To work out how many limos for a wedding you need, count everyone who actually needs a ride — the couple, the wedding party, the parents, and sometimes guests — then divide that number by the capacity of each vehicle and add a small buffer for comfort. Most weddings come down to one vehicle for the couple plus one or more for the wedding party, with extra vehicles only when parents or guests need transporting too.
The exact mix depends on your group size and your timeline, not a fixed formula. This guide walks through who to count, who usually drives themselves, and how to size the fleet using real vehicle capacities — so you reserve the right number of cars without overpaying for seats that ride empty.
Who do you actually need to transport?
Start by counting only the people who genuinely need a ride on the day: the couple, the wedding party, and usually the parents and immediate family. Everyone else typically drives themselves or arranges their own way.
It helps to think in tiers. The couple and the wedding party almost always travel together by arrangement, because their timing is tied to the ceremony and photos. Parents and grandparents are often included next, especially if they have a role in the day or would rather not drive in formalwear. Most other guests find their own way to the venue and back, unless you are putting on shuttles (more on that below). Officiants, planners, and vendors generally handle their own transport. Write the names down rather than guessing — a quick headcount is the single most useful thing you can do before you reserve anything.
Does the couple need their own car?
Most couples reserve one dedicated vehicle for themselves — a sedan or SUV — so they have a private, photo-ready ride and a clean getaway after the ceremony.
There is a practical reason beyond the photographs. The couple’s schedule rarely matches the wedding party’s: you may arrive separately, leave at a different moment, or want a few quiet minutes alone between the ceremony and the reception. A car of your own gives you that. A luxury sedan or SUV seats the two of you with room for a dress and a clutch, and your chauffeur can stage it for the exit while the party is still inside. If budget is tight, the couple can share the party vehicle, but a separate car for the two of you is the small luxury most couples are glad they kept.
How big a vehicle does the wedding party need?
Size the wedding party vehicle to the real number of attendants. A full-size SUV seats up to six, and a Mercedes Sprinter van seats ten to sixteen — so most parties fit in one vehicle rather than a convoy.
Count your attendants honestly: bridesmaids, groomsmen, and anyone who travels with them such as a flower girl or ring bearer’s parent. A party of four to six can ride comfortably in a Suburban or Escalade, which seat six. A party of eight, ten, or more belongs in the Sprinter van, which seats ten to sixteen and keeps everyone together. Splitting a ten-person party across two SUVs is possible, but a single Sprinter is usually simpler, cheaper, and far less prone to one car getting stuck in traffic while the other arrives. Keep the formalwear in mind when you size it — see the comfort section below.
What about parents and immediate family?
Parents and immediate family are the next group to consider after the couple and the party. Whether they need a vehicle depends on their role in the day and whether they would rather not drive.
In many weddings the parents of the couple are part of the processional and the photographs, so it makes sense to include them in a vehicle that arrives on schedule. Grandparents who would find driving and parking in formalwear a strain are often happiest with a reserved ride too. If the party is travelling in a Sprinter with spare seats, parents can sometimes ride along; if not, a second SUV covers immediate family comfortably. Aunts, uncles, and cousins generally drive themselves unless you are running guest shuttles for everyone.
When do guest shuttles make sense?
Guest shuttles make sense when many guests are staying at the same hotel, when parking at the venue is limited, or when the celebration runs late and you want everyone home safely.
Shuttles are most worthwhile for destination-style weddings and city venues where guests are concentrated in one or two hotels. A Sprinter van seating ten to sixteen can run loops between the hotel and the venue, carrying most of a guest list across a few trips rather than needing one vehicle per group. Shuttles also solve the end-of-night problem: guests who have been celebrating get a safe ride back without driving. If your guests are spread across the Chicago area or mostly local, shuttles add cost for little benefit, and those guests are better left to their own arrangements.
Why you shouldn't pack a party in tight
Wedding formalwear takes up far more room than everyday clothes, so size each vehicle for comfort and the outfits, not just the headcount on paper.
Can one vehicle make several trips instead of two cars?
Yes. If your timeline has room, a single vehicle can make multiple runs — taking the party first, then returning for parents or guests — which often replaces a second car entirely. ‹confirm scheduling›
This is where a well-built timeline saves real money. A chauffeur who drops the wedding party, then loops back for the parents, covers two groups with one vehicle, provided the gaps in the schedule allow it. The trade-off is time: multiple runs only work when the ceremony and photos are not stacked back to back. Map your day out before you decide how many vehicles to reserve — our Chicago wedding transportation guide walks through building a wedding-day timeline that vehicles can actually keep. When the schedule is tight, reserve enough vehicles to move everyone at once; when it has breathing room, one car doing round trips is the leaner choice.
How many vehicles: a quick decision table
Use the table below as a starting point. It maps the people you need to transport to a suggested vehicle mix using real fleet capacities — a Suburban or Escalade seats six, and a Mercedes Sprinter van seats ten to sixteen. Adjust up a size whenever formalwear or comfort calls for it.
A quick counting worksheet. Run through this list and total it up before you reserve:
- The couple — almost always one dedicated car
- Bridesmaids and groomsmen — count every attendant
- Anyone travelling with the party (flower girl, ring bearer and a parent)
- Parents and grandparents who need a ride
- Guests, only if you are running shuttles
- Now divide each group by vehicle capacity (SUV 6, Sprinter 10–16) and add a buffer for gowns and suits
Planning a Chicago wedding? Our wedding transportation service sizes the fleet for you, and the wedding party and guest transportation guide goes deeper on moving a larger group.
Frequently asked questions