Where castle gardens, mill walls and the Firth of Forth set the scene for the day you'll remember — half an hour from Edinburgh, a world from the city.
East Lothian sits on the south shore of the Firth of Forth, beginning where Edinburgh ends and stretching east through farmland, fishing harbours and golden beaches until it meets the Berwickshire coast. It is, in a quiet way, one of the most beautiful corners of Scotland — and one of the easiest to reach.
This is castle country. Tantallon Castle stands on a clifftop above the Firth, looking across the water to the volcanic plug of the Bass Rock. Dirleton Castle is set among gardens that date to the seventeenth century. Inland, North Berwick Law rises out of the fields like a green pyramid, visible for miles. Walk the cliffs at Dunbar, the dunes at Yellowcraig, the white sand at Tyninghame Beach, or the long stretch at Belhaven Bay with its lone arched bridge stranded at high tide.
For weddings, the appeal is straightforward. You can hold a ceremony in a walled garden, a working harbour, a Victorian mill, a Georgian mansion or on a beach — sometimes all in the same week. Edinburgh is twenty to forty minutes away by road or rail, which means guests can fly into Edinburgh Airport, stay in the city, and arrive at your venue without a long journey.
East Lothian is also genuinely loved by the people who live here. Eighty-three per cent of couples who marry in the region are from the region — a statistic worth pausing on. It says something about a place when the people who know it best are the ones who choose it.
The Venue at
Eskmills
On the banks of the River Esk in Musselburgh, a restored Victorian mill has spent the last decade quietly becoming one of East Lothian's most-loved wedding venues. Light pours through the arched windows. Cobbled courtyards open onto a landscaped Eden Garden. The proportions are generous — large enough for a 350-guest celebration, intimate enough for a 70-seat ceremony with no echo in the room.
The Venue is licensed for indoor and outdoor ceremonies, fully exclusive on the day, and a fifteen-minute train ride from Edinburgh Waverley. Twilight weddings begin at four in the afternoon, when the light starts to soften across the millworks. It is, in essence, what a Scottish wedding venue should feel like — rooted in the place, beautifully restored, run by people who know what they are doing.
EH21
The Honest Toun, on the south bank of the River Esk where it meets the sea. Five minutes by train from Edinburgh, ten by car. Home to one of Scotland's oldest racecourses, riverside walks, and the restored mill complex at the heart of the town.
EH39
A Victorian seaside town beneath the green cone of the Law, with two beaches, a working harbour, and views to the Bass Rock. The Lobster Shack on the harbour is a fixture of any wedding weekend; the Marine Hotel still has the bones of a grand Edwardian resort.
EH42
Birthplace of John Muir, sitting at the eastern end of the county where the cliffs begin. Dunbar's harbour is small, weather-beaten and beautiful. Belhaven Beach stretches west; the cliffs at Barns Ness look out over open North Sea.
EH41
The county town, set on a bend of the Tyne. A Georgian high street, a medieval church (St Mary's, the longest parish church in Scotland), and the registrar's office at John Muir House — where notice of every East Lothian marriage is lodged.
EH40
A conservation village on the Tyne with a railway station newly reopened in 2023. Preston Mill, a cluster of seventeenth-century buildings managed by the National Trust, sits on the river just outside the village.
EH31
Pronounced gull-an. Famous for its golf — Muirfield, hosting venue of the Open — but also for one of the most beautiful sand beaches in Scotland, with Edinburgh's skyline visible across the water on a clear day.
EH32
A coastal village wrapped around a tidal nature reserve. The bay fills and empties twice a day; greylag and pink-footed geese arrive in their thousands every autumn. Quiet, slow, and deeply photogenic.
EH32
A commuter village on the East Coast Main Line with the dunes of Gosford Bay at its eastern edge. Seton Collegiate Church, a fifteenth-century ruin in the care of Historic Environment Scotland, stands a mile inland.
Scotland is one of the few places in the UK where you can legally hold your ceremony outdoors — and East Lothian's coast is built for it. White sand at Yellowcraig, dunes at Belhaven, cliff-tops above the Firth.
Stately homes opened only for weddings, with portrait galleries, walled gardens and rooms that have hosted celebrations for four hundred years. Best for couples who want a single venue for everything — ceremony, dinner, dancing, sleep.
The walled garden is a Scottish wedding archetype: a square of warm stone enclosing roses, lavender and apple trees. Ceremonies under canvas or open sky, drinks among the herbaceous borders, dinner inside if the weather turns.
