Meet the Author: Didier Di Mario
Updated: 27/05/2026 | Published: 27/05/2026
British spring has a way of making everything feel a bit more important. The light changes, the hedgerows wake up, and couples who have spent the winter in spreadsheets and venue tours suddenly find themselves with three months to go and a long list of things still unresolved. Transport is almost always near the bottom of that list until it isn’t.
We have been doing this since 1996, and every spring the same conversation happens: someone calls in February, having found their dream car, only to discover it went in October. Spring wedding car trends shift and tastes evolve, but that particular lesson stays constant: the cars that photograph beautifully against bluebells and blossoming orchards get booked first, and they go early.
The car is easy to dismiss as a logistical detail. Get in, travel, get out. But we have watched enough weddings over thirty years to know that the journey matters more than most couples expect. Those few minutes in the car - the quiet drive to the ceremony, the giddy ride back as a married couple - tend to be among the clearest memories of the whole day.
A vehicle that clashes with your venue or the feel of the occasion does not just look odd in photos. Something about it sits wrong in a way that is hard to name but easy to feel. The wedding day is a complete picture, and the car is in more of it than people realise until they see the photographs.
From what we are seeing across our fleet and our bookings, wedding car trends 2026 have a clear direction: couples want something that feels chosen rather than arranged. The generic is out, the character is in. So, here is where the interest is landing this spring.
Luxury wedding transport this season is quieter than it used to be, in the best possible way. The Rolls-Royce Ghost does not announce itself - it simply arrives, and the quality does the talking. The Bentley Mulsanne and Phantom 8 sit in the same territory in our bookings: couples who want the best, but would rather the car feel like a natural part of the day than the headline act.
There is also a plain practical argument here. Spring weather in the UK is not to be trusted. A modern long-wheelbase Rolls-Royce has climate control, proper door seals, and enough room in the back that a full wedding dress arrives looking as intended. For a spring wedding, that reliability matters.
Nobody has ever looked at a 1959 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud outside a stone church in May and thought it looked out of place. That is the thing about classics - they do not need context. They belong anywhere with a bit of history and a decent hedgerow.
What we hear from couples who choose vintage is that much of it is tactile: the smell of old leather, the sound of a door closing properly, the way a Silver Cloud or a Jaguar Mk II sits on the road like it has all the time in the world. When you look through a well-stocked wedding car collection, the classics are the ones people keep returning to.
The photographs hold up in a way modern cars sometimes do not. A 1959 Silver Cloud does not look dated in thirty years. It looks timeless - which is exactly what a wedding photograph should be.
Premier Carriage has one of the largest collections of classic and vintage wedding cars in the UK, including multiple Rolls-Royce Silver Clouds, Beauford convertibles, and Jaguar Mk IIs available across the country. Many of our vehicles have appeared in The Crown and Downton Abbey, which gives you some sense of how they photograph. Browse the full classic and vintage collection here.

Wedding car colour trends for spring 2026 have moved away from the standard brilliant white. The couples booking with us right now are asking for something softer.
Sage and willow greens are genuinely popular - they sit naturally in the British landscape and work beautifully against ivory or blush dresses. Champagne and warm cream are gaining ground as a more interesting alternative to white. Powder blue gets regular requests from couples who want their “something blue” to be a bit more unexpected than a garter. And muted grey has found a following for more contemporary weddings - the contrast against a white dress is quietly striking without competing for attention.
The car is not a standalone decision anymore - it is part of the design of the whole day. A boho woodland wedding and a glossy stretched limousine simply do not belong in the same story. A black-tie London ceremony deserves something sleeker than a flower-draped Beauford, however lovely that car is in the right setting.
The “stealth wealth” look - dark modern saloons, minimal chrome, clean proportions - is having a strong moment for urban weddings. For countryside settings, couples are reaching for genuine character: classic Land Rovers, vintage VW campervans, the occasional Morris Minor. The car should feel deliberately placed, not just dropped.
One of the stronger spring wedding car trends we are seeing in 2026 is the move toward thinking about guests, not just the couple. Remote barns and country houses are beautiful venues, but getting sixty people there without a parking disaster requires some planning. Hiring a vintage bus - or a fleet of matched cars - is increasingly how couples solve that problem.
A 1966 Routemaster carrying your guests from the church to the reception is not just transport; it’s an experience. It is forty minutes of laughter, a spontaneous sing-along if the right person is on board, and the kind of easy conversation that usually takes until the second course to get going. As wedding car trends 2026 go, this one pays dividends well beyond the journey itself.

We cannot write about spring wedding car hire 2026 without mentioning the growing number of couples asking about lower-emission options. Electric vehicles are a more common request than they were even two years ago - a Tesla Model S or an Audi e-tron GT will not give you the grumble of a classic engine, but their near-silent arrival suits certain weddings very well.
The development we find most interesting is the small number of companies beginning to retrofit classic bodywork with electric drivetrains. The proportions of a 1960s Bentley with a quiet powertrain underneath - it is an elegant solution that will become more widely available in the years ahead.
A few things worth knowing before you commit:
Book early, and mean it. Our most popular spring vehicles are often gone by October. If you find the right car, hold it.
Check the fit. A narrow rear door and a full ballgown do not get on well. Ask about interior dimensions when you enquire.
Take spring weather seriously. If you want a convertible, make sure the hood is watertight. Hope for sunshine, plan for April.
See the car in person. Colour reads differently on a screen than it does in a car park on a grey morning.
Ask about the chauffeur. A good driver is unhurried, reads the room, and understands that your dress needs as much care as your schedule.
Whatever you end up choosing, the right car is the one you feel something about when you first see it. After nearly thirty years of watching couples climb into everything from Silver Clouds to Routemasters, that instinct has never let anyone down. That is what the best spring wedding car trends have always come back to.