Top 5 Waterfront Wedding Venues in Rhode Island: A Performer’s Insider Guide

The wind off Narragansett Bay does something to a wedding that no ballroom can replicate. I noticed it again last June, setting up gear for a ceremony on a Newport lawn: the briny pull of the air, halyards slapping aluminum masts down in the harbor, the way late afternoon light turns the water into a sheet of hammered copper. The bride was still hours from arriving. Her father had pulled a folding chair near the lighthouse, sleeves rolled up, just looking at the bay. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to.

That’s the thing about waterfront weddings in Rhode Island. The Ocean State isn’t just a marketing slogan. It’s a 400-mile coastline crammed into America’s smallest state, which means you’re never more than a half hour from saltwater, and the venues lining that shoreline have had centuries to figure out how to host a party with the Atlantic as the backdrop.

I’ve worked coastal weddings up and down the Eastern Seaboard. Cape Cod, the Hamptons, the Maryland Chesapeake. Rhode Island sits in its own category because the geography here forces a particular intimacy with the water. Newport is essentially a peninsula. Watch Hill is a fingertip of land jutting into Block Island Sound. Bristol curls around Mount Hope Bay. You don’t have water near your wedding here. You have water as your wedding. The ceremony, the cocktails, the photos, the dancing, all of it happens in conversation with the tide.

This guide covers the five best waterfront wedding venues Rhode Island has on offer, from a peninsula estate with its own working lighthouse to a marina venue where guests can arrive by yacht. These are the rooms I’d point a couple toward if they called tomorrow asking where to get married on the Rhode Island coast.

Why Waterfront Wedding Venues in Rhode Island Work

Coastal venues in this state book out 18 to 24 months in advance for a practical reason. It isn’t just the views, though the views are part of it. Waterfront properties in Rhode Island have absorbed Gilded Age money for over a century, which means the infrastructure is built for serious celebrations. Tents that don’t flap in the wind. Catering kitchens engineered for 300-plate dinners. Lawns leveled and manicured to a degree most state parks would envy.

From an entertainment standpoint, working a Rhode Island waterfront wedding means thinking about three things most ballroom gigs never require. First, the wind. Open-air receptions on the bay can hit 15-knot gusts by late afternoon, and that changes everything from microphone placement to how a vocalist projects. Second, the sunset window. Couples here build their entire timeline around when the sun drops behind the Pell Bridge or sets over Block Island Sound, and you’d better have the ceremony processional cued to land inside that 20-minute golden hour. Third, the energy transition. Most waterfront weddings move from a breezy outdoor ceremony to a tented or indoor reception, and the entertainment has to bridge those two moods without missing a beat.

The reward for navigating all of that is a wedding that doesn’t look like every other wedding. Rhode Island waterfront wedding venues give you ocean light, salt air, and a kind of New England honesty no amount of inland landscaping can fake.

The Five Best Waterfront Wedding Venues in Rhode Island

Castle Hill Inn (Newport)

A working lighthouse anchors one corner of this 40-acre Gilded Age estate, which hosts one wedding per day on a peninsula as exclusive as its guest list.

Drive down the Castle Hill Inn approach for the first time and you understand why couples mortgage their futures to get married here. The road narrows. The trees thin. The Atlantic opens up on three sides because you’re on a peninsula now, jutting into Narragansett Bay, and the only building ahead of you is the 1874 mansion Alexander Agassiz built as his Harvard marine-biology summer retreat. The lighthouse stands a hundred yards off to your left, still active, still flashing its signal at night during your reception.

The grounds form a series of stepped terraces and rolling lawn that funnel guests toward the water. Ceremonies happen on the Grand Lawn with the Atlantic as the backdrop. No edits required for the photos. The custom Sperry sailcloth tent handling the reception is engineered for the wind that comes off the bay, which is not a trivial detail in October when the gusts pick up. Inside, the estate’s Chalet (once Agassiz’s actual laboratory) handles smaller events with a more cabin-like intimacy. During WWII the mansion served as a naval lookout for the entrance to Narragansett Bay. That history is still in the bones of the place.

