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The Best Wedding Ceremony Songs for 2026

· Updated 12 July 2026

This is our pick of the best wedding ceremony songs for 2026, chosen for the moments everyone remembers: the walk down the aisle, the signing of the register, and the exit as a newly married couple. Choosing ceremony music is one of the most personal decisions you’ll make for your wedding, so we have organised these by moment to make the choice easier.

Here’s a guide to the songs that work for each ceremony moment, with tips on how to find even more options using Apple Music’s curated wedding playlists.

Walking down the aisle (Processional)

This is the one everyone agonises over. The song that plays as the bridal party enters, and then as the bride walks in. It sets the entire emotional tone.

What you want: something that builds gradually, doesn’t peak too early, and can be faded out at any point without sounding wrong. You don’t know how long the walk will take. Rehearsals are always faster than the real thing. Your song needs to work at any length, and you need a way to fade it out gracefully when the moment arrives.

Classical and Instrumental

  • Canon in D (Pachelbel). The classic for a reason. Works in every setting, every venue, every denomination. If you’re unsure, start here.
  • Clair de Lune (Debussy). Gentle, romantic, understated. Beautiful in a small venue.
  • A Thousand Years, instrumental version (Christina Perri). The modern classic. The orchestral arrangement is the one you want; the vocal version is too busy for a processional.
  • Arrival of the Queen of Sheba (Handel). Grand and joyful. Better for larger venues.
  • Gymnopédie No. 1 (Satie). Beautifully simple. Sounds stunning on its own.

Modern and Contemporary

  • Perfect (Ed Sheeran). The definitive modern wedding song. The acoustic version works best for a processional.
  • Can’t Help Falling in Love (Elvis). Or the Haley Reinhart cover, which is softer and works better as entrance music. The Reinhart version is worth finding.
  • Songbird (Fleetwood Mac). Timeless and tender. Christine McVie’s vocal is perfect for this moment.
  • Turning Page (Sleeping at Last). Intimate and cinematic. One of those songs that couples discover and immediately know is the one.
  • Say You Won’t Let Go (James Arthur). Emotional without being saccharine.

Something Different

  • Glasgow Love Theme (Craig Armstrong, from Love Actually). Cinematic and moving. No lyrics to worry about.
  • The Book of Love (Peter Gabriel). Quirky, heartfelt, memorable. Not for everyone, but the couples who choose this one really love it.
  • First Day of My Life (Bright Eyes). For indie-hearted couples who want something that feels like them, not like a wedding.

Signing the register

This is the unpredictable bit. It can take 2 minutes or 10, depending on the registrar, the number of witnesses, and whether anyone drops the pen. Pick 2 to 3 songs so there’s always music playing. Background-friendly tracks work best; you don’t want something that demands attention while people are chatting.

  • At Last (Etta James). The gold standard. Lands every single time.
  • Everywhere (Fleetwood Mac). Upbeat enough to keep the energy up while paperwork happens.
  • Your Song (Elton John). Warm, familiar, just right.
  • Better Together (Jack Johnson). Laid-back and happy. Good for outdoor ceremonies.
  • Bloom (The Paper Kites). Quiet and beautiful. One of those songs that sounds like it was written for this exact moment.
  • You Are the Best Thing (Ray LaMontagne). Soulful. More energy than most signing songs, which can be exactly what’s needed.
  • L-O-V-E (Nat King Cole). Classic. Keeps things light.
  • Into My Arms (Nick Cave). For something deeper. Not everyone knows this one, which is part of its charm.

Practical tip: set up your signing playlist with crossfade enabled. If a song ends and the register isn’t done, the next one flows in without an awkward gap. This is the kind of thing you don’t think about until the silence hits. If you only have one track for a particular moment, switch on loop. The song will keep playing until you’re ready to move on.

Leaving the ceremony (Recessional)

You’re married. This is the celebration moment. Go upbeat. Go big. Nobody judges the recessional song for being too joyful.

