Bride’s Diet Plan: What to Eat and Drink on Your Wedding Day, According to a Nutritionist

From hydration and caffeine intake to balanced meals and smart snacking, a nutritionist shares the ideal bride’s diet plan for her big day.

May 27, 2026
By Tatiana Dias
  • Wedding day diet for brides
    A representational picture of a bride keeping her diet in check before her wedding dayPexels

    If there’s one thing most bridal couples regret about their wedding day, it’s not getting to eat or drink properly, especially when they’ve carefully curated the menu. Between the endless rituals, photo ops, running around, and entertaining guests with a permanently plastered smile, meals become an afterthought — especially for brides, who often skip food altogether out of the fear of bloating or looking puffy in photographs. But, surviving on caffeine and nerves alone can quickly lead to dehydration, fatigue, dizziness, and the kind of headache no bridal touch-up can fix. What you eat can impact energy levels, mood, and overall comfort — which is why your wedding diet needs to be of equal priority as getting ready.


    “Most brides unintentionally under-eat while getting ready because of nerves, excitement, tight schedules, or fear of bloating,” explains Karishma Shah, integrative nutritionist and health psychologist. “But going into long wedding events on coffee and a few bites of fruit is one of the biggest reasons for fatigue, acidity, headaches, dizziness, nausea, and energy crashes later in the day.”


    The goal, according to the expert, is to stabilise blood sugar, sustain energy, hydrate, and provide digestive comfort. And here’s a breakdown on what to eat and drink, when to eat and drink, and why to eat and drink it on your wedding day!

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    While Getting Ready 

     

    Think balanced breakfast or a meal rich in protein, healthy fats, and easy-to-digest carbohydrates. She recommends breakfast favourites like moong chilla with curd, eggs with toast and avocado, idlis with sambar, oats with chia seeds, nuts, and berries, or something as simple as rice with dal and ghee for those who tolerate traditional meals better. 

     

    “For brides specifically, I recommend avoiding extremely salty, greasy, spicy, or gas-forming foods while getting ready, because these can worsen bloating and water retention. Very high sugar breakfasts can also cause a mid-event crash,” warns Shah. 

     

    Considering hair and makeup can take time, she also suggests keeping small snacks during the process. Snacks like coconut water, banana with nut butter, trail mix, protein bars (with clean ingredients), Greek yoghurt, fruit with nuts, and khakra with hummus.  

    Just Before Events 

    What should brides eat on their wedding day
    Pexels

    Approximately 45 to 90 minutes before the main function, Shah recommends a light but stabilising snack, rather than eating a heavy meal or staying on an empty stomach. “This helps maintain energy, focus, mood, and stamina, through long ceremonies, dancing, photoshoots, and social interactions,” she explains. Good options include: banana and nuts, a small protein smoothie, toast with nut butter, paneer or tofu bites, fruits with seeds, or a small sandwich with protein filling. 

     

    “This is especially important because many people experience an adrenaline surge before events, which can temporarily suppress hunger, but later lead to sudden weakness or acidity. Avoid experimenting with unfamiliar foods on your wedding day,” she says.  

    During The Wedding 

    Wedding day diet for the brides
    Pexels

    Ironically, many couples barely eat at their own wedding. Shah usually advises couples to intentionally schedule 10 to 15 minutes to sit and eat something simple during the celebrations. “Even small amounts help maintain energy and prevent post-event exhaustion,” 

     

    Think simple protein, easy-to-digest carbohydrates, and of course, hydration. Meals like dal and rice, grilled paneer, simple sushi, soup, khichdi, small wraps, fruits, and light desserts in moderation. 

     

    “Long gaps without food combined with dehydration, heavy outfits, alcohol, and emotional stress, can increase the chances of headaches, acidity, fatigue, faintness, and even panic-like symptoms.” 

    Staying Hydrated 

     

    Unfortunately, hydration is probably one of the most underrated parts of wedding wellness, and Shah notes that people often forget to drink water or tend to rely only on caffeine and alcohol throughout the celebrations. “This can worsen bloating, fatigue, dry skin, headaches, constipation, and water retention.”  

     

    Remember to stay hydrated by sipping plain water, coconut water, lemon water with a pinch of sea salt, electrolyte mixes without excessive sugar, buttermilk, or infused water with cucumber or mint. According to the expert, if there are multiple events across several days, keeping electrolytes handy can genuinely help, especially in hotter climates or destination weddings.  

     

    “I prefer cleaner electrolyte options with sodium, potassium, and magnesium instead of very sugary sports drinks,” adds Shah. “Alcohol also increases fluid loss, so for every alcoholic drink, having water alongside is important.” 

    What To Avoid 

     

    Crash diets, skipped meals, excess caffeine, alcohol on an empty stomach, and overly greasy and salty foods are all best avoided before and during the wedding day. While salty foods can increase puffiness and water retention, heavy fried meals may slow digestion and worsen lethargy. Too much sugar and alcohol can destabilise energy levels, while excess caffeine, especially when paired with stress and little food, can trigger anxiety, shakiness, palpitations, and dehydration. It’s also wise to avoid unfamiliar foods, supplements, or anything that personally causes bloating or acidity. 

     

    “I also tell brides not to obsess over ‘looking lighter’ by starving themselves before the event. Physiologically, that often backfires by increasing stress hormones, bloating, fatigue, constipation, and poor recovery,” advises Shah. 

    Your Emergency Survival Kit 

     

    While supplements are meant to support the body and do not replace proper meals, the expert recommends a few practical essentials on hand. Electrolyte sachets and ORS packets can help with dehydration, while magnesium glycinate may ease muscle tension, stress and headaches. Ginger chews or tea bags are useful for nausea, peppermint tea can help with bloating, and digestive enzymes may come in handy for those prone to heaviness after large meals. And for moments when eating properly isn’t possible, a protein bar can be an easy emergency energy fix.  

     

    “If someone has a known medical condition like acidity, migraines, PCOS, diabetes, thyroid concerns, or anxiety, they should also keep their prescribed essentials accessible,” suggests Shah. “Most importantly, the wedding day is not the day to aggressively detox, restrict, or experiment. The body performs best when it feels safe, nourished, hydrated, and regulated.” 

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