Trends
The Most Anticipated Celebrity Weddings of 2026
AltarHaus Editorial
From Lady Gaga to Millie Bobby Brown, 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated years in celebrity wedding history. Here is who we are watching.
Celebrity weddings have always functioned as a kind of cultural barometer — a moment where fashion, aspiration, and spectacle converge in a way that quietly shapes what the rest of us imagine for our own big days. In 2026, the calendar of anticipated nuptials is unusually stacked. Here is every couple we are watching, and what their weddings might mean for bridal trends.
Lady Gaga
Lady Gaga and Michael Polansky announced their engagement in 2025, and the world has been speculating about the wedding ever since. Given Gaga’s history of theatrical self-expression, expectations are running high for something architectural, maximalist, and almost certainly involving custom couture. Whether she opts for a single iconic gown or a series of looks across the day, her wedding is likely to generate the kind of fashion conversation that echoes through the industry for years.
Dua Lipa
Dua Lipa and Callum Turner have been one of the most photographed couples of the past year, and their aesthetic as a pair — effortlessly cool, quietly glamorous — gives a strong indication of what their wedding might look like. Expect something European in setting, minimalist in palette, and impeccably styled without appearing to try too hard. Dua’s fashion credentials make her bridal look one of the most anticipated of the year.
Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have not confirmed an engagement, but the cultural anticipation surrounding the possibility of a Swift wedding is unlike anything in recent memory. Were it to happen in 2026, it would be the most watched celebrity wedding in a generation — and the influence on bridal fashion, florals, and even wedding music playlists would be immediate and enormous. We are watching this space closely.
Why It Matters for Bridal Trends
Celebrity weddings do not just generate headlines — they generate searches, saves, and mood boards. When a high-profile bride chooses a particular silhouette, designer, or aesthetic, the ripple effect through the bridal industry is measurable and swift. Boutiques report spikes in enquiries for specific styles within days of a major celebrity wedding. For couples planning their own weddings in 2026 and beyond, paying attention to these moments is not about imitation — it is about understanding the visual language of the moment and deciding, consciously, what resonates.
AltarHaus Editorial


