The Matcha Wedding Trend: Your Complete Guide to a Matcha-Themed Wedding

Francesca Tang Borg
Last updated: 22nd Apr 2026

I’ll be honest — I’m not writing about this purely as a detached observer. I love matcha, I’m planning a wedding myself, and yes, there will absolutely be a matcha bar at mine. Which means I’ve gone down every matcha wedding rabbit hole there is, so you don’t have to.

Here’s the scene. A compact white wooden cart sits under a parasol, framed by pink flowers and green foliage, with a handwritten menu in a gold frame. Guests arrive, choose their milk, add a splash of syrup, and watch their drink being whisked in front of them. It’s iced in summer and warm and steaming in the colder months. Everyone is, frankly, delighted.

The matcha wedding trend has taken TikTok and Pinterest by storm and shows absolutely no sign of slowing down. Rooted in Japanese tea culture and turbocharged by Gen Z’s love of earthy aesthetics and wellness rituals, it’s one of the most exciting directions couples are taking right now.

In this guide, we’re covering everything from the colour palette (including the very popular strawberry matcha wedding vibe) to the matcha bar, the cake, the favours, and all the ways you can weave the theme through your day without it feeling like a tea ceremony gone rogue. And if you want to see how it fits into the bigger shift in how Gen Z couples are doing weddings differently, our Gen Z Wedding Index is worth a bookmark.

What Is the Matcha Wedding Trend?

Matcha wedding ceramic cup with whisk

At its core, the matcha wedding takes the visual and sensory world of Japanese matcha tea and translates it into a wedding aesthetic. Think muted earthy greens, cream, ivory, natural textures like bamboo, linen and ceramic, and a general sense of calm that feels a long way from the classic all-white-and-flowers setup couples have been choosing for decades.

The appeal is real. Wedding matcha as an aesthetic is modern, rooted in a culture and lifestyle, and it photographs beautifully. Gen Z and younger millennials are drawn to weddings that feel personal and a little unexpected, so matcha fits that brief perfectly. It’s a flavour and colour palette that’s distinctive without being divisive. And it scales just as well for a 200-person celebration as it does for an intimate gathering of thirty.

The Matcha Wedding Colour Palette

moodboard showing matcha wedding colour combinations
This mood board uses AI-generated imagery to bring the matcha colour palette to life.

This is where the aesthetic really lives, and it’s more versatile than you might think.

The core matcha palette centres on a muted, dusty green — the kind that belongs on the shelf of a Scandi ceramics shop rather than a football pitch. Pair it with ivory, warm cream, and natural linen tones and you’ve got a base that works across every season and venue type, from a barn in the Cotswolds to a Georgian townhouse in Edinburgh.

From there, you can take it in a few directions.

  • Matcha + ivory + terracotta — The most autumnal of the three options. Terracotta accents in your stationery wax seals, table runners, or floral arrangements give the palette warmth and depth. Grounded and beautiful.
  • Strawberry matcha — The pairing that’s had the biggest cultural moment, inspired by the viral strawberry matcha latte and translated into dusty rose, sage green, berry tones, and cream. It’s softer and more romantic than straight matcha green, and it carries through florals beautifully — think pink hydrangeas, blush peonies, and eucalyptus. From cake tiers to table styling and stationery, the palette translates across every detail. If you want the matcha look without going too green-heavy, this is a good option.
  • Matcha + white + gold — Cleaner, more elevated. For couples who want the modern edge of the theme with a slightly more classic finish. Works especially well in formal or city venues.
  • Matcha + ube purple — The newest pairing making waves online. Ube, the Filipino purple yam, has its own growing food and wellness moment, and the combination of its dusty violet tones with matcha green is beautiful. Think lilac bridesmaid dresses alongside sage florals, or a matcha and ube two-flavour cake that earns its place on the dessert table. If you want to be ahead of the curve rather than on it, this is the way to go.

Whichever direction you take, the palette carries through bridesmaid dresses, florals, and stationery with ease.

The Matcha Bar

Employee making a matcha for wedding guest

If there’s one thing that defines the matcha wedding more than anything else, it’s this. A dedicated wedding matcha bar, staffed by someone who actually knows what they’re doing, where guests can have ceremonial grade matcha prepared and customised to their taste.

A compact, design-led cart or bar with clean lines underneath a parasol, framed by pink and white flowers, with a hand-written menu displayed in a gold frame. It blends minimalist structure with soft romantic details to create a stunning focal point — the kind of setup where people gather, linger, and take about fifteen photos.

