Japan’s Wedding Industry Faces Battle to Adapt to Changing Culture Amid Drop in Number of Traditional Ceremonies

The Yomiuri Shimbun
The chapel of il cuore, a wedding hall in Mizunami, Gifu Prefecture which, will closed at the end of this year.

Wedding halls across the country continue to struggle even after the passing of the coronavirus pandemic, during which people were advised to avoid crowded spaces and close-contact settings.

The market has only recovered to 80% of its previous level partly due to changing values, such as opting to get married without holding a ceremony. As the industry has seen an increase in large-scale bankruptcies, the search is now on for ways to survive.

“It’s regrettable because this chapel is still usable,” said Kosuke Goto, 38, the manager of il cuore, a wedding hall in Mizunami, Gifu Prefecture, which will close at the end of this month.

A couple who are originally from Gifu Prefecture and now live in Aichi Prefecture explained that they chose this venue close to their hometown so they could express their gratitude to their family and relatives, saying: “It’s sad that this place will close.”

Since the venue opened in 2014, it has celebrated the beginnings of about 500 couples. However, things took a turn for the worst when the coronavirus pandemic hit. The number of weddings that were large enough to guarantee a certain level of revenue had halved, and simplified options such as photo-only weddings have increased. Staff members are increasingly being assigned to help at funeral homes affiliated with the venue.

Goto attributes the situation to declining populations and cost-saving tendencies driven by rising prices. “The close-knit community relationships cherished in regional areas have rapidly weakened,” he said. As a result, people are prioritizing cost- and time-efficiency weddings. The invites of workplace supervisors have disappeared, and the culture of parents paying for the ceremony has faded.

The waiting room at Partir Plus, an affiliated wedding hall in Nakatsugawa, Gifu Prefecture, has been renovated into a dining space suitable for smaller gatherings. “Even if we recommend a flashy arrangement, it won’t lead to happiness if people don’t recognize the value to it,” said Goto.

According to the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry, there were 485,092 marriages in 2024, half of the peak number of 1,099,984 in 1972, and data released by Recruit Bridal Research also shows that only half of the married couples surveyed held a ceremony in 2024. In addition, market analysis by Teikoku Databank shows that the industry’s market size in 2024 was ¥488.1 billion, still below the pre-pandemic level of ¥616.3 billion in fiscal 2018. In Fukuoka Prefecture, wedding halls operated by the long-established firm Arcadia were closed, causing a stir after ceremonies were cancelled.

Cafe as wedding venue

The industry is increasingly looking at opportunities when downsizing and streamlining.

Lec, a Kobe-based wedding venue, has been successful with its low-cost strategy, offering what they call small weddings. Unique services, such as the “solo photo wedding” program, which allows women to have photos taken alone while wearing a wedding dress, are also popular. “We’re no longer live in an age when people claim that small weddings aren’t profitable,” said company employee Masayuki Katsuta, 58.

Major industry players Novarese and Escrit, both of which are based in Tokyo, are set to merge their operations next spring. Their combined sales are projected to reach ¥45 billion, making them the industry’s second-largest player, and are aiming to consolidate management resources to improve efficiency.

In Mie Prefecture, Mie Heiankaku closed its wedding hall, which was able to accommodate 300 people, and transformed it into a cafe that can accommodate weddings with a capacity for about 40 guests. An official of the firm’s bridal division said: “We feel a sense of mission to ensure that the culture of weddings, a major life event, does not die out. We want to respond to customer demands even if we change how they are offered.”