Capacity: Up to 400 (tented); 250 ceremony on the Lawn; 55 in the Chalet (ceremony); 40 in the Beach House Spaces: Grand Lawn, Sperry Sailcloth Tent, Chalet, Beach House, Lighthouse grounds Price Range: $60,000–$175,000+ total investment; F&B minimums $140,000+ for peak Saturdays; venue fees from $15,000 Peak Season: June–September Best For: Couples wanting peninsula exclusivity and Gilded Age prestige Pet-Friendly: Conditional. Dogs allowed for overnight guests in Harbor Houses/Beach Cottages only; restricted from event spaces May–October

The Performer’s Take: Castle Hill is one of the more acoustically forgiving outdoor venues on the New England coast because the natural bowl of the Grand Lawn pulls sound toward the water rather than letting it scatter. The Sperry tent has decent reverb characteristics for a sailcloth structure, better than the older traditional pole tents, and there’s actual power capacity for a full hybrid setup. The walk between the ceremony lawn and the tent gives you a built-in energy break, which is useful. You can let the ceremony breathe, then ramp things up for the reception entrance without the awkward bridging that hurts a lot of single-room weddings.

The Detail That Sticks: The secluded cove just below the property is known locally as “Grace Kelly Beach.” During the filming of High Society in 1956, Kelly used to hide there from the paparazzi between shoots, walking down the bluff path to disappear for a few hours at a stretch. That cove is still accessible to guests staying at the inn, and it’s the kind of footnote that ends up in someone’s toast.

Official website: https://www.castlehillinn.com

Belle Mer (Newport)

Picture 127 acres of working farm where the ceremony space overlooks the Mount Hope Bridge and the after-party can happen in an 1800s barn forty yards from the water.

Belle Mer looks nothing like any other Newport venue, which is exactly the point. The “white-on-white” Mediterranean aesthetic was carved out of a building that, until 2006, was the navy-themed “Regatta Club.” Longwood Venues stripped it down to clean lines and white walls and turned it into something that feels closer to a contemporary villa on the Amalfi Coast than a New England wedding spot. The transformation is so complete that first-time visitors regularly miss the historical layers underneath.

The layers are there, though. Goat Island used to house a military fort, then a major torpedo station during both World Wars. The original “Vanderbilt Lamp Posts” still stand on the property, small physical reminders of the Gilded Age history the white-paint makeover almost erased. The Water Salon is the headline space, anchored by that 100-foot NanaWall system that retracts completely on a good-weather day. The Island House handles smaller events. The Ocean Lawn can hold over a thousand people for cocktails if you’ve got the guest list to fill it.

The view across the water hits the Newport waterfront, the Pell Bridge, and on a clear evening, the cluster of lights coming on in downtown Newport. Couples build their timelines around the sunset hour over the bridge for a reason.

Capacity: Water Salon 280 seated / 950 cocktail; Island House 180 seated / 325 cocktail; Ocean Lawn 1,000+ Spaces: Water Salon, Island House, Ocean Lawn, multiple bridal suites Price Range: Site fees $8,000–$15,000+; per-person costs $185–$225+ (2025 estimates) Peak Season: May–October Best For: Couples wanting modern glamour with retractable indoor-outdoor flow Pet-Friendly: Yes. Leashed dogs welcome as “ring bearers” for Ocean Lawn ceremonies

The Performer’s Take: The Water Salon is one of the better-engineered hybrid spaces I’ve worked on the East Coast. With the NanaWall open, you’re essentially playing outdoors: sound disperses, vocals need more presence, and you’re pushing through ambient ocean noise. Closed, the acoustics tighten into something closer to a controlled reception room. The challenge is that the wall can go up or down based on weather, so you need an entertainment team comfortable adjusting EQ and microphone gain mid-event without anyone in the room noticing. The dance floor sightlines are clean, the ceiling height supports a full live setup, and the floor itself has enough give for serious dancing without bouncing.

The Detail That Sticks: That 100-foot retractable glass wall isn’t a marketing exaggeration. It’s a NanaWall system, the same engineering used in high-end architectural projects, and when it’s fully open there’s literally no line between the reception room and the Atlantic. Couples doing their first dance in front of it have the bay as their backdrop, with the Pell Bridge lit up in the distance. You don’t need a videographer to make the shot work. The room does it.

Ocean House (Watch Hill)

One of the only resorts in New England with a private white-sand beach reserved for ceremonies, all of it tucked inside a $140 million replica of an 1868 Victorian hotel.

Ocean House is loud in a way the other venues on this list aren’t. Visually loud. The building rises bright yellow, four stories tall, perched on a bluff over Watch Hill’s beach, visible from a mile down the coast road. It’s deliberately, theatrically Victorian, and the current structure is a $140 million meticulous reconstruction of the original 1868 hotel that was demolished in 2005. Every detail was rebuilt from archival photos and original drawings. The result is a property that wears its grandeur on its sleeve.

