fancy dress ideas for hen night

Fancy Dress Ideas for Hen Night: Ultimate 2026 Guide

You’ve probably got the group chat open, ten opinions flying around, and one big question no one wants to get wrong. What are you all wearing? That decision shapes more of the hen do than people realise. It affects the budget, the photos, how easy the weekend feels, and whether everyone’s still happy two hours in. Choosing the right theme isn’t about picking the loudest idea. It’s about finding something the bride will love, the group can afford, and the venue can carry properly. Some them

By Victoria BlakeUpdated 8 May 202619 min read
Fancy Dress Ideas for Hen Night: Ultimate 2026 Guide
Victoria Blake
Victoria Blake

Windsor & Thames Valley Hen Party Specialist

Windsor-based contributor covering royal heritage experiences, riverside elegance, and premium Home Counties weekends.

You’ve probably got the group chat open, ten opinions flying around, and one big question no one wants to get wrong. What are you all wearing? That decision shapes more of the hen do than people realise. It affects the budget, the photos, how easy the weekend feels, and whether everyone’s still happy two hours in.

Choosing the right theme isn’t about picking the loudest idea. It’s about finding something the bride will love, the group can afford, and the venue can carry properly. Some themes look brilliant in a Liverpool apartment and fall flat in a quiet countryside cottage. Others are perfect for a Somerset lodge with a hot tub but awkward for a city dinner booking.

That’s why these fancy dress ideas for hen night aren’t just a random mood board. They’re the themes that work in real UK hen settings, with real trade-offs, practical styling notes, and venue-matching advice you can use. You’ll find the bold options, the classy ones, the easy wins, and the themes that need a bit more planning than people expect.

If you’re still juggling guest lists, budgets, timings and bookings, it also helps to start with this party planning template before anyone panic-buys a feather boa at midnight.

Table of Contents

1. 70s Disco Diva

If the group wants instant energy, disco rarely lets you down. Sequins, flares, metallics and platform heels are easy to recognise in photos, easy to build from high street pieces, and forgiving if not everyone wants a full costume. You can go all-in with jumpsuits or keep it simple with wide-leg trousers, a halter top and oversized earrings.

A fashion illustration of a woman in a 1970s style disco jumpsuit holding a mirror ball.

Why it works

This theme is strongest when the property has a proper social space. A city apartment with a Bluetooth speaker and good lighting works. A countryside lodge with a games room works even better because you can do pre-drinks, photos and a full dance-floor moment before heading out.

The practical win is flexibility. If someone hates fancy dress, she can wear a black mini dress and add gold hoops, glitter eyeshadow and a satin scarf. Nobody looks out of place. That matters more than people think.

Best suited to

  • City Apartment: Great for Liverpool or Brighton nights out where the outfit needs to survive pre-drinks and dancing.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Good if you keep the hot tub separate from the main look.
  • Beach House: Fine for indoor drinks, less convincing if you’re planning windy seafront photos.

Practical rule: If the bride loves dancing, pick a theme that already looks good in motion. Disco does.

For shopping, ASOS and Boohoo usually cover the basics, but don’t ignore charity shops for faux-fur jackets and statement jewellery. A mirror ball centrepiece, silver fringe curtain and one designated playlist-maker will do more for the vibe than buying everyone identical costumes.

If you want the room to feel finished, add simple hen night props that actually show up well in photos rather than a pile of random novelties.

2. Bad Girls / Prison Inmates

This one has been around for years because it’s cheap, easy and funny within minutes. Black-and-white stripes, name tags, handcuffs as props, mock mugshots on arrival. Everyone understands the assignment straight away, and you don’t need specialist costumes to make it work.

The key is keeping it playful rather than tacky. Matching striped tees, black shorts or leggings, and one clear detail for the bride usually lands better than head-to-toe novelty outfits. A “Bride on the Run” sign or custom bib often does enough.