Guests choose their milk (oat is the crowd favourite, but almond, coconut, and regular cow’s milk all work) and then pick their flavour. Vanilla, blueberry, strawberry, cherry, pumpkin spice… the options are limitless, and half the fun is watching guests treat it like their own personal matcha café. The cups can be ceramic for a more elevated, sustainable feel, or glass for iced drinks. In the summer especially, a cold matcha latte might be the best thing you can put in someone’s hand.

There’s also something really special about what a matcha bar does for guests who don’t drink alcohol. Rather than being handed a glass of something sugary and forgettable, they get a premium, intentional drink that feels just as celebratory as anything in the champagne flutes. Non-drinkers are, for once, the ones with the most exciting option at the table.

And speaking of champagne, some couples have started swapping the traditional champagne tower for a matcha tower instead. Same visual impact, arguably more photogenic, and nobody has ever been sad about a matcha at 4pm.

Real couples and creators are already doing this brilliantly. Australian influencer Dominique Elissa served matcha as the welcome drink at her wedding in Sicily, handing guests “shots” of matcha in champagne flutes on arrival. The choice was personal and intentional, tied to her sobriety journey, and it set the tone for the whole day. Healthcare creator Miki Rai took things even further, incorporating a full matcha bar, a giant ceremonial whisk, and a “first whisk” matcha ceremony into her reception in place of the traditional first drinks moment. Both are brilliant examples of the matcha bar working as something more than just a station. It becomes a story.

A matcha bar wedding can slot into several points in your day.

  • Morning welcome drink. Particularly good for outdoor ceremonies or morning slots, where champagne would feel a bit intense at 11am.
  • Afternoon station. A lovely alternative to a standard coffee station during the post-wedding breakfast lull.
  • Late-night mocktail bar. A matcha mocktail (a strawberry matcha fizz, a matcha lemonade, something with a tiny umbrella) is exactly what people need at midnight when they’ve danced through their shoes.

Find matcha bar suppliers for your wedding. Search drinks stations and catering specialists on Bridebook to find vendors offering matcha bar hire and staffing across the UK.

Matcha Wedding Cakes

matcha wedding coloured cake
Photo © Mooies Couture Cake House | See their Bridebook profile

More bakers are incorporating matcha into their wedding cakes each year, both as a flavour and a colour, and it’s not hard to see why. Searches for matcha wedding cake have been climbing steadily, and it’s quietly become a must-have for couples who want their cake to do something visually interesting.

The aesthetic here is worth pausing on. A matcha wedding cake isn’t just a pale muted green tier. Think textured buttercream in sage and cream, bold graphic tiers, artistic glazing, or a vintage-style ruffled cake finished in a muted matcha green that looks like it belongs in a film. The visual range is wide, from pared-back and minimal to maximalist and statement-making, and all of it photographs beautifully.

Some of the flavour combinations that work best:

  • Matcha and strawberry. The natural pairing, and a brilliant way to tie your cake back into the wider strawberry matcha wedding palette.
  • Matcha and white chocolate. Rich, creamy, and a crowd-pleaser every time.
  • Matcha and lemon. Brighter and sharper. A great call for spring or summer weddings.
  • Matcha and black sesame. More adventurous, and absolutely delicious if you want your wedding food to feel distinctive.

Multi-tier works beautifully for the full statement, but a single-tier matcha cake suits intimate celebrations just as well. The key is finding a baker with portfolio examples. Look for anyone who’s worked with flavoured or naturally-coloured cakes and ask directly before booking.

Find wedding cake makers on Bridebook. Search UK cake specialists who offer flavoured and coloured wedding cakes, including matcha.

Matcha Wedding Favours

Favours are a detail that can go one of two ways. Something guests actually reach for, or something that quietly gets left on the table next to the place cards. Matcha wedding favours are firmly in the first camp because they’re on-theme, they look the part, and they’re delicious.

Some of the best options right now.

  • Personalised matcha tins. Filled with ceremonial grade matcha powder and stamped or embossed with your initials, wedding date, or a short message. Look for suppliers who can do custom tin lids with foil lettering for a high-end finish that doesn’t cost a fortune.
  • Matcha latte sachets with custom labels. More accessible on price, very giftable, and easy to personalise in bulk.
  • Mini matcha whisk sets. A step up in investment, but a lovely keepsake that encourages guests to try making matcha properly at home.
  • Matcha chocolate bars. KitKat’s matcha flavour has a cult following, and artisan brands like Meiji do exceptional matcha chocolate. Either makes a brilliant favour.
  • Strawberry matcha shortbread or biscuits. Custom-baked and tied with a ribbon in your palette colours. These are a standout favour that guests eat on the journey home.
  • Matcha-scented candles. Earthy and calming, with a hint of sweetness, in that dusty pale green. Versatile even for guests who’ve never touched a matcha latte.
  • Seed packets in matcha-green packaging. A sustainable option with real charm. A detail that plants a little piece of your day in someone’s garden.