Wedding spaces split between the Seaside Ballroom for smaller seated events, the South Lawn Tent for larger receptions, and the resort’s beach for ceremonies of up to 350 guests. The Relais & Châteaux catering team handles food with five-star polish, and the lobster boils and champagne cocktail hours here legitimately justify the price tag. The whole Watch Hill social ecosystem orbits this hotel during the summer season, which means your wedding is happening in the middle of one of the most exclusive seaside communities in the country. Taylor Swift’s “Holiday House” is the immediate neighbor; her Fourth of July parties have made the property a fixture of celebrity-culture coverage in recent years.

 

What sets Ocean House apart from any other Rhode Island waterfront wedding venue is the beach itself. It’s private to the resort, one of the few in New England where wedding ceremonies happen on sand reserved for hotel guests, which means you can walk barefoot from the resort to your processional spot without dealing with public beach logistics.

Capacity: Seaside Ballroom 180 seated; South Lawn Tent 250 seated; Beach Ceremony 350 guests Spaces: Seaside Ballroom, South Lawn Tent, Private Beach, on-site spa, multiple suites Price Range: 2026 Saturday F&B minimums often $65,000+; site fees $10,000–$75,000 tented; total spend $120,000–$350,000+ Peak Season: July–August Best For: Old-money galas and full-resort destination weddings Pet-Friendly: Yes. Dogs 50 lbs and under welcome with $195 fee; includes a “Pooch Menu” and designer beds

The Performer’s Take: A beach ceremony at Ocean House photographs like a dream and runs like a logistical exercise behind the scenes. Sand absorbs sound. The wind off Block Island Sound is consistent. You’re running a wireless setup that has to account for both factors, plus the fact that you’re carrying gear across uneven terrain to a spot the staff has cordoned off that morning. The reception spaces are more conventionally workable. The South Lawn Tent has clean acoustics and proper power infrastructure, and the Seaside Ballroom is small enough that a tighter live setup actually works better than scaling up. Mandatory multi-night room blocks mean you’ll have a built-in resident audience for the welcome reception the night before, which changes how you pace the energy of the main event.

The Detail That Sticks: The hotel was immortalized in the 1916 silent film American Aristocracy starring Douglas Fairbanks, which makes it one of the earliest American resorts ever captured on motion picture film. The current building is technically newer than that film, the original 1868 structure was demolished in 2005 and rebuilt, but the location, the silhouette, and the social role of the property in Watch Hill’s identity have held steady for over 150 years.

Official website: https://www.oceanhouseri.com/

Newport Beach House (Middletown)

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A toes-in-the-sand ceremony and a reception on the same beach, in the only luxury waterfront venue in the Newport area built for both.

Newport Beach House sits on Easton’s Beach (what locals call First Beach), and it’s the closest thing to a Newport wedding without actually being in Newport proper. It’s technically in Middletown, a fact most couples don’t catch until they’re filling out the marriage license paperwork. The location matters. Easton’s Beach is a much wider, longer shoreline than the rocky downtown Newport coast, which means you get an actual sandy beach for ceremonies rather than a manicured lawn that overlooks the water from a distance.

The building itself operated as “Johnny’s Atlantic Beach Club” for over 90 years before its 2016 transformation into a wedding venue. Longwood Venues (the same group behind Belle Mer) gutted the space and turned it into a two-story modern beachfront property with retractable glass doors, a grand floating staircase, and an outdoor terrace that sits about thirty feet from where the sand starts. The Eventide space on the top floor handles up to 300 seated. The Surfside on the ground floor handles 150–160 seated for dinner & dancing (up to 250 without dance floor). Full buyouts can scale to over a thousand for events that take over both levels plus the beach.

Where Belle Mer feels like a Mediterranean villa, Newport Beach House feels like a contemporary beach club someone’s serious money built on a serious piece of sand. The vibe is laid-back luxury, Belle Mer’s “sister venue” as the team there describes it, but with actual beachfront access that Belle Mer doesn’t have.