Best use case

This theme performs best when the group wants a silly start to the night without spending ages getting ready. Bournemouth seafront weekends, Brighton bar crawls, and apartment-based pre-drinks are all natural fits because the look reads instantly in a crowd.

Where it struggles is upscale dining. If you’ve booked a polished cocktail bar or a private chef evening, this theme can feel too goofy for the setting.

Good trade-offs

  • Low effort: Primark basics and printable accessories get the job done.
  • High group visibility: You won’t lose each other easily.
  • Weak point: It can feel one-note if you don’t add games or photo moments.

The best version of this theme starts with a mock booking-in desk at the property, not with expensive costumes.

Try splitting the group into “guards” and “inmates” for games. That gives you an easy team structure for forfeits, dares and drinking challenges. If you’ve got a larger group, use hen party games for large groups that can carry the joke without forcing everyone into awkward public antics.

For venue matching, this is strongest in a City Apartment or Beach House. It’s only middling for a Countryside Lodge unless you’re deliberately planning a very informal, games-heavy night in.

3. Sexy Superheroes

Some themes collapse because everyone interprets them differently. This one works because that’s part of the appeal. One person can go full Wonder Woman, another can lean Black Widow, another can do a cat-inspired look with just boots, black eyeliner and a cape. There’s room for personality without losing the group effect.

It’s especially good for active hens. If you’ve got outdoor challenges, a scavenger hunt, a dance class or adventure activities planned, the theme can be adapted into outfits people can move in. That’s the trick. Don’t buy costumes that rip the minute anyone sits down.

What to assign before the weekend

Give people characters early. If you leave it vague, you’ll get three Catwomen, two panic orders and one person in plain black claiming she’s “night mode Batman”. A simple character list sorts it.

Assign these in advance

  • Bride role: Make her the lead hero with the clearest silhouette or strongest colour.
  • Comfort rule: Tell everyone to build around trainers or boots if activities are involved.
  • Cape policy: Short capes only if you’re going out. Long satin capes are a drink-spill magnet.

This theme suits a Countryside Lodge surprisingly well because it turns games and activities into part of the costume concept. It also works in a City Apartment if the group likes getting ready together and doing a proper photo set before heading out.

It’s less natural for a Beach House unless the plan is more playful than glamorous. Sand, wind and fiddly accessories don’t always mix.

One thing that does help is choosing a colour palette. If everyone’s in bold red, black, silver and cobalt, the photos look coordinated even when the costumes aren’t identical.

4. Neon / Rave Theme

The group has booked a city flat, dinner runs late, and nobody wants a costume that needs an hour of taping, pinning and fixing. Neon solves that problem. It gives you a high-energy look with very little effort, and it lets each person choose how far to go, from a black mini dress with UV eyeliner to full mesh, face gems and glow accessories.

Three stylized figures dancing with neon paint splashes and light trails against a black background.

The trick is keeping it stylish. Neon looks strong when the base is simple and the colour is controlled. Black, white or silver underneath usually works better than everyone turning up in ten different clashing shades. I usually tell groups to pick two highlight colours max, then repeat them across liner, scrunchies, glasses or fishnet gloves so the photos look planned rather than messy.

This theme is also one of the easiest to match to the property you book, which matters more than people think.

Best suited to

  • City Apartment: Excellent. Great for pre-drinks, playlists, LED lighting and getting ready together before heading out.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Good, if you keep body paint away from the water and save detailed makeup until after food.
  • Beach House: Good for sunset drinks and house-party energy, but wind, sand and sticky gloss can ruin the finish fast.

A few setup choices make the difference between fun and faff.

What usually works

  • Black base outfits: Easier to pack, flattering on everyone, and they make neon details show up properly.
  • One getting-ready station: Put the paint, gems, mirrors, wipes and setting spray in one place instead of spreading it across bedrooms.
  • Late application: Do the full face and body details just before the main event, not at 4pm when people still need to eat, travel or sit on furniture.
  • Lighting test: Check UV products under the actual bulbs in the property. Some “neon” items barely show unless the lighting is right.

