Your Complete Guide to Confetti Rules at UK Churches and Venues
Planning your confetti moment? Confetti is one of those magical wedding details that every couple dreams about. The cascade of petals as you walk out together, the laughter of guests, those gorgeous photographs you’ll treasure forever. But before you order, there’s one important question to answer: what does your venue actually allow? Here is everything you need to know about confetti rules, what’s allowed, and why dried petal confetti is almost always the answer as told by The Dried Petal Company.

Confetti rules vary widely across UK churches and wedding venues, and it pays to know what to expect. The good news? If you choose natural, biodegradable dried petal confetti, you’re almost always onto a winner.
Why confetti rules exist
Venues aren’t trying to spoil your fun — there are genuine, practical reasons behind confetti restrictions. Non-biodegradable paper confetti and metallic or foil confetti are notoriously difficult to clean up. They can block drains, stain carpets and stone pathways, and linger in outdoor grounds for months. Synthetic confetti can also be harmful to local wildlife, which is a real concern for venues in rural or countryside settings.
As environmental awareness has grown, so has the pressure on venues to protect their grounds. The result is that most UK wedding venues now either strongly prefer or outright require biodegradable confetti and many specify real flower petals over manufactured alternatives.
The practical upshot: choosing natural dried petal confetti from the outset means you’re unlikely to face any problems at all.
Confetti rules at UK churches
Church weddings are one of the most common wedding settings in the UK, and confetti rules at churches can feel a little unpredictable. Here’s what you generally need to know:
Most churches allow biodegradable confetti outside. The key word is outside. Confetti inside the church building itself is almost never permitted – understandably, as petals and paper caught in pews, on carpet, and around the altar would be a nightmare to clear. The confetti moment at a church wedding typically takes place on the path or in the churchyard as you leave.
Churches prefer petals to paper. Even where paper biodegradable confetti might technically decompose, many churches and their grounds maintenance teams prefer real dried flower petals — partly for environmental reasons, and partly because petals break down so quickly and completely that there’s genuinely very little to clean up.
Designated confetti areas are common. Some churches specify an exact spot – often at the end of the path, away from the church door – where confetti can be thrown. This is partly practical (it stops petals blowing back into the building) and partly to keep the churchyard tidy. Your vicar or church administrator will be able to tell you exactly where your confetti moment can take place.
Always ask your specific church directly. While the above is a useful general guide, individual churches set their own rules. A quick email or phone call to your vicar or church office before you order is always worthwhile and will save any last-minute surprises (or upsets) on the day.
Our biodegradable wedding confetti, whether freeze-dried rose petals, larkspur, or hydrangea, is widely accepted by churches across the UK. Being 100% natural and free from synthetic dyes or materials, dried petal confetti is exactly what most churches are happy to see.