Restored Victorian millworks, weavers' sheds, harbour-side warehouses. Industrial bones softened with planting, candlelight and long tables. Eskmills sits in this category; so do a handful of others across the county.
Bohemian, blank-canvas, weekend-long celebrations. Often built on private estates or coastal farms, where guests stay onsite in cabins, treehouses or bell tents. East Lothian's farming country is well-suited to this.
Twelve guests, a registrar, a cliff-top, two witnesses. Scotland's marriage law makes this genuinely simple — and a small wedding in East Lothian is often more memorable than a large one anywhere else.
Scottish marriage law is, to the relief of nearly everyone, more permissive and less fussy than the equivalent law in England and Wales. You can marry outdoors. Humanist celebrants are recognised. The notice period is short. Below is the practical sequence.
Both parties complete an M10 form and submit it to the registrar at John Muir House, Haddington — the office that handles every East Lothian marriage notice. The form must be lodged at least 29 days before the ceremony, though three months ahead is more comfortable.
Three options: a civil registrar (provided by East Lothian Council), a religious celebrant (Church of Scotland, Catholic, and others), or a humanist celebrant (the Humanist Society Scotland is the largest provider). All three carry equal legal weight in Scotland.
Once the notice period is complete, the registrar issues a Marriage Schedule. Civil ceremonies have it delivered to the venue; for religious or humanist ceremonies, one party collects it from the registrar in person, usually a week or two before the day.
Two witnesses, both over sixteen. The Marriage Schedule is signed at the ceremony by the couple, the witnesses and the celebrant. It does not have to take place indoors — Scotland is one of the few jurisdictions where outdoor ceremonies are routinely legal.
The signed Marriage Schedule must be returned to the registrar within three days. The registrar then enters the marriage into the official record and issues the marriage certificate. This last step is usually handled by the celebrant or the venue.
Spring
Mar — May
Daffodils through the hedgerows, blossom on the Tyne, the first warm afternoons. Cooler than summer but generally drier; venues less booked, prices kinder. May is the sweet spot — long evenings without the peak-season premium.
Summer
Jun — Aug
Daylight until ten in the evening. Beaches at their best; walled gardens at full bloom. Book early — weekends from late May through September fill eighteen months out at the most-loved venues. Pack a backup plan for Scottish summer rain.
Autumn
Sep — Nov
The county at its richest. Golden light across the stubble fields, woodland turning, beech avenues at peak colour. September often the warmest month of the year — and one of the most popular wedding months. October light is cinematic.
Winter
Dec — Feb
For couples who want intimacy. Candlelight, fires, fewer guests, more presence. Mid-week weddings carry significant savings. Cold and short on daylight — ceremonies tend to start at three, with everything moved indoors.
Average Wedding · East Lothian & Scottish Borders · 2025
The 2025 Bridebook Wedding Report puts the average East Lothian and wider Scottish Borders wedding at £18,617 — around £2,000 below the UK average of £20,822. The figure covers the venue, food and drink, photography, flowers, music, attire and stationery for a typical seventy-to-eighty guest celebration.
The range, of course, is wide. A small humanist ceremony with twenty guests at a coastal venue can come in under £6,000. A full exclusive-use weekend at a country house with two hundred guests will sit closer to £45,000 once accommodation is included. Twilight and mid-week weddings cut a third or more off the headline figure. The single biggest variable is guest numbers — followed by the choice between in-house catering and a marquee built from scratch.
The East Coast Main Line runs the length of the county, with stations at Musselburgh, Wallyford, Prestonpans, Longniddry, Drem (for North Berwick), East Linton and Dunbar. Trains every fifteen to thirty minutes from Waverley, all day, every day.
The A1 runs east out of Edinburgh, hugging the coast. Musselburgh is twenty minutes from the city centre; Dunbar at the eastern end of the county is forty-five. Most wedding venues offer free on-site parking — almost unheard of within Edinburgh itself.
Edinburgh Airport sits on the west side of the city, which puts it the wrong side of the rush-hour traffic but still within an hour of any East Lothian venue. Direct flights from across the UK, Europe, the Middle East and North America. Most international guests build a long weekend around it.
East Lothian has a small but unusually dense network of wedding suppliers — many of them based in Musselburgh, Haddington and North Berwick, working repeatedly with the same venues over years. The categories you will need:
If you have read this far, you are seriously thinking about East Lothian. Begin with the venue we have featured throughout — and see why couples keep coming back.
Explore The Venue at Eskmills