Resort Brides is a destination wedding planning service run out of Richboro, Pennsylvania by an online travel agency called TripGuy Travel LLC. The whole premise is narrow on purpose: couples who want to marry at an all-inclusive resort somewhere warm, and want someone else to handle the resort selection, the package, and the booking logistics. Seven regions are on offer, and they are the obvious ones for this kind of trip: Costa Rica, Jamaica, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Antigua, St. Lucia, and Aruba. So the geography is Caribbean and Mexico, full stop, which is honest about what it does well and does not pretend to plan a wedding in Tuscany.
Where the site gets more convincing is the list of resort partners. It names twelve-plus chains, and these are not obscure ones: Iberostar, Hard Rock, Couples Resorts, Royalton, Playa Hotels, the AMR Collection, Palace Resorts, Palladium, RIU, Karisma, Posadas, and Beaches Resorts. A destination wedding lives or dies on which property you land at, and a planner working across that spread of brands can match a couple to a budget and a vibe instead of pushing the one resort they happen to have a contract with. The planning side of Resort Brides covers what you would expect a coordinator to own: venue and resort selection, then the package itself, decoration, music and entertainment, photography and videography, and catering scaled up to a buffet for two hundred or more guests. That last figure tells you the operation is set up for full-size weddings, far beyond two people on a beach with an officiant.
A free initial consultation is the front door for Resort Brides. You book it through the site, which is the right call for this category, because the first thing to settle is always whether a given resort can even host the date and the headcount, and that is a conversation, not a checkout button. The dual identity of the site is worth understanding before you reach out: alongside the planning service, Resort Brides runs as a magazine and discussion space for couples still in the research phase, so a fair amount of the page exists to inform people who have not committed to anything yet. That double role is unusual, and it makes Resort Brides easier to vet, since you can read the content before you ever speak to anyone.
Does the operator behind it check out?
This is the part that decides whether a destination wedding planner is worth trusting with a deposit, and Resort Brides does not hide who is behind it. The About page states plainly that the operator is TripGuy Travel, a Pennsylvania travel agency that specializes in Caribbean and Mexico resort travel. Having the wedding brand and the travel agency openly linked is reassuring, because the reviews follow the agency name, and there are reviews. The Knot carries a TripGuy Travel profile with multiple five-star ratings and named reviewer quotes. WeddingWire lists twenty-three reviews for the same operator, again leaning firmly to five stars in the visible excerpts.
One Facebook post from the Resort Brides page points to the broader TripGuy team passing six hundred Google reviews, which, if accurate, is a serious volume of feedback for an agency this size. I would treat that number with mild caution since it comes from the company's own post and the wedding-specific share of it is unclear, but the pattern across The Knot and WeddingWire is consistent enough that the positive picture is not coming from a single source. A ProvenExpert profile also exists, though nobody has left a review there, so it adds nothing either way. No Trustpilot, Yelp, or BBB pages turned up.
Reaching the team is straightforward, which is what you want when real money and a real date are involved. Resort Brides lists a phone number, an email, a PO box in Richboro, and the consultation booking option, so a couple has several ways to reach a human before any deposit changes hands. For a service that asks you to plan a wedding several countries away, that visibility counts for a lot.
So who is this for, and how does it stack up against the alternatives? If you already know you want an all-inclusive in Mexico or the Caribbean, Resort Brides is a focused, credible choice with a track record under the TripGuy name and a roster of resorts deep enough to give you real options. Weigh it against something like Destination Weddings.com, which casts a wider geographic net across Europe and beyond and runs as a larger booking machine. That breadth is an advantage if your heart is set on a vineyard in Italy or a villa in Greece. For a Caribbean or Mexico beach wedding specifically, though, the tighter focus here, paired with the named resort partnerships and the consistent review history, makes Resort Brides the more grounded pick of the two.





Business address
Resort Brides
PO Box 416, Richboro,
Richboro,
Pennsylvania
18966
United States
Contact details
Phone: +1-888-9908747