Confetti rules at licensed wedding venues
Licensed wedding venues – barns, country houses, manor houses, hotels, and outdoor spaces – each have their own confetti policies, and these can vary enormously. Here’s what to look out for:
Outdoor venues and country houses
Outdoor venues and those with beautiful grounds are usually the most confetti-friendly, but they almost always specify biodegradable confetti only. Many country house venues and barn wedding venues are set within farmland or natural landscapes, and the thought of synthetic confetti blowing across their fields simply isn’t acceptable. Real dried flower petals, however, are welcomed warmly as they biodegrade within weeks and leave no lasting trace.
Hotel and indoor venues
Indoor venues tend to be the most restrictive. Paper confetti – even the biodegradable kind – can leave a residue on carpets and floors that’s frustratingly difficult to remove. Many hotels and indoor reception spaces don’t allow confetti inside at all, but will permit it in outdoor areas such as terraces, gardens, or car parks.
The great news is that dried petal confetti is far less likely to stain or leave marks than dyed paper alternatives, which means it often gets the go-ahead even in venues where paper confetti is refused.
Barn wedding venues
Barn venues are generally very confetti-friendly, particularly for outdoor or threshold moments as you step out of the ceremony barn. Many barn venues specifically request natural petal confetti to keep in keeping with their rustic, eco-conscious aesthetic.
Registry offices
Registry offices (civil ceremony venues run by local councils) tend to have stricter policies than churches or private venues. Some don’t allow confetti at all inside or outside, due to shared public spaces and limited cleaning resources. If you’re having a civil ceremony, it’s especially worth checking the confetti rules and if confetti isn’t permitted at the registry office, and you don’t want to miss out, you can always plan your confetti moment at your reception venue instead.
What type of confetti do venues usually accept?
To put it simply: natural, biodegradable dried flower petals are the most universally accepted type of confetti at UK wedding venues. Here’s how the main confetti types compare:
- Dried petal confetti. Accepted almost everywhere. 100% natural, biodegrades quickly, safer for wildlife. The gold standard.
- Biodegradable paper confetti. Accepted at some venues, refused at others. Can leave residue and takes longer to break down than petals.
- Non-biodegradable paper or metallic confetti. Increasingly banned at venues across the UK. Best avoided unless you’ve confirmed it’s permitted.
- Fresh flower petals. Accepted at many venues, though they can be slippery underfoot and bruise quickly. Dried petals tend to be a more practical and photogenic choice.
How to check confetti rules at your venue
The simplest approach is to ask directly. Most venues include confetti information in their wedding FAQs or pack, but if not, a quick email to your venue coordinator will get you a clear answer. When you ask, it’s worth checking:
- Is confetti allowed at all?
- Does it need to be biodegradable?
- Where can we have our confetti moment — is there a designated area?
- Are there any restrictions on confetti indoors vs outdoors?
- Is there a specific type (petals vs paper) that the venue prefers?
Armed with those answers, you can order with complete confidence.
Why dried petal confetti is almost always the answer
At The Dried Petal Company, we’ve been helping couples plan their perfect confetti moment for over a decade and in that time we’ve seen just about every venue policy going. The consistent lesson? Natural, dried flower petal confetti gets the thumbs up almost everywhere.
Our freeze-dried rose petal confetti, larkspur petal confetti, and hydrangea petal confetti are all 100% biodegradable, free from synthetic dyes, and completely natural. They biodegrade within weeks of landing on the ground, and no mess that a light breeze won’t handle naturally. That’s why they meet the guidelines of churches, country houses, barn venues, and outdoor wedding spaces the length and breadth of the UK.
Beyond the practical benefits, dried petal confetti simply looks extraordinary in photographs. The soft, organic shapes and natural colour variation of real petals catching the light, whether it’s bright summer sunshine or golden late-afternoon glow, create those truly magical shots that paper confetti just can’t replicate.
A note on confetti cones and packaging
As well as choosing the right confetti, how you present it matters too. Confetti cones are a popular and practical choice – they make it easy for guests to hold and throw, they look beautiful on a display tray, and they can be personalised to coordinate with your wedding scheme. Our personalised confetti cones can be printed with your names, initials, and wedding date, adding a lovely finishing touch that guests often keep as a memento.

Confetti envelopes (including our glassine and biofilm options) are another elegant way to present your petals, and are particularly good for wedding couples that want a ready for use option.

The bottom line
Confetti rules at UK churches and venues can feel complicated, but the reality is straightforward: choose natural, biodegradable dried petal confetti and you’ll be welcome almost everywhere. Always check with your specific venue and designate a spot that works for your photos. Your photographer may take the lead to organise your guests and set up that all important confetti moment, then simply enjoy one of the most joyful moments of your whole wedding day.
Browse our full range of biodegradable wedding confetti petals, confetti cones, and confetti envelopes and if you’d like to see and feel the petals before you commit, order a sample pack and try them out.
The Dried Petal Company – Award-winning eco-friendly wedding confetti provider, featuring real dried flower petals. Celebrating our 12th wedding season in 2026.
