destination wedding experience and they are usually positively amazed by the sheer joy that they experienced together at their union. Leaving home to go to a tropical location for your commitment will likely put an awesome sense of enjoyment into your hearts and your marriage.
And don’t fret, a distant wedding location won’t be that costly. It is certainly very likely to have a nicely inexpensive wedding in another country or U.S. state. So before you set your plans in stone for your wedding at home, take a thought to why it might really be both enjoyable and inexpensive to plan the destination wedding of a lifetime.
Think about how you also want a honeymoon. For a destination wedding, once the service is finished, you’ll already be at your vacation location. So it won’t cost you any more airline expenses than you would have shelled out running off on a nice honeymoon location.
Probably one of the most inexpensive weddings destination for you to consider is in Maui, Hawaii. Each year for the last 14 or 15 years, Maui has been voted the world’s best island by the readers of Conde Nast Traveler magazine. It has consistently been rated as the top destination for honeymooners and vacationers alike.
Maui weddings have been heard about through out the globe. Over half of all tourist weddings celebrated in the Hawaii take place on Maui. This is because the island has the most awesome wedding beaches in the islands. There are a number of great beaches on the western side of the island which are just right for sunset beach weddings.
If you’re planning to get married, you owe it to yourself to evaluate the Maui wedding packages offered by the island’s best wedding planners. We encourage you to ask each other . . . “Will you Maui me?”