The main trade-off is comfort versus impact. Heavy face paint, large visors and loads of glow jewellery look great for photos, but they get annoying halfway through the night. For groups doing bars, club entry and taxis, lighter styling usually wins. Save the full rave look for a private house party or a lodge with a games room where nobody has to carry the outfit around all evening.

If the bride wants a theme that feels playful, current and easy to pull together without a big costume spend, this is one of the safest picks. It works particularly well in party-friendly city stays and indoor-heavy hen weekends where you want the property to feel part of the night.

5. 1920s / Great Gatsby

You see this theme at its best when the group walks into a private dining room or a candlelit apartment lounge and suddenly the whole setting makes sense. Sequins catch the light, champagne towers look right at home, and nobody feels like they bought a panic costume at the last minute.

This works well for hens who want glamour without turning the weekend into a joke theme. The catch is that it needs the right backdrop. In a polished property, it looks expensive even if the outfits are partly hired or built from high-street pieces. In a casual house after a muddy daytime activity, it can feel overdressed and a bit forced.

A sophisticated flapper girl in a 1920s style beaded fringe dress with a feather headband accessory.

How to make it look polished

The quickest way to get this wrong is to buy everything from one novelty shop. The better version comes from mixing textures and keeping the styling controlled. Beading, satin, velvet, pearls, gloves, waved hair and a strong lip usually do enough heavy lifting on their own.

Keep accessories selective. One good headband, long earrings and a beaded dress beat a pile of feather boas and plastic props every time.

It suits hen groups planning cocktails, dinner, a murder mystery, live jazz, casino-style games or a house party with proper drinks styling. It is less practical for weekends built around spa slots, outdoor activities and lots of outfit changes, because the hair and detail take effort to get right.

Best suited to

  • City Apartment: Excellent for cocktail bars, private chefs and dressed-up photo moments before heading out.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Fair, but only for one planned evening. Sequins, steam and hot tubs are not a natural mix.
  • Beach House: Better for an indoor dinner party than a windy seafront plan. Feathers, finger waves and sea air rarely stay sharp for long.

The trade-off is effort versus payoff. This is one of the most photogenic themes on the list, but it asks more from the group than a simple matching dress code. If the bride loves detail and the property has the right mood, it can be brilliant. If the weekend is loose, messy and activity-heavy, choose something easier to wear.

For broader inspiration around venue and activity pairing, hen weekend ideas in the UK can help you shape the rest of the itinerary around the look.

6. Playboy / Bunny Theme

This is a classic, but it needs a bit more judgment than people admit. Done well, it’s polished, playful and very easy to style. Done badly, it slips into cheap fabric, bad fit and a bride who spends the evening tugging at a bodysuit she never wanted in the first place.

The easiest way to modernise it is to loosen the dress code. Everyone doesn’t need a full bunny costume. Black bodysuits, satin shirts, tux-style tailoring, ears, cuffs and strong glam makeup can create the effect without making the whole group wear identical club-shop outfits.

The styling line not to cross

A good bunny theme should still let people eat, sit, dance and get from venue to venue without feeling overexposed. If a theme makes half the group uncomfortable by the first round of drinks, it’s not a good theme, no matter how funny it looked in the chat.

Keep one feature recognisable and let the rest be normal clothes. Bunny ears and a sharp black outfit usually look better than a full novelty costume.

This one pairs naturally with properties that have hot tubs, pool areas or nightlife nearby. It also works for apartment stays where everyone can do a proper group getting-ready session. It’s less convincing for rustic cottages unless the whole weekend is glam-led.

For shopping, better ears make a noticeable difference. Cheap headbands droop in every photo. Spend a little more on the accessories and keep the outfit itself simple. The bride can wear white or blush while the rest of the group stays in black, which gives you a clear visual split without fuss.