Capacity: Eventide 300 seated; Surfside 200 seated; Full Buyout 1,000+ Spaces: Eventide, Surfside, beach ceremony zone, outdoor terrace Price Range: Total starting cost $45,000–$60,000+; site fees $25,000–$30,000 peak; F&B minimums $25,000–$40,000 Peak Season: May–October Best For: Toes-in-the-sand couples wanting modern beach-club aesthetics Pet-Friendly: Yes. Pet-friendly for beach ceremonies with leashed animals and a designated handler

The Performer’s Take: Eventide is the better dance space of the two: slightly higher ceilings, better speaker placement geometry, and a layout that pushes energy toward the floor rather than dispersing it across the room. The retractable glass doors are great for cocktail hour transitions but tricky during the dance set. Open them and you lose low-end frequency response to the open air; close them and the room can heat up fast on a humid August night. The grand floating staircase makes for a knockout entrance moment for the couple, and we usually plan the band’s opening number to coincide with that walk down. The beach ceremony presents the same sand-and-wind challenges as Ocean House, but with shorter equipment carry distances that make the logistics meaningfully easier.

The Detail That Sticks: Easton’s Beach has drawn Rhode Islanders since the 1880s, and the original Atlantic Beach Club building (now Newport Beach House) hosted generations of Aquidneck Island families for summer dances, prom afterparties, and yes, weddings, for nearly a century before the 2016 redesign. Local couples occasionally book here specifically because their grandparents got married in the same building.

The Bohlin (Newport)

A 5,000-square-foot permanent sailcloth tent inside the Newport Yachting Center, with a teak ceremony deck where the wedding party can dock just feet from the aisle.

The Bohlin doesn’t try to be anything other than what it is: a high-end event space inside an active marina, in the city that calls itself the Sailing Capital of the World. The 5,000-square-foot sailcloth tent is permanent, climate-controlled, climate-engineered, and the teak dock where ceremonies happen sits at the edge of the harbor with multi-million-dollar yachts as the literal scenery. You eat dinner under a ceiling of sailcloth while looking up at masts.

The aesthetic was deliberately designed to mimic a classic wooden schooner. Teak floors, sailcloth ceiling, authentic marine rigging integrated into the structure. The venue takes its name from Dick Bohlin, a figure in Newport’s sailing community whose legacy informs the property’s identity. The whole space feels like the inside of an extremely well-appointed yacht club, except larger and with a kitchen capable of serving 250 guests dock-to-table seafood from Newport Restaurant Group.

What makes The Bohlin work as a wedding venue is the dual identity. It’s nautical without being kitschy. It’s elegant without losing the working-marina energy. Boats keep arriving and departing in the harbor during your cocktail hour. The sound of halyards and the occasional foghorn become part of the soundtrack. For couples with a real connection to sailing, or guests who would genuinely enjoy arriving by boat from a different point on the harbor, this venue is a one-of-one in Rhode Island.

Capacity: 250 seated dinner; up to 500 standing reception Spaces: 5,000 sq. ft. sailcloth tent, teak ceremony dock, dockage available for boat arrivals Price Range: Site fees from $2,500; peak season F&B minimums $32,000–$52,000 (2025); per-person costs approx. $100+ Peak Season: May, June, and October Best For: Sailing enthusiasts and couples wanting dockside marina ambiance Pet-Friendly: Yes. Pets welcome for ceremonies on the teak deck; typically removed before formal dinner

The Performer’s Take: A 5,000-square-foot sailcloth tent over a teak floor carries its own specific acoustic signature. The fabric softens reverb in a way that benefits live vocals, but the open-air sides mean low-end bass can escape quickly. We typically reinforce the bottom of the mix in this kind of space and pull back on overhead reverb-heavy effects. The dock ceremony location works well for microphone setups because the water actually helps carry the vocal signal back toward seated guests rather than scattering it. The dance floor area sits roughly center-tent, which gives clean sightlines from every table. The one logistical wrinkle is load-in timing. Boats coming in and out of the marina can complicate vendor truck access, so we coordinate with the venue on arrival windows.

The Detail That Sticks: The Bohlin ranks among the few venues in New England where guests can legitimately arrive at the wedding by boat. The Newport Yachting Center has guest dockage available, and a number of couples coordinate with the venue to have specific guests, or themselves for the entrance, arrive by yacht or sailboat. A teak ramp leads from the dock straight into the cocktail area. The whole sequence feels staged for a film, which it isn’t.

