Life Intelligence

How to vet a wedding vendor you've never heard of

Houston has a long tail of small wedding vendors — many of them excellent, some of them inexperienced, a few of them problematic. Here''s the 20-minute due diligence that separates them.

Tier 1: Public record in 5 minutes

  • Texas Secretary of State: search the business name at sos.state.tx.us. Is the LLC in good standing? How long has it existed? LLCs less than 6 months old for a wedding vendor is a yellow flag.
  • Texas Comptroller: search franchise tax status. "Forfeited" or "not in good standing" is a red flag.
  • Google the business name + "complaint" / "scam" / "refund": see what comes up. Ignore drama; look for patterns.

Tier 2: Professional footprint

  • BBB profile (if any): how many complaints, were they resolved, when were recent ones?
  • WeddingWire + The Knot profiles: how long on each platform, review trend over time, vendor responses to negative reviews.
  • Instagram: post cadence, diversity of real weddings, client tags. A vendor with only stylized shoots and no real-wedding tags is a yellow flag.
  • LinkedIn (for planners, coordinators, photographers): employment history, portfolio consistency.

Tier 3: References that actually matter

Ask for:

  • Two references from weddings in the last 90 days.
  • One reference from a wedding 12+ months ago (tests whether the relationship survived).
  • Ideally, contact info for the venue coordinator they worked with. Coordinators see everything.

When you call:

  1. "Would you hire them again? Why or why not?"
  2. "What surprised you — good or bad?"
  3. "How was their communication the week before and day of?"
  4. "Did any deliverables come late?"

Tier 4: The contract test

Before you sign, request:

  • Sample contract.
  • Proof of insurance (for photographers, planners, catering: $1M general liability minimum).
  • Proof of business licensing where applicable (catering, transportation, venues).
  • Their backup plan if they''re sick the day of.

A vendor who can''t or won''t produce these within 48 hours is telling you something.

Red flags that end the evaluation

  • Asks for full payment upfront.
  • Only accepts Zelle or Venmo ("credit cards have fees").
  • Contract is a one-page template with no deliverables specified.
  • No separate business address or entity (invoice comes to a personal Venmo account).
  • Offers to waive the contract in exchange for a discount.
  • Reviews are all extremely recent (less than 60 days) and very positive — possible review-bombing.
  • Extensive negative reviews with consistent specific patterns.
  • "I''m new to weddings but I''ve shot 200 families" — weddings are a specific skill.

Green flags worth paying for

  • Multi-year consistent portfolio.
  • Clear, itemized contracts.
  • LLC in good standing 3+ years.
  • Proof of insurance readily produced.
  • Responses to negative reviews that are professional and factual.
  • Referrals from established planners or venue coordinators.
  • Willingness to accept credit card payment without penalty.

Sources: Texas Secretary of State Business Search, Texas Comptroller Franchise Tax, BBB Houston.

AnalysisAutomatedSource: KnowYard EditorialPublished: Apr 6, 2026, 12:53 AM

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