A proven wedding photography proposal template that presents your packages professionally and makes it easy for couples to say yes.
A great wedding photography proposal does one job: make it as easy as possible for the right couple to say yes. Most photographer proposals fail at this — they either dump too much information on the couple or make the path to booking unclear.
Here's a template structure that works, along with the reasoning behind each section.
The best proposals are short, visual, and end with one clear action. Here's the structure:
This isn't your bio — it's a bridge. Reference something specific from your conversation: their venue, the vibe they described, their engagement story. Couples want to feel like you actually listened.
Example: "It was great connecting with you both about your October wedding at Ravine Estate. The romantic outdoor ceremony you described is exactly the kind of shoot I get most excited about — here's what I'd put together for your day."
Don't offer more than three packages. Research consistently shows that more than three options causes decision paralysis. Name them intuitively — not "Package A/B/C" but something that maps to scope: "Ceremony Only," "Full Day," "Full Day + Album."
For each package, list:
List these separately from your packages. Keeping add-ons separate makes the base price feel lower and lets couples customize without feeling like they're being upsold. Common add-ons: engagement session ($400–$800), second shooter ($300–$600), rush delivery ($200–$400), premium album ($500–$1,500).
Brief, 3–4 bullet points. Couples are anxious about logistics — tell them what happens after they book. "After your deposit, we schedule a planning call 60 days before the wedding. Final images delivered within 6 weeks via your private gallery."
This is the most important part. End with one action: a button or link to select their package and pay the deposit. Don't ask them to email you back. Don't ask them to "let you know." Make booking frictionless.
Your proposal should collect the deposit — not just ask for a yes. A couple who says "yes" but hasn't paid a deposit hasn't actually committed. Use a tool like ShootRate to attach your packages to an online booking flow so the deposit is collected the moment they choose their package.
Send your proposal as a link, not a PDF. A PDF is a dead end — the couple reads it and has to email you back to book. A link takes them to a live page where they can act immediately.
Timing matters too. Send the proposal within 2 hours of your initial inquiry call. Response rates drop dramatically after 24 hours as couples talk to other photographers.
If you don't hear back within 48 hours, follow up once: "Hey [Name], just wanted to make sure my proposal landed — sometimes emails end up in spam. Happy to answer any questions!" Keep it light. A second follow-up 3–4 days later is acceptable. After that, move on.
ShootRate lets you build this exact proposal structure, send it as a link, and collect the deposit in one step — free to start. No monthly fees until you're booking.
No monthly fees to start. Create your packages, send a link, collect the deposit — all in one flow built for wedding photographers.
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