Official website: http://bohlinnewport.com 

How to Choose Between These Waterfront Wedding Venues in Rhode Island

Working with a guest list north of 250 and you want the Newport-prestige factor without compromising on scale? Castle Hill Inn is the obvious move. It handles up to 400 in the tent and gives you a full peninsula to work with. Belle Mer is the comparable choice for that same large-guest-list scenario but with a modern aesthetic instead of Gilded Age.

Planning something smaller, say 150 guests or fewer? Newport Beach House’s Surfside space or Belle Mer’s Island House give you a more intimate footprint without losing the waterfront access. The Bohlin works at this scale too, and it’s the only option on this list that gives you genuine working-marina atmosphere.

If budget is a meaningful constraint and you still want a Rhode Island coastal wedding, The Bohlin’s starting site fee of $2,500 is significantly lower than the others. The total spend will still climb with food and beverage minimums, but the entry point is more accessible than Ocean House or Castle Hill, where you’re looking at six-figure investments before you’ve factored in florals.

Want a beach ceremony, actual sand, actual barefoot? Your options narrow to Newport Beach House or Ocean House. Newport Beach House is the more accessible price point and gives you Easton’s Beach’s wider shoreline. Ocean House is the higher-end experience with a private beach reserved exclusively for resort guests.

Traveling with guests from out of state and want everything in one place (ceremony, reception, accommodations, after-party, brunch)? Ocean House is the only true resort on this list. Castle Hill has some on-site suites but isn’t a full hotel. Everyone else requires nearby hotel coordination.

Getting married in a shoulder season (late April, early May, or November)? Belle Mer’s climate-controlled Water Salon and The Bohlin’s permanent climate-controlled tent are your best bets. The other three lean heavily on outdoor weather cooperation. [INTERNAL LINK: DLE wedding planning timeline guide]

Why Entertainment Matters More Than You Think at Waterfront Wedding Venues

Most couples don’t realize this until they’re at a friend’s coastal wedding and watching the band struggle: open-water acoustics behave nothing like indoor acoustics. The wind carries sound away. Salt air affects equipment. Sunset photos require precise timeline coordination with the ceremony processional. And the energy shift from a breezy outdoor ceremony to an enclosed reception can either feel seamless or jarring, depending entirely on whether your entertainment team understands the transition.

Take a venue like Castle Hill or Newport Beach House. The ceremony is happening on a lawn or a beach with no walls to contain the sound. A standard PA setup that works fine in a hotel ballroom will sound thin and washed-out in that environment. You need musicians and a sound engineer who know how to project, plus gear that’s calibrated for outdoor reinforcement. Wireless microphones need to be tested in the actual wind conditions of the day. We bring extra windscreens for every microphone for exactly this reason.

Then there’s the sunset timing. Rhode Island waterfront venues face west or southwest, which means the sunset is your money shot. Couples plan their entire timeline around hitting the ceremony recessional, the cocktail-hour walk to the water, or the first dance during golden hour. An entertainment team that’s never worked these venues won’t know that you have to start the processional music three to four minutes earlier than the printed timeline says, because the bride is going to pause on the path to look at the water. We’ve seen this exact moment so many times we now build the buffer in automatically.

The ceremony-to-reception transition is the other underrated piece. At Belle Mer, the NanaWall opens or closes based on weather. At The Bohlin, you move from the dock to the tent. At Ocean House, you go from the beach to the South Lawn Tent or the Seaside Ballroom. Each of these transitions is an opportunity to either keep the energy elevated or let it crater. The hybrid DJ band model exists precisely for this kind of choreography: live musicians during ceremony and cocktails, DJ-driven energy during transitions, full hybrid mode during the reception. The right team plays the room differently at every stage of the night.

Why DLE Event Group for Your Rhode Island Waterfront Wedding

Full disclosure: this is the part of the article where I make the case for our team. I’ll keep it brief and specific.

DLE Event Group has spent over a decade as the pioneers of the hybrid DJ band model, with live musicians and a professional DJ working together as a single integrated entertainment unit rather than two separate vendors trying to coordinate. For waterfront wedding venues in Rhode Island, this format solves the problems I just outlined. Live instruments (sax, guitar, percussion, vocals, more depending on the package) bring presence and warmth to outdoor ceremonies where a laptop DJ would sound thin. The DJ component handles the genre versatility most couples want for the dance floor, from a Frank Sinatra slow dance to whatever your college friends will lose their minds over at midnight.

