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Start a Wedding Photography Business in Oregon

Wedding packages at $1,605-$6,420+ per wedding.

Starting a wedding photography business in Oregon requires no professional license—but success demands professional-grade equipment, strong skills, and comprehensive insurance. This is a high-investment, high-reward business where reputation is everything. Startup costs range from $10,700 for a photographer upgrading from portraits to $53,500 for a fully equipped operation with backup gear and studio space. Wedding photographers in Oregon charge $1,605-$6,420+ per wedding, with experienced photographers in premium markets commanding $9,630+.

Important Notices

Always Have Backup Equipment

Wedding days cannot be recreated. Camera failures happen. Always bring a backup camera body, extra lenses, multiple memory cards, and spare batteries. One equipment failure without backup can end your business—and potentially result in a lawsuit.

Contracts Are Essential

Every wedding booking needs a detailed contract specifying date, hours, deliverables, payment schedule, cancellation policy, and image rights. Contracts protect both you and the couple. Have a lawyer review your contract template.

Important Notices

Item Low High
LLC Filing Oregon LLC registration $100 $100
Professional Camera Body Full-frame mirrorless or DSLR (Canon R6, Sony A7IV, Nikon Z6) $2,150 $6,425
Backup Camera Body Essential—never shoot a wedding with one camera $1,600 $4,275
Professional Lenses (3-4) 24-70mm f/2.8, 70-200mm f/2.8, 35mm/50mm primes $3,200 $8,550
Lighting Equipment Speedlights, modifiers, stands $525 $2,150
Memory Cards & Storage Fast cards, external drives, cloud backup $325 $1,075
Professional Liability Insurance Annual E&O coverage—critical for wedding photographers $425 $1,275
General Liability Insurance Annual, venues often require proof $325 $850
Equipment Insurance Annual coverage for camera gear $325 $850
Editing Software Annual: Lightroom, Photoshop, Capture One $125 $650
Website & Portfolio Professional site with gallery $325 $2,150
Marketing & Advertising Bridal shows, The Knot, WeddingWire listings $525 $3,200
Computer & Editing Workstation Fast processor for editing thousands of photos $1,075 $3,200
Total $11,025 $34,750

Licenses & Insurance

Business Registration

Register LLC with Oregon Secretary of State

1-2 weeks

$100

EIN

Required for business banking and contracts

Instant online

Free

General Business License

Check Oregon city/county requirements

1-2 weeks

$0-$100

Sales Tax Permit

Required if selling prints, albums, or products

1-2 weeks

$0-$50

Professional Liability Insurance

Covers claims if photos are lost, corrupted, or client is unhappy—essential for weddings

Same day

$425-$1275/year

General Liability Insurance

Many venues require proof before allowing you to shoot

Same day

$325-$850/year

FAA Part 107 (If Using Drones)

Required for commercial drone photography

2-4 weeks

$175

Licenses & Insurance

Portland

650K

Portland has an active wedding market with venues ranging from historic locations to modern spaces. Build relationships with local wedding planners and venues—they're your best referral sources. Wedding season peaks spring through fall.

Salem

180K

Salem has an active wedding market with venues ranging from historic locations to modern spaces. Build relationships with local wedding planners and venues—they're your best referral sources. Wedding season peaks spring through fall.

Eugene

175K

Eugene has an active wedding market with venues ranging from historic locations to modern spaces. Build relationships with local wedding planners and venues—they're your best referral sources. Wedding season peaks spring through fall.

Wedding Photography Costs in Other States

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Oregon Wedding Photography Tips

Second Shoot First

Before going solo, second shoot 10-20 weddings for established Oregon photographers. You'll learn timeline management, lighting challenges, and client expectations while getting paid and building a portfolio.

Build Vendor Relationships

Wedding vendors refer each other constantly. Connect with Oregon planners, florists, venues, and DJs. One strong venue relationship can generate 10-20 referrals per year. Attend industry networking events.