7. Cowgirls / Wild West

This is one of the easiest themes to get right in a countryside setting. Hats, denim, boots, fringe jackets and bandanas already look at home around lodges, pub gardens, glamping sites and outdoor activity venues. You don’t have to force the atmosphere. The location does half the work.

It’s also forgiving on budget. Participants can often build a version from things they already own, then add a hat or scarf to tie it together. That’s why it’s such a strong option when the group has mixed spending limits.

What makes it easy

Cowgirl styling doesn’t need everyone dressed identically. In fact, it looks better when there’s a bit of variation. One person in double denim, one in a white dress and boots, one in a fringe co-ord, one in a checked shirt and shorts. The group still reads as one theme.

Best for these plans

  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Excellent. It suits BBQs, pub trips and outdoor games.
  • Beach House: Surprisingly good in Weymouth-style settings if you lean coastal-western.
  • City Apartment: Usable, but it can feel costume-heavy in a slick urban venue.

This theme really shines when the itinerary includes something active. Horse-riding style references, line-dancing, target games, country pubs and garden drinking games all pair well. It’s less effective if the whole plan is a formal dinner and cocktail bar circuit.

Comfort matters here. Tell people early that the shoes need to be walkable. Western boots look great, but only if people can last a full day in them. If not, save them for photos and switch to ankle boots later.

8. White Party / Toga Theme

You arrive at the house, everyone’s unpacking, and within ten minutes you can tell whether this theme is going to look polished or fall apart by pre-drinks. White party usually wins that test. It photographs well, feels pulled together fast, and gives the group freedom to dress in shapes they will wear again. Toga only works when someone takes charge of styling and keeps it firmly in Grecian territory.

That distinction matters more than people expect. A white dress code suits mixed ages, mixed confidence levels and mixed budgets because the brief is clear without being rigid. One guest can wear a satin slip, another a linen co-ord, another an ivory jumpsuit, and the group still looks cohesive.

The mistake is treating toga as shorthand for bedsheet and safety pins.

If the bride likes the idea of goddess styling, use proper draped dresses, one-shoulder cuts, gold accessories and flat metallic sandals. Keep the fabric secure, keep the hemlines practical, and save full costume styling for a private house party rather than a public bar crawl. I’ve seen plenty of groups start with “fun toga idea” and end up spending the night fixing straps and worrying about flash photography.

Best for these plans

  • City Apartment: Excellent for rooftop drinks, private dining and any setting with a slick dress code.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Good, but only if the white outfits are for dinner or photos rather than the whole day.
  • Beach House: Excellent. Sunlight, sea views and soft neutral outfits do a lot of the styling work for you.

This theme earns its place because it can be as simple or as styled as the group wants. White party is the safer choice if you want easy packing, cleaner photos and less faff on the night. Toga works for a bride with a playful streak, but it needs better fabrics, better planning and a venue that suits the joke.

9. Pyjama / Sleepwear Party

Friday night in a countryside lodge usually splits hens into two camps. Half want cocktails and photos. Half want snacks, slippers and a hot tub by 8pm. A pyjama theme solves that better than almost any costume on this list because it feels relaxed without looking like the group gave up.

It works best when the property is part of the plan, not just a place to sleep. I book this theme most often for lodge weekends, spa-style stays and beach houses with a big kitchen, outdoor seating and enough lounge space for games, grazing boards and a proper catch-up. In a city apartment, it can still work, but usually as one part of the weekend rather than the headline look for a full night out.

The trade-off is obvious. Comfort is high. Public wearability is low. If the itinerary includes bars, brunch spots or club entry, pyjamas need a second outfit plan or a clear private setting for the main event.

How to make it look styled, not accidental

Matching satin sets are the obvious option, but they are not always the smartest one. They photograph well, yet they can feel sticky in summer and expensive for something guests may never wear again. Cotton pyjamas, oversized shirts with shorts, soft robes over simple camis, or a coordinated colour palette often land better. The look still reads as deliberate, and the group gets more use out of it afterwards.

