Wine Country
Wedding Photographers in Santa Rosa
8 hand-vetted professionals
Santa Rosa's wedding photography scene is as diverse as the city itself — from sweeping skyline backdrops and fog-laced bridges to intimate garden ceremonies and sun-drenched vineyards just outside town. The photographers listed here know exactly where the light falls best and how to capture the moments that matter most on your wedding day.
What wedding photographers cost in Santa Rosa
Pricing scales with hours of coverage, second shooter, deliverables, and editorial-name reputation. Top Bay Area photographers book peak Saturdays (May-October) a year or more in advance.
Photographers in Santa Rosa
8 results
David N. Sachs Photography + Film
Award-winning Bay Area wedding photography and cinematography with a documentary, editorial approach.

Alicia Parks Photography
Contemporary wedding photography across Sonoma County.
Diane Bagaoisan Photography
Fun authentic wedding imagery in Sonoma and Napa.

Eva Nelson Photo
Sonoma County couples and wedding photographer.

Holly Brose Photography
Sonoma County wedding photographer capturing natural, timeless moments with golden-hour mastery at wine country venues.

Laurie Ann Martin Photography
Sonoma County photographer for romantic outdoor weddings.

Love and Wolves Photography
North Bay wedding photographers based in Santa Rosa capturing love stories with a documentary, emotive approach.
Sweetbay Photography
Authentic candid wedding moments in Sonoma County.
Six things separate the great from the merely available
- 1Full galleries (not just highlight reels) so you see how they shoot a complete day, not just the best 10 frames.
- 2Consistent style across multiple weddings - unique vision, not chameleon work that drifts to whatever’s trending.
- 3Experience shooting at venues similar to yours, especially difficult-light spaces (Wine Country golden hour, fog-bound coast, indoor city halls).
- 4A clear contract: hours, deliverables, turnaround, raw-files policy, second shooter, and reschedule terms.
- 5Insurance and a backup plan - real professionals carry liability coverage and bring a second body and dual cards.
- 6A personality you’ll want around you all day. The best photographer is one your guests barely notice.
Ask these before you sign anything
- How many hours of coverage are included, and what does overtime cost?
- Do you bring a second shooter, and is that an additional fee?
- When will we receive the gallery, and how many edited images can we expect?
- Do you have backup gear, backup memory cards, and backup photographers if you get sick?
- Have you shot at our venue before? If not, will you visit beforehand?
- What’s your policy on raw / unedited files?
- How do you handle reschedules due to weather, illness, or other surprises?
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Wedding Photographers in Santa Rosa - FAQ
How much should I budget for a Bay Area wedding photographer in 2026?
Most Bay Area couples spend $4,500-$9,500 for a quality wedding photographer with 8-10 hours of coverage and a second shooter. Editorially-known photographers and luxury elopement specialists frequently quote $12,000-$18,000+. Below ~$3,500 you’re typically looking at newer photographers, partial-day coverage, or out-of-area talent traveling in.
How far ahead should I book?
Book 10-14 months in advance for a peak-season Saturday (May through October). Off-season weekends and weekday weddings often have 4-6 months of availability. Many of the top names release dates by tier - Premium clients first, then standard.
What’s the difference between a $5,000 and $15,000 photographer?
At the top end you’re paying for editorial reputation, deeper pre-wedding consultation, post-production craft, full albums, and demand. The $5,000 photographer can absolutely deliver beautiful work; the $15,000 photographer is often a name your guests will recognize from magazines, with a slower-paced delivery process and a curated client roster.
Should I get raw files?
Most photographers don’t include raw files because they’re unedited and not representative of finished work. Some offer them as a paid add-on. The professional standard is high-resolution edited JPEGs with personal-use rights, plus a reasonable-resolution gallery you can share online.
Do I need a second shooter?
For weddings over 80 guests, a second shooter is strongly recommended - they capture reactions during the ceremony and getting-ready rooms simultaneously. For elopements and very small weddings, one experienced photographer is plenty.