How much does a wedding photographer cost in New England?

A straightforward breakdown of pricing in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and beyond — what's included, what drives the difference, and how to find the right fit for your day.

If you've started pricing out wedding photographers in Boston or Massachusetts, you've probably noticed the range is wide — from under $2,000 to well over $7,000 — with very little explanation for why. This post is my attempt to give you an honest answer, without the sales pitch.

I'm Anthony Niccoli, a wedding photographer based in Raynham, Massachusetts. I've been shooting weddings for 17 years and have photographed over 280 of them — across southeastern Massachusetts, Boston, Cape Cod, Newport, and Rhode Island. I'm a Knot Best of Weddings Hall of Fame recipient, and I run a boutique studio built around one consistent creative vision, photographing a limited number of weddings each year so every couple gets my full attention.

Here's what I know about what wedding photography actually costs in this market — and what's behind the differences.

The Landscape

What wedding photographers in
Boston and New England typically charge.

Pricing in New England generally breaks into three tiers. Where a photographer sits in that range tells you something — but not everything. What matters most is what's included, how consistent their work is across different venues and conditions, and whether you trust them with one of the most important days of your life.

Under $2,500

Newer photographers building their portfolios, part-time shooters, or packages with limited coverage — typically 4–5 hours, smaller galleries, minimal editing. There's genuine talent here, particularly from photographers who are early in their careers. The tradeoff is experience: fewer weddings photographed means less preparation for low-light receptions, compressed timelines, or the hundred small things that can go sideways on a wedding day.

$2,500 – $4,500

A wide and mixed tier. Some of the best emerging photographers in New England are here. Others have been at this price point for years without meaningfully growing. Deliverables often include fewer hours, smaller galleries, and slower turnaround. Vetting matters more here than at any other tier — look at full galleries, not just curated portfolio highlights.

Wedding portraits at Cape Club Sharon MA
What to Know

What actually drives
the difference.

Experience and consistency

A photographer who has shot 280 weddings has already solved problems you don't know to worry about yet — the ceremony that started 45 minutes late, the reception with no natural light and four overhead can lights, the family formals that needed 20 minutes quietly compressed into 8. That experience shows up in the final gallery whether or not anything goes wrong.

Hours of coverage

Most full wedding days need 8–10 hours. Eight hours covers getting ready through toasts and early dancing — enough room for a first look, portraits, and everything in between. Ten hours lets the day breathe: a relaxed first look, unhurried portrait time, and full reception coverage through the open dance floor. I photograph weddings at venues throughout southeastern Massachusetts — Lakeview Pavilion in Foxborough, Black Rock Country Club in Hingham, Charter Oak Country Club in Hudson — and the weddings with room in the timeline consistently produce fuller, more relaxed galleries.

What's actually included

The headline number means very little without knowing what's inside it. Some photographers quote $3,500 and add fees for gallery downloads, a second shooter, and travel. Others quote $6,000 and include everything. Read the contract carefully, not just the price.

Albums, engagement sessions, and prints

A professionally printed heirloom album is a significant investment on its own — my albums start at $1,200 for an 8×8 and go up to $2,250 for a 12×12 when priced separately, and a standalone engagement session runs $1,000. When these are bundled into a collection at a fair price, the value is real and immediate — and the engagement session has a practical benefit on the wedding day itself, because we've already worked together once before the most important day of your life.

Second photographer

For larger weddings, or any couple who doesn't want either side of the morning undocumented, a second photographer changes what's possible. It's not primarily about capturing more images — it's about being in two rooms at once during getting ready, covering candid guest moments throughout cocktail hour, and ensuring that nothing significant goes unrecorded simply because one photographer had to make a choice about where to be.

My Collections

Transparent pricing,
no surprises.

Collections start at $4,995. No travel fees within Massachusetts and southern New England. No invoices after the fact. No line items that should have been standard from the start. Additional hours are available at $550/hr if your day calls for it.

Coverage

Collections are built around 8 or 10 hours of wedding day coverage — enough room for a first look, unhurried portraits, and full reception coverage. Additional hours are available if your day calls for it.

What's always included

Every collection includes a fully curated gallery of 800–1,200+ edited images, digital download with print rights, and an online gallery hosted for 10 years. No hidden fees, no surprise invoices.

Albums & engagement sessions

Select collections include a complimentary engagement session and a professionally printed heirloom album — bundled at a fair price rather than added on after the fact.

Two photographers

My Premier collection adds a dedicated second photographer — two complete getting-ready galleries, two perspectives on the same day, full documentation of both sides of the morning simultaneously.

Full pricing, collection details, and availability on my investment page.

View Full Pricing
Due Diligence

Questions worth asking
any photographer.

Before you book anyone — including me — here's what actually matters. Any photographer worth booking will answer all of these without hesitation.

01

Is pricing all-inclusive, or are travel, gallery downloads, and a second shooter separate?

02

How many weddings have you photographed, and can I see full galleries — not just portfolio highlights?

03

What happens if you have an emergency on my wedding day?

04

How long until we receive our photos, and what does the delivery process look like?

05

Is an album included, and how does the design process work?

06

Have you shot at our venue before, or at venues with similar lighting conditions?

Where I Work

Eight venues I know
by heart.

Part of what you're paying for at the higher end of the market is familiarity — with how light moves through a specific ballroom, where the best portrait locations are on a property, and how each venue's team operates. Over 17 years and 280+ weddings, I've built that familiarity at venues across southeastern Massachusetts and beyond.

Worth Saying

Why photography is worth
prioritizing.

The flowers are gone by Sunday. The cake is eaten. The dress goes into storage. The photographs are the only thing from your wedding day that you'll actively return to — on your walls, in an album, eventually passed to people who weren't there.

That's not an argument for spending beyond what's comfortable. It's an argument for not treating photography as the first category to compress when the budget gets tight. After 280 weddings, the couples who tell me afterward they wish they'd prioritized something else are rare. The ones who say they wish they'd invested more in photography are not.

Let's Talk

Ready to see if your
date is available?

I take a limited number of weddings each year. If you're planning a wedding in New England — or beyond — I'd love to hear about your day. Consultations are in person or over video, no pressure, just a real conversation.

Check Availability
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