Sourcing-wise, Etsy has a strong range of customisable options, and specialist tea companies can often produce branded or personalised tins. Check Bridebook suppliers for bespoke options too.

More Ways to Bring Matcha Into Your Day

Photo © Mark Elliott Photography | See their Bridebook profile

If you want to go deeper, there’s a lot more to work with beyond the bar, cake, and favours.

  • Welcome drinks. A chilled or warm matcha on arrival sets the tone immediately and works beautifully for morning ceremonies, non-drinkers, or couples who want something more interesting than the standard prosecco queue.
  • Cocktail and mocktail menu. A matcha mojito, a matcha martini, or a strawberry matcha lemonade as a signature drink gives your bar something different to offer.
  • Stationery. Earthy sage envelopes, terracotta wax seals, and matcha-toned invitation suites are widely available from independent stationery designers. This is often where couples first commit to the palette before anything else.
  • Table styling. The colours do most of the work here. Sage and cream linen napkins, warm ivory table runners, terracotta place card holders, and matcha green glassware all pull the palette together in a way that feels cohesive without every single detail needing to match perfectly.
  • Bridal party looks. Sage or dusty matcha green is one of the most flattering and photographable bridesmaid colours going right now. For suits, a sage tie or pocket square nods to the theme without anyone feeling like they’ve been dressed to match the bar.
  • Florals. White ranunculus, cream roses, eucalyptus, dried pampas, and pink hydrangeas all sit beautifully within the matcha palette. If you’re using a florist, show them the specific shade of green you’re working with. “Matcha green” rather than “light green” will save at least one confused conversation.
  • The hen do. If the theme is carrying through to your pre-wedding celebrations, a “She Found Her Perfect Matcha” hen do is a genuinely lovely idea. Think a dedicated matcha station, matcha-toned balloons and dried floral decor, and a morning of matcha lattes before the evening kicks off. It’s cohesive, it photographs brilliantly, and it’s a lot more memorable than a standard cocktail-making class.

Matcha Wedding FAQs

What is a matcha wedding?

A matcha wedding incorporates the earthy green aesthetic and flavour of Japanese matcha tea across the wedding day, through the colour palette, a matcha bar, wedding cake, favours, and styling details. It’s a direction that resonates with Gen Z and millennial couples who want their wedding to feel like it’s actually theirs, rooted in real taste and real culture.

How much does a wedding matcha bar cost?

A staffed matcha bar typically starts from around £450 for a compact setup, rising to £950 or more for a full-service experience with drinks, baristas, and styling included, though prices vary depending on guest numbers, the level of customisation, and your location in the UK. London and South East suppliers tend to sit at the higher end of that range, while regional vendors may offer more competitive rates. Request quotes from specialist drinks station suppliers to get a clearer picture for your area.

What is a strawberry matcha wedding?

The strawberry matcha wedding combines the earthy muted green of matcha with dusty rose and berry tones, a palette inspired by the viral strawberry matcha latte. It’s a softer, more romantic take on the theme that works across florals, cake tiers, and stationery, and looks wonderful alongside blush peonies and pink hydrangeas.

Where can I find matcha wedding cake makers in the UK?

Search for cake specialists on Bridebook who offer flavoured or naturally-coloured wedding cakes. Matcha is an increasingly popular request, so look for portfolio examples before booking or ask directly whether they’ve worked with it before.

What are good matcha wedding favour ideas?

Personalised matcha tins, latte sachets, matcha chocolate bars, and strawberry matcha shortbread are all strong options. They’re on-theme, they look great in your palette colours, and most importantly, they’re delicious.

Ready to Plan Your Matcha Wedding?

Whether you’re going full matcha immersion or just borrowing the palette for a few key details, this is a wedding direction that feels personal, visually striking, and very much of this moment. The strawberry matcha pairing in particular has unlocked a softer, more romantic take that works beautifully across every aspect of the day.

Find your matcha wedding bar vendor, cake maker, or wedding stylist and search thousands of UK suppliers on Bridebook today.

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Francesca Tang Borg
Francesca is a content writer and wedding expert at Bridebook, the UK’s No.1 wedding planning app. As an engaged bride currently planning her own wedding, she combines first-hand experience with Bridebook’s proprietary data from over 7,000 UK couples to help others budget smarter and plan with confidence. With a first-class honours degree in Marketing and Management and a background in the events and conference industry, Francesca creates practical, trustworthy guides grounded in real couple experiences, up-to-date pricing research and insights from Bridebook’s annual wedding report. Her philosophy is simple: your wedding doesn’t need to follow a rulebook - whether you’re planning a big celebration or something beautifully intimate, it should feel like you.
Last updated: 22nd Apr 2026