A few details do the heavy lifting here. Sleep masks for photos. Slippers with grip if there is decking or a hot tub area. Robes for outdoor dashes between bedroom and garden. If you want names or embroidery, keep it subtle. Big novelty slogans can push the whole thing into cheap hen pack territory.

Best for these plans

  • City Apartment: Good for a first-night-in setup, cocktail making, beauty treatments and games. Less effective if the whole plan centres on bars and restaurants.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Excellent. This is the natural home for the theme, especially for groups who want spa energy, movie-night comfort and easy packing.
  • Beach House: Very good. Works well with barefoot breakfasts, matching robes, balcony drinks and a slower morning schedule.

Pyjama party is one of the easiest themes to get wrong by under-planning it. Give it a palette, a fabric direction and a schedule that suits it, and it feels polished. Treat it as “everyone bring whatever you sleep in”, and it turns into a group photo rather than a proper theme.

10. Maid of Honour / Bride and Bridesmaids Matching

You arrive for pre-drinks, the bride is in white, the group is in one clear palette, and every photo already looks organised before anyone has touched a sash. That is why this theme keeps getting booked. It gives the hen party a polished identity without pushing anyone into a costume they will hate by midnight.

The trick is styling for a group, not for a mannequin. One exact dress rarely suits every budget, body shape and confidence level. Better results come from setting three rules and stopping there: a colour palette, a dress level, and one clear marker for the bride. White mini and champagne slip dresses. Black outfits with the bride in ivory. Soft pinks for the group and metallic heels if you want a dressier finish. It reads as coordinated, but guests still get room to choose something they will wear again.

If the bride says she wants something fun but still chic, this is usually the brief.

This theme also solves a common planning problem. Fancy dress can split a group fast, especially when some want a big night-out look and others do not want novelty outfits in public. Matching bride and bridesmaids styling keeps everyone on the same page and works for dinner, bars, brunch and house-party photos without a full costume change.

Best for these plans

  • City Apartment: Excellent. This is one of the safest choices for rooftop drinks, cocktail bars, private dining and glam getting-ready photos.
  • Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Very good, if the weekend includes a meal out, wine tasting or a dressed-up dinner at the house. Less useful if the plan is muddy activities and hot tub sessions all day.
  • Beach House: Good. Keep fabrics light, choose sandals over heels, and avoid anything too fitted if wind, salt air and walks along the front are part of the schedule.

A few practical fixes make the whole thing stronger. Ask for outfit screenshots before the trip so shades do not drift. Give a backup option such as "any black dress" for late shoppers. Keep accessories simple. One bouquet colour, one style of jewellery, or one ribbon detail does more than a pile of novelty extras.

Handled properly, this theme feels expensive without costing a fortune. Handled badly, it turns into six different dresses and one confused bride. Set the brief early, keep the bride visually distinct, and match the styling to the property you have booked. That is what makes it work.

Top 10 Hen Night Fancy Dress Comparison

Choosing a theme gets much easier once you judge it against the property, not just the group chat mood. A disco look that flies in a city apartment can feel awkward in a quiet beach house. A pyjama party that works brilliantly in a lodge falls flat if the plan is a full night of bars. Use the table below as a booking filter as much as a costume shortlist.

