If you are fighting more now that you are planning a wedding, take a breath: that is incredibly common, and it is almost never a sign that something is wrong with your relationship. It is a sign that you are under a lot of pressure at once. Here is a toolkit to fight fair and get through it closer, not further apart.
1 Why you are fighting more
Wedding planning stacks several classic stressors on top of each other at the same time: money, family opinions, dozens of decisions, a public deadline, and the emotional weight of a huge life change. Any one of those can spark a fight. All of them at once is a pressure cooker. Naming that out loud, this is the stress talking, not us, is the first tool in the kit.
2 The fair-fighting rules
Agree on these together, ideally before your next disagreement, not during it.
- One topic at a time. No dragging in every past grievance.
- No name-calling, no contempt, and ban the words always and never.
- Do not use the past as ammunition.
- Take a break before it boils over, not after.
- Attack the problem, not each other.
- Aim for a repair, not a victory.
3 Communication exercises that actually work
These are the same healthy communication exercises used in premarital therapy. They feel a little awkward at first, and they work.
Start complaints with how you feel and what you need, not with an accusation. Try: I feel overwhelmed about the guest list, and I need us to decide it together this weekend, instead of You never help with anything.
When either of you feels flooded, call a time-out and agree to come back in 20 minutes. Not to avoid the issue, but to calm down enough to solve it. Nothing productive happens when you are both fired up.
One person speaks for two minutes. The other cannot rebut, only reflect back what they heard: So what I am hearing is… Then switch. You will be surprised how many fights are just two people not feeling heard.
Agree on a phrase or gesture that means let us reset, like Can we start over? or a hand on the arm. Honoring each other repair attempts is one of the strongest predictors of a lasting marriage.
4 Defusing wedding-specific fights
Money
Budget is the number one wedding fight. Get aligned before the invoices start. Our financial questions guide is built for exactly this conversation.
Decisions
Divide ownership. Each of you takes the decisions you care about most and trusts the other with the rest. Agree on the three things that truly matter to each of you and let the rest be easy.
Family and in-laws
Present a united front and set boundaries together, so neither of you is caught between your partner and your parents. Understanding each other conflict styles helps here too, our Enneagram guide breaks that down.
5 When to bring in a pro
If the same fight keeps repeating, if contempt is creeping in, or if you just feel stuck, a few sessions of premarital therapy or counseling is a smart, normal investment. You would hire a planner for the logistics. A counselor is a planner for the partnership.
Planning a wedding in NYC?
When the big conversations are handled, we make the day itself effortless. Married by NotarEaseNYC officiates warm, personal ceremonies and takes care of the license and paperwork.
This article offers general communication tools, not therapy or professional counseling. If conflict feels unsafe or unmanageable, please reach out to a licensed therapist or counselor.