Deliver Fast, Exceed Expectations

Couples are excited to see their photos. Deliver sneak peeks within 48 hours and full galleries within 4-6 weeks. Fast delivery generates word-of-mouth and social shares while excitement is high.

Diversify Beyond Weddings

Wedding photography is seasonal and weekend-heavy. Offer engagement sessions, anniversary shoots, and family portraits to Oregon clients. Past wedding clients become lifelong portrait clients.

Oregon Wedding Photography Tips

1

Master Your Photography Skills

Wedding photography is high-pressure with no retakes. Before launching, build skills shooting portraits, events, and low-light situations. Second shoot for established wedding photographers to learn the workflow and build a portfolio.

2

Invest in Professional Equipment

Budget $7,500-$21,400 for camera bodies, lenses, and lighting. You need two camera bodies (one backup), fast lenses (f/2.8 or wider), and reliable speedlights. Rent equipment for your first weddings if needed.

3

Register Your Business

File LLC ($100) with Oregon Secretary of State. Get EIN from IRS (free). Open a business bank account. Get a sales tax permit if selling prints or albums.

4

Get Proper Insurance

Professional liability insurance is non-negotiable—it covers you if photos are lost or a client sues. General liability is required by most venues. Equipment insurance protects your $16,050+ gear investment.

5

Build Your Portfolio

You need wedding photos to book weddings. Options: second shoot for established photographers, offer 2-3 weddings at deep discounts, organize styled shoots with vendors. Quality beats quantity—10 stunning images beat 100 mediocre ones.

6

Create Packages & Pricing

Oregon wedding photographers offer packages ranging from $1,605 (6 hours, digital files) to $6,420+ (full day, album, engagement session). Create 3-4 packages at different price points. Include clear deliverables and timelines.

7

Establish Your Online Presence

Build a portfolio website with your best work, packages, and booking information. Create Instagram showcasing recent weddings. List on The Knot and WeddingWire for Oregon wedding searches.

8

Book Your First Weddings

Network with Oregon wedding planners, venues, florists, and other vendors for referrals. Attend bridal shows. Respond quickly to inquiries—couples often book the first photographer who responds professionally.

Oregon Wedding Photography FAQ

Do I need a license to start a wedding photography business in Oregon?
No professional photography license is required in Oregon. You need a general business registration (LLC or sole proprietorship), any local business licenses required by your city/county, and a sales tax permit if selling prints or albums. Insurance is not legally required but is practically essential.
How much does it cost to start a wedding photography business in Oregon?
$10,700 to $53,500. A photographer with existing equipment can start for $10,700-$21,400 covering backup gear, insurance, and marketing. Starting from scratch with professional equipment runs $26,750-$53,500.
How much do wedding photographers charge in Oregon?
Wedding photographers in Oregon charge $1,605-$6,420+ per wedding. Entry-level: $1,605-$2,408. Mid-range: $2,408-$4,494. Premium: $4,494-$6,420+. Pricing depends on experience, portfolio, and target market.
What equipment do I need for wedding photography?
Essential: two camera bodies (primary + backup), fast zoom lenses (24-70mm f/2.8, 70-200mm f/2.8), prime lenses (35mm, 50mm, 85mm), external flashes with modifiers, fast memory cards, and reliable storage. Budget $10,000-$25,000 for a professional kit.
Do I need insurance for wedding photography?
Legally required? Usually no. Practically essential? Absolutely. Professional liability insurance covers you if photos are lost or a client sues over quality. General liability is required by most venues before you can shoot. Equipment insurance protects your gear investment.
How do I get my first wedding photography clients?
Second shoot for established photographers to build a portfolio. Offer 2-3 weddings at deep discounts to friends/family. Organize styled shoots with other Oregon vendors. List on The Knot and WeddingWire. Network with planners and venues. Ask every satisfied client for referrals.

Oregon Wedding Photography FAQ

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