Updated July 7, 2026
How to Collect Photos from Wedding Guests
Your guests will take hundreds of photos at your wedding — and by default you will see almost none of them. The fix is picking a collection method before the day, so sharing takes guests seconds instead of relying on good intentions.
This guide compares the five methods couples actually use — on guest friction, cost, and how fast the photos reach you — then walks through setting up the one that works best.
At a glance
The five methods, compared
| Method | Guest effort | Typical cost | Photos ready |
|---|---|---|---|
| QR code gallery (see it work) | Scan → upload | From $49 one-time | Same night |
| Shared cloud drive (Google/iCloud) | Sign-in required | Free | Chase people for weeks |
| Wedding hashtag | Public post | Free | Only what gets posted |
| Disposable cameras | Physical handling | $150–400 | Days (developing) |
| Email / group chat | Manual sending | Free | Trickles in for months |
To be fair to the alternatives, each has a case. A shared Google or iCloud drive is a solid free option if your guests are a small, tech-comfortable group who already use it (see our Google Photos comparison). A wedding hashtag can work if your crowd is heavily on Instagram and you do not mind public, compressed posts. Disposable cameras earn their keep purely for novelty and tangible prints, if you accept the cost and the hit-or-miss quality. And email or a group chat is fine for a very small wedding. The QR gallery simply wins when you want the most photos, from the widest range of guests, with the least friction.
Why bother
Why collecting guest photos is worth the setup
Nearly every guest is already carrying a good camera, so the question is never whether the photos exist — only whether they reach you. Your photographer captures the formal record, but one person cannot be everywhere; guests catch the candids, from the angles and moments the pro misses. Collecting those is the cheap layer that completes the day.
Step by step
How QR code photo collection works
One code per table links straight to your private album. Guests scan it with their normal camera app, pick their photos and video, and upload in the browser — you wake up to the night's photos in one place, at full resolution.
- Create your event album and get the QR code.
- Print the code on table cards and place it where guests sit.
- Guests scan and upload during the party — no app download.
- Download all the originals the morning after.
Get uptake
How to get guests to actually use it
- Put a QR code on every table, not just one welcome sign — guests are already sitting with their phones out.
- Have the MC or DJ announce it, ideally more than once; a prompt during dinner is the single biggest upload moment of the night.
- Add it to take-home cards and your wedding website, so guests can upload later from home while going through their camera roll.
- Keep the upload link open after the day and include it in your thank-you message — a lot of photos arrive in the week that follows.
Two honest expectations. Even done well, not every guest uploads — treat what you collect as a bonus layer of candids, not a replacement for your photographer. And uploads need a connection, so if your venue has patchy signal, make the WiFi password easy to find or lean on the after-the-day uploads. One thing to decide up front: a QR code is open to anyone who can see it, so if you want a say over what appears, choose a gallery with moderation — the ability to hide or approve uploads before they show.
Afterwards
After the wedding
Download the originals soon after the day — most galleries keep them for a set window, so do not leave your only copy online. With a QR gallery you get one full-resolution download of everything, photos and video, rather than saving files one at a time or chasing a shared drive.
Frequently asked questions
A QR code photo gallery is the easiest method: guests scan a code at their table and upload from the phone browser without installing an app or creating an account. The couple gets every photo in one private album the same night, at full resolution.
Not with a browser-based QR gallery. Guests scan the code with their normal camera app and upload directly from the web page. App-based methods and shared cloud drives lose a share of guests at the install or sign-in step, which can be a drop-off point.
For collecting the actual files, yes. A hashtag only shows photos guests choose to post publicly, and only if their account is public — and the platform compresses them. A QR gallery collects full-resolution photos and video straight into one private album you control, with nothing posted publicly.
Make it visible and prompt it out loud. Put a QR code on every table, add it to take-home cards and your wedding website, and ask your MC or DJ to announce it during the reception — the dinner prompt is the biggest upload spike of the night. Keeping the link open afterward catches the rest.
Uploads need an internet connection, so if your venue has weak cell signal, share the WiFi password somewhere obvious. If the connection is poor during the event, guests can still upload later from home — a good QR gallery keeps the link open for weeks after the wedding, so nothing is lost.
It varies a lot, and no reliable study puts a firm number on it. What is certain is that more than 9 in 10 US adults own a smartphone (Pew, 2025), so the limit is rarely whether photos exist — it is whether sharing is easy enough that guests bother. Treat what you collect as extra candids on top of your photographer's work, not a guaranteed count.
Yes. A browser-based QR gallery accepts guest video alongside photos, so you get the speeches, the first dance and the candid clips, not just stills. A good gallery keeps both at full quality.
Keep the upload link open after the event and send it in your thank-you message. With Wedding Arrivals the upload window stays open for months after the wedding, so late photos still land in the same album — then you download everything as one full-resolution file.