  • Signed, Sealed, Delivered (Stevie Wonder). Pure joy. Hard to beat for this moment.
  • You Make My Dreams (Hall & Oates). Instant smile. Works every time.
  • Mr. Brightside (The Killers). If that’s your vibe, own it.
  • Lovely Day (Bill Withers). Optimistic and warm.
  • Walking on Sunshine (Katrina and the Waves). Unashamedly happy.
  • I Gotta Feeling (The Black Eyed Peas). Party energy from the first beat.
  • Happy (Pharrell Williams). Does what it says on the tin.
  • Don’t Stop Me Now (Queen). Big energy exit. Hard to top this one for pure momentum.
  • Higher Love (Whitney Houston / Kygo remix). Modern, uplifting. The remix gives it a tempo that works brilliantly as exit music.
  • September (Earth, Wind & Fire). The ultimate feel-good song. If in doubt, pick this.

Finding more songs with Apple Music

If you have Apple Music, there’s a shortcut most couples miss. Apple Music maintains curated wedding playlists, collections organised by ceremony moment, genre, and mood. Wedding Player surfaces these directly. Just tap Browse and it automatically shows curated wedding playlists like Wedding Songs: Walking Down the Aisle, Wedding Songs: First Dance, and more. Select the tracks you want and add them straight to your ceremony timeline.

This is particularly useful for the signing section, where you need 2 to 3 background-friendly tracks and might not have strong opinions. Let Apple’s curators do the initial shortlisting, then pick the ones that feel right. (Apple Music browsing is on iPhone and iPad. On Android, you build your ceremony from your own files and Wedding Player Originals.)

Prefer ready-made instrumental tracks?

If you would rather not source these songs yourself, Wedding Player also includes around 40 of its own fully licensed instrumental ceremony tracks, called Wedding Player Originals, from classical to contemporary, covering the prelude, processional, signing and recessional. They are separate from the named songs above: ready to drop straight into your timeline, with no tracks to buy or licence yourself.

Tips for choosing ceremony music

Listen to the whole song. A great chorus doesn’t mean a great processional. Some songs take 90 seconds to build, and you might only need 30 seconds of it. Wedding Player lets you trim the track to start at exactly the right moment, right in the app.

Think about the space. A string quartet version of a pop song works in a church. The original might not. Barn venues can handle louder, more contemporary tracks. Small registry offices need something quieter.

Check the lyrics. Some love songs have breakup verses. Read the words before you commit.

Match the energy to the moment. Processional: emotional. Signing: background. Recessional: celebration. Don’t use your biggest, most upbeat song for the processional; save it for the exit.

It’s your wedding. If your song is unconventional, play it anyway. Nobody remembers the couple who played Canon in D. Everyone remembers the couple who walked out to Mr. Brightside.

Getting it right on the day

The hard part isn’t choosing the songs. It’s playing them reliably when it matters.

Choosing the songs is the fun part. Playing them reliably on the day is the hard part, and that’s why I built Wedding Player.


Wedding Player is a ceremony music app for iPhone, iPad and Android. Organise your music by ceremony moment, mix Apple Music (on iPhone and iPad) with your own files, rehearse at home, and Go Live with confidence on the day. Free to download.

Common questions

What song should I walk down the aisle to?

Popular processional choices for 2026 include Canon in D, Clair de Lune, an instrumental of A Thousand Years, and Can't Help Falling in Love, alongside modern picks like Perfect and Say You Won't Let Go. Choose a song whose opening works at walking pace, and trim it so it starts on the note you want rather than the intro.

What music plays during the signing of the register?

The signing can run anywhere from two to ten minutes, so choose two or three songs rather than one. Warm, mid-tempo tracks such as At Last, Everywhere, or Your Song keep the atmosphere going while the paperwork is signed, with the music fading out cleanly the moment you are called back.

What is a good wedding recessional song?

The recessional is the celebration, so go upbeat and big from the first beat. Choose something that hits straight away rather than a slow build, and set it to start on the kiss rather than thirty seconds later.

How do I play these wedding ceremony songs with no gaps?

Build the songs into a ceremony running order, trim and fade each one, and play it offline so venue signal is never a factor. Wedding Player does this on iPhone, iPad and Android: it keeps the prelude, processional, signing, and recessional in one sequence and fades between them on a single tap, with no gaps.

Try Wedding Player for Free

No account needed. Works fully offline.