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Martyn's Law for wedding venues.

Martyn's Law applies to publicly accessible premises used for a qualifying activity where 200+ people may be present at the same time. Hall (village, community, conference or exhibition) counts as a qualifying use — so whether your venue is in scope comes down to how many people could realistically be present, including staff.

The 'from time to time' rule

When are wedding venues in scope?

A venue that hosts intimate weddings midweek can still pass 200 at a full-capacity Saturday wedding once guests, your team, caterers and the band are counted together.

The threshold counts the most people reasonably expected at once — including staff — even if that only happens occasionally. Check it against fire occupancy, ticketing or past event records, and record your decision either way. Typically the responsible person is the venue owner or events manager.

What to think about
  • Guest counts vary hugely between bookings — scope turns on your biggest realistic event, including staff and suppliers.
  • Most people present are one-time visitors who don't know the building, so clear procedures matter more than familiarity.
  • If the venue is also a hotel or offers overnight stays, that use qualifies under Schedule 1 in its own right.
§If you're standard tier

Evacuation

Getting people safely away from the premises.

Invacuation

Moving people into, or to a safer part of, the premises when leaving is not safer.

Lockdown

Restricting access to, or movement within, the premises.

Communication

Alerting people on the premises and sharing clear information quickly.

§Common questions

Does Martyn's Law apply to wedding venues?

It can. "Hall (village, community, conference or exhibition)" is a qualifying use under Schedule 1 of the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025, so your venue is in scope if it is reasonable to expect 200 or more people — including staff — to be present at the same time, even if that only happens from time to time. A venue that hosts intimate weddings midweek can still pass 200 at a full-capacity Saturday wedding once guests, your team, caterers and the band are counted together.

What does the standard tier actually require for your venue?

Standard tier (200–799 people) asks for public protection procedures covering evacuation, invacuation, lockdown and communication — so far as reasonably practicable — plus notifying the SIA that you are responsible for the premises. There is no requirement to buy equipment, hire security or pay consultants; the Home Office estimates compliance at roughly £330 a year of staff and management time.

Who is the responsible person for wedding venues?

The responsible person is whoever has control of the premises in connection with its qualifying use — for wedding venues that is typically the venue owner or events manager. They own the scope decision, the procedures and the SIA notification, though the practical work can be shared.

When does your venue need to comply?

The Act received Royal Assent in April 2025 and statutory guidance was published in April 2026. Enforcement is expected from Spring 2027, with the SIA's notification portal opening in early 2027. Nothing is legally required yet — but the venues that record their scope decision and procedures now will find notification trivial when it opens.

Get your venue sorted in about an hour

PremiseReady walks you through the scope decision, the four procedures and a staff sign-off log — then exports a tidy evidence pack. Enforcement expected Spring 2027.

Start the free check
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