Pioneer Valley DJs — Wedding Planning Resource

Wedding DJ Checklist for Couples

Everything you need to prepare, confirm, and finalize with your DJ — organized by planning phase from booking through the morning of your wedding. Check items off as you go.

By Joel Rios, Pioneer Valley DJs  ·  Updated April 2026
How to Use This Checklist

This checklist is organized by planning phase — At Booking, 2–3 Months Before, 4–6 Weeks Before, Final Week, and Day Of. Check items off as you complete them. The notes under each item explain why it matters and what to communicate to your DJ. Items marked Important are the ones that most affect how your reception flows.

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Phase 1 — At Booking
  • Confirm your DJ is booked with a signed contract and deposit
    Your date is not held until a contract is signed and deposit paid. Don't assume a verbal agreement locks the date — especially for peak season Saturdays.
  • Save your DJ's direct contact information
    Phone, email, and any planning portal login. Have this somewhere accessible — not just buried in an old email thread.
  • Understand what is and isn't included in your package
    Ceremony coverage, cocktail hour, uplighting, photo booth — get a clear written breakdown of what's in your package vs. what costs extra. See our wedding DJ cost guide for what's typically standard vs. add-on.
  • Note your balance due date and payment method
    Most DJs collect the balance 1–2 weeks before the wedding. Set a calendar reminder so it doesn't sneak up on you.
Phase 2 — 2 to 3 Months Before
  • Choose your first dance song
    Give your DJ the exact song title and artist — not just "something romantic." If you want a specific version or edit, note that too. This is one of the most-remembered moments of the night.
  • Choose your grand entrance song
    High-energy is usually the goal here — this is the first moment that sets the reception's tone. Pick something that feels like you and gets the room pumped up.
  • Decide on parent dances and choose those songs
    Father/daughter and mother/son dances are optional but common. If you're doing them, choose songs in advance. You can combine them into one song or do them separately — tell your DJ which format you prefer.
  • Choose ceremony music — prelude, processional, and recessional
    If your DJ is covering the ceremony, they need specific song selections for: prelude music as guests arrive, the processional (when you walk), and the recessional (when you leave). Give exact titles and artists for all three.
  • Define the overall vibe for cocktail hour music
    You don't need a specific playlist — just a direction. Jazz? Acoustic pop? Upbeat background music? Motown? Your DJ will build from there. If you have specific songs, share those too.
  • Start your must-play list
    These are songs your DJ commits to playing during open dancing — not just songs you like, but songs you definitely want on the floor. Be specific (artist + title). Aim for 10–20 songs. More than 30 starts to limit how much the DJ can read the room. See our wedding songs guide for ideas.
  • Create your do-not-play list
    Songs that would kill the vibe for you — tied to bad memories, ex-partners, or just things you genuinely can't stand. Also include genres if you want entire styles avoided (no country, no EDM, etc.). Your DJ should honor this list completely, including when guests request those songs.
  • Decide whether you want guest song requests
    Three options: open requests (DJ uses judgment on what fits), no requests, or a specific list of acceptable songs. Tell your DJ which approach you prefer so they can handle requests consistently throughout the night.
Phase 3 — 4 to 6 Weeks Before
  • Complete your pre-wedding planning consultation with your DJ
    This is when everything gets finalized in detail — music lists, timeline, formality order, special announcements, and crowd profile. If your DJ doesn't offer a planning consultation, ask for one. This meeting is essential.
  • Finalize your reception timeline with your DJ and coordinator
    This means specific times — not just order — for grand entrance, first dance, dinner, toasts, open dancing, cake cutting, and last song. Use our wedding DJ timeline template as a starting point.
  • Confirm which formalities you're including and in what order
    Cake cutting, bouquet toss, garter toss, anniversary dance, dollar dance, sparkler send-off — decide which you want, which you're skipping, and what order they happen. Not every couple does all of these and skipping some often improves the flow.
  • Provide your DJ with the full wedding party names and pronunciation
    For the grand entrance announcement — every name in order, phonetically spelled if any are unusual. Nothing is more awkward than a botched name announcement for the maid of honor.
  • Describe your guest crowd profile to your DJ
    Age range, general musical tastes, energy level, cultural background. Is it mostly college friends? A multigenerational family crowd? Heavy on Latin music fans? This shapes what the DJ emphasizes during open dancing.
  • Confirm all venue setup details with your DJ
    Ceremony location, cocktail hour location, reception room — all three if they differ. Load-in time, parking, elevator access, and any venue restrictions (volume curfew, no confetti, specific load-in entrance). Your DJ should ideally have this from the venue directly, but confirm they have it.
  • Share your wedding coordinator's contact information with your DJ
    Your DJ and coordinator should be in direct communication — not routing everything through you. Make sure they have each other's phone numbers before the wedding.
  • Note any special announcements or moments to call out
    Anything beyond standard formalities — a military homecoming moment, a surprise performance, a memorial tribute, a special family milestone. Tell your DJ in advance so they can plan the announcement appropriately.
  • Confirm lighting and add-on details are finalized
    Uplighting colors, monogram text and font, photo booth props, 360 booth setup location — anything custom should be confirmed in writing at this stage, not the week before.

🎧 DJ Perspective — The Planning Consultation

The 4–6 week mark is when our planning consultation happens. We go through everything on this list together — music selections, timeline, formality order, crowd profile, venue logistics, and any special moments. By the time we hang up, both of us have a complete picture of your day and there are no open questions.

If you book with us and haven't heard from us by 6 weeks out, reach out and we'll schedule it. Don't wait until two weeks before — that's too close to leave details unresolved.

Phase 4 — Final Week
  • Do a final check-in with your DJ
    A brief call or message confirming: they have everything they need, the timeline is finalized, all music selections are confirmed, and they have your coordinator's number. This call should take 10 minutes if everything is already in order.
  • Confirm your DJ's arrival time at the venue
    Your DJ should arrive 90–120 minutes before the first guest. Confirm this is still the plan and that they have the correct venue address and load-in entrance.
  • Pay your remaining balance if due
    Most DJs require the balance 1–2 weeks before the wedding. Check your contract and make sure this is handled so it's not on your mind on the day itself.
  • Share any last-minute timeline changes with your DJ and coordinator
    If your ceremony time shifted, a formality got added or removed, or the venue sent updated logistics — make sure both your DJ and coordinator have the updated information before wedding day.
  • Make sure a trusted person knows how to reach your DJ on the day
    In case you're unavailable (getting ready, photos, etc.) — your maid of honor, best man, or day-of coordinator should have your DJ's cell number and know they're authorized to communicate with them directly.
Phase 5 — Day Of
  • Brief your DJ when they arrive — any last-minute changes only
    If everything was handled in the planning process, this should be a 5-minute conversation confirming everything is as planned. Not a 30-minute catch-up. That's the point of doing the preparation ahead of time.
  • Introduce your DJ to your wedding coordinator
    If they haven't already connected directly. Your DJ and coordinator should be aligned on the timeline and each other's cues before guests arrive.
  • Trust the process — then enjoy your wedding
    If you've done the preparation, your DJ knows your music, your timeline, your crowd, and your vision. The best thing you can do on your wedding day is be present and let the night unfold. That's what all of this planning is for.

Related Planning Guides

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Check your date and we'll walk through this entire list together during your planning consultation — no detail left open, no surprises on your wedding day.

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Or call / text Joel directly: (413) 313-2069
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