The track record matters here. The Knot Best of Weddings Hall of Fame eleven times running (2013–2023). Over 100 weddings and events performed at venues including The Plaza Hotel, The Pierre, Gotham Hall, Guastavino’s, Park Chateau, Ashford Estate, and properties throughout the tri-state area and beyond. Our home base is NYC, with a primary service area across the Hudson Valley, the Hamptons, Long Island, Westchester, and Upstate New York. Rhode Island is a Northeast extension we travel for when the right couples and venues call.

The planning process is what separates a smooth wedding from a stressful one. We start consultations roughly six months out. Five to ten Zoom planning meetings. Custom song learning for first dances, parent dances, and any cultural ceremonies in the program (Hora, Tarantella, Baraat, Dabke, whatever your traditions are). Detailed MC pronunciation guidance. Real-time crowd reading at the event itself. We bring backup equipment for every critical component because at a waterfront venue, you don’t get a second chance if something fails.

Packages start at $5,995. Travel fees apply for out-of-region events. Every quote is custom because every wedding is.

FAQs

For Newport-area Saturdays during peak season (May through October), expect to book 18 to 24 months in advance. The most exclusive properties (Castle Hill Inn, Ocean House) often release dates two full calendar years ahead, and those calendars fill within weeks. Off-peak dates from November through March can sometimes be booked with 6 to 9 months of lead time. The Bohlin and Newport Beach House tend to have slightly more flexible booking windows than Castle Hill and Ocean House.

For 150 guests at a mid-tier property like The Bohlin, plan for $50,000 to $80,000 total. For Belle Mer or Newport Beach House at that same guest count, $75,000 to $130,000 is more realistic. At Castle Hill Inn or Ocean House, total investment for 150 to 200 guests routinely lands between $120,000 and $250,000. These numbers include venue fees, food and beverage minimums, taxes, and service charges. Entertainment, floral, and photography are separate line items.

Yes, and all five venues on this list are designed for it. Each has dedicated ceremony spaces (lawns, beaches, decks) separate from the reception areas, which gives you a natural cocktail-hour transition window for the room flip. Castle Hill’s Grand Lawn ceremony followed by the Sperry tent reception is a textbook example. Newport Beach House handles the entire arc with even shorter walking distances: beach ceremony, cocktail hour on the terrace, reception on Eventide.

For ceremonies on a lawn or beach, a hybrid live-acoustic setup typically outperforms a pure DJ rig. Live instruments like strings, sax, and guitar carry better in open-air conditions, and wind-resistant microphones with proper windscreens are essential for the officiant and vows. We recommend wireless microphone tests on the actual day, since wind patterns shift between the morning walkthrough and the ceremony itself. For the reception, hybrid DJ band setups give you the genre range to keep the dance floor moving for three to four hours.

Newport and the surrounding Aquidneck Island area have dense lodging options. Ocean House includes on-site accommodations (with mandatory multi-night room blocks for wedding parties). Castle Hill has limited on-site suites. For Belle Mer, The Bohlin, and Newport Beach House, you’ll be coordinating room blocks at nearby hotels such as the Newport Marriott, Vanderbilt Grace, Gurney’s Newport, or smaller boutique inns in the historic district. Most couples set up two or three lodging tiers at different price points within a 15-minute drive of the venue.

Wind is a factor, not a deal-breaker. Most ceremonies are scheduled for late afternoon (typically 4:00 to 5:30 PM), which is generally when wind speeds settle. The professional venues on this list all have backup contingency spaces (tents, indoor rooms) that they can flip to with a few hours’ notice if conditions turn. A good entertainment team brings wind-rated equipment, secures all cabling, and adjusts microphone gain for ambient noise. We’ve done ceremonies in 15-knot gusts that sounded clean in the recordings because the gear and the setup were dialed for it.

Let's Talk About Your Rhode Island Waterfront Wedding

Picking a venue is the start. The entertainment is what makes the night feel like it’s actually yours.

If you’re considering one of the waterfront wedding venues in Rhode Island covered in this guide (Castle Hill Inn, Belle Mer, Ocean House, Newport Beach House, or The Bohlin) and you want to talk through what hybrid DJ band entertainment looks like for your specific vision, we’d love to start a conversation. We’ve worked the coastal-wedding playbook for over a decade and can walk you through what your timeline, your music selections, and your reception flow could actually look like at any of these venues.

Premier Rhode Island waterfront dates book 18 to 24 months out. The same is true on our side. If you’ve already locked in your venue, the next call should be about your entertainment.

Get in touch:

Phone: 877-534-2424

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