First comes The Pods, and then comes marriage. The remaining Love Is Blind couples went through with their weddings and the venue that they held it at looks like a dream come true!
Love Is Blind season 7 winded down to two couples who made it to the altar. Garrett and Taylor lived out their happily ever after when the groom confessed to the bride on their wedding day, “I did not think it was possible to feel this way, finding a partner that I just think is so perfectly matched for me, and I feel just perfectly matched for you.” While Tyler and Ashley gave their love a second chance. “I feel like I want you in my life no matter what. It’s not what I intended for myself, but I feel like it’s worth the reward, which is you,” she said.
Related: Which Love Is Blind Couples Are Still Together? The Unpredictable Pair
The couples hailed from the nation’s capital and the surrounding DMV area, but where did the dream nuptials actually take place?
Where did the Love Is Blind season 7 weddings take place?
Both Tyler and Ashley and Garrett and Taylor’s weddings took place at Great Marsh Estate, a Georgian-style wedding venue in Bealeton, Fauquier County, Virginia. The award-winning wedding venue can hold up to 200 guests across it’s lush estate. The venue is located about an hour and a half drive from Washington D.C.
According to PerfectDJ.Net, couples can expect to pay $5,000 to $15,000 for a wedding at the Great Marsh Estate depending on their budget and their chosen packages. The venue exclusively caters with Serendipity Catering, which according to Wedding Wire, has a rate of about $50 per person.
Wait, do the Love Is Blind contestants have to pay for their own weddings?
The show will pay for the wedding and celebrations, but it’s up to the contestants how much they want to add on. The show’s creator Chris Coelen has said if the couples want to personally add stuff to their wedding beyond the budget, the show won’t stop them. “If they wanted to spend their own money, or try to enhance it within reason, we would certainly allow that,” he said. “We would never put any constraints on them unless it was something we couldn’t accommodate within the show. That was really up to them.”