Theme Effort to organise 🔄 Budget & kit needed ⚡ Best fit by Hen Hideaways stay type 🏡 What it delivers 📸 Watch-outs before you commit
70s Disco Diva Medium Medium. Sequins, flares, platforms, a few metallic extras City Apartment: Excellent. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Very good. Beach House: Good Big dance-floor energy, strong group photos, easy bride spotlighting Heels and hot venues can wear people out fast. Build in a flats option.
Bad Girls / Prison Inmates Low Low. Striped pieces, number tags, simple props City Apartment: Good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Fair. Beach House: Good Cheap, funny, easy to coordinate for larger groups The joke can feel dated. Keep it light and avoid overdoing props.
Sexy Superheroes Medium to high Medium to high. Better costumes cost more and sizing matters City Apartment: Good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Excellent. Beach House: Fair Bold photos, easy character customisation, high group energy Comfort is the deciding factor here. Cheap fabrics, awkward fits and cold weather ruin this one quickly.
Neon / Rave Theme Medium Low to medium. Neon makeup, glow kit, batteries, maybe UV lighting City Apartment: Excellent. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Very good. Beach House: Fair Fast visual impact, flexible outfits, strong late-night atmosphere It needs lighting to really work. In daylight settings it can look less polished.
1920s / Great Gatsby High High. Dresses, tailoring, headpieces, gloves, dress-code discipline City Apartment: Very good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Good. Beach House: Poor to fair Elegant photos, a polished dinner-party feel, clear theme cohesion This one asks for commitment. If half the group underdresses, the whole effect drops.
Playboy / Bunny Theme Low to medium Low to medium. Ears, cuffs, bodysuits, heels or boots City Apartment: Good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Very good. Beach House: Fair Recognisable look, quick to assemble, works for house-party settings Check everyone is genuinely comfortable with it. This theme divides groups more than planners expect.
Cowgirls / Wild West Low Low. Hats, denim, boots, checked shirts, fringe City Apartment: Good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Excellent. Beach House: Good Easy all-day wear, ideal for activities, low stress to source Boots are part of the look, but they are not always part of the comfort. Tell guests early if walking is involved.
White Party / Toga Theme Medium Medium. White outfits, backup layers, care with fabrics City Apartment: Very good. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Good. Beach House: Excellent Clean, unified photos and a simple brief guests understand quickly White is unforgiving. Fake tan, makeup transfer and weather can cause problems by the first round of drinks.
Pyjama / Sleepwear Party Low Low. Most guests already own something suitable City Apartment: Fair. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Excellent. Beach House: Very good Comfort, relaxed bonding, easy house-party styling Great indoors, weaker outside. It does not carry a bar crawl unless the group is fully committed to the joke.
Maid of Honour / Bride and Bridesmaids Matching Medium to high Medium. Matching outfits, colour control, some advance planning City Apartment: Excellent. Countryside Lodge with Hot Tub: Very good. Beach House: Good Clear group identity, reliable photos, easy dress-code briefing Coordination is everything. One wrong shade or last-minute substitute stands out immediately.

A quick rule from planning real weekends. Low-effort themes usually work best where the house is part of the event. High-styling themes need the right backdrop, decent getting-ready space, and a plan that justifies the outfit.

If the group is split, pick from the themes with flexible entry points. Disco, neon, cowgirls and matching bridesmaids styling let one guest go full costume while another keeps it simple with accessories. Gatsby and superheroes look brilliant when done well, but they punish half-hearted participation more than the rest.

From Idea to Itinerary Making Your Theme Happen

It usually goes wrong at one of two moments. Either the group picks a theme that looks funny in the WhatsApp chat and falls apart once everyone has to buy it, pack it and wear it for six hours, or they book the house first and realise too late that the theme does not suit the setting. Good hen planning fixes both problems early.

Start with the setting, because the property will shape the whole weekend more than the costume mood board. A city apartment suits themes that get out the door fast, survive taxis and still look good in a bar. A countryside lodge gives you more freedom for games, props, slower getting-ready time and indoor photos. A beach house needs outfits that can handle daylight, sea air, stairs, sand and people wandering between kitchen, terrace and shoreline.

That is why the suitability notes matter.

A 70s disco setup works best when the group wants a flexible dress code, decent playlist potential and a theme that still looks right if one guest only turns up in flares and earrings. Gatsby needs more commitment, better styling and a property with some polish, or it can slip from chic to hired-from-a-bag very quickly. Pyjamas can be brilliant in a lodge with a hot tub and a late-night snack spread, but they lose momentum if the plan is queueing for clubs in town. White party looks clean in photos, yet it needs careful handling if fake tan, self-serve cocktails and bad weather are part of the plan.

Budget usually decides