Micro Wedding Venues in Tennessee

12 micro wedding venues serving Tennessee couples planning an elopement or micro wedding.

Micro Wedding Venue

Butterfly Hollow Bed and Breakfast

Gordonsville, Tennessee · $$

A bed and breakfast first and a wedding venue second, Butterfly Hollow caps every celebration at 30 guests or fewer — small gatherings are the spec…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Chapel in the Hollow

Seymour, Tennessee · $$

Tucked into a wooded hollow in Seymour, this outdoor ceremony site puts a private forest between you and the bustle of nearby Gatlinburg and Pigeon…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Dara's Garden

Knoxville, Tennessee · $$

Short engagement? Dara's Garden lets elopements go on the calendar just sixty days out, while micro weddings book six months ahead — a useful split…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Drakewood Farm

Goodlettsville, Tennessee · $$

An 1850s mansion anchors this forty-acre farm in Goodlettsville, fifteen minutes from downtown Nashville, and the historic architecture carries thr…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Gardens in the Gorge

Chattanooga, Tennessee · $ · from $800

Eight hundred dollars covers the aptly named Let's Just Elope package at Gardens in the Gorge, a Chattanooga venue perched above the Tennessee Rive…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Hemlock Falls LLC

Sequatchie, Tennessee · $$ · from $2,500

Every wedding booked at Hemlock Falls comes with a built-in honeymoon: a two-night stay in the property's log cabin is included with its packages.…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Honeysuckle Hills

Pigeon Forge, Tennessee · $$

Four named packages organize the offerings at Honeysuckle Hills, a small-wedding venue on Mill Creek Road in Pigeon Forge at the edge of the Smokie…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Leeric Lodge

Silver Point, Tennessee · $$$ · from $3,500

Center Hill Lake supplies the backdrop at this Silver Point estate between Nashville and Cookeville, where the signature Effortless Elopements pack…

Elopements · Micro Weddings · Destination

Micro Wedding Venue

Mountain Heights Venue

Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee · $$

Twenty-three acres in Soddy-Daisy give this Chattanooga-area property room to run weekday elopements and micro weddings in two distinct formats. Th…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Orion Hill Events

Arlington, Tennessee · $ · from $500

Getting the whole estate to yourselves is the core of the microwedding offer at Orion Hill, an Arlington property northeast of Memphis: $3,500 buys…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Micro Wedding Venue

Sandy Creek Farms

Springville, Tennessee · $$

How many places let you trade vows on a private island? Sandy Creek Farms, a 430-acre estate in Springville that calls itself Tennessee's largest d…

Elopements · Micro Weddings · Destination

Micro Wedding Venue

The Elliot Wedding Venue

Somerville, Tennessee · $ · from $500

Two clearly priced small-wedding formats define the offer at The Elliot, a family-owned venue on ten private acres in Somerville, positioned betwee…

Elopements · Micro Weddings

Choosing between a Smokies cabin, a chapel, and a Nashville loft

Tennessee really runs two separate venue markets. In Sevier County — Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge — the dominant model is the rental cabin that doubles as ceremony site: thousands of log homes with mountain-view decks, hot tubs, and sleeping capacity for your whole guest list, so lodging and venue collapse into one booking with no rental-hour clock. Local tourism boards bill the area as the wedding capital of the South, citing tens of thousands of ceremonies a year.

That volume built a second institution: the Gatlinburg wedding chapel. Dozens of dedicated chapels run multiple ceremonies daily with in-house officiants and photographers, which keeps prices low and scheduling flexible but means weekday or off-season dates buy you privacy.

Nashville plays by city rules instead — rooftop event spaces, renovated warehouses, and boutique-hotel buyouts priced per hour with vendor lists and capacity tied to fire code rather than bedroom count. Guests sleep off-site, so factor hotel blocks into the comparison. A useful rule of thumb: ceremonies on private cabin or chapel property need no government permit at all, which is exactly what makes them the low-friction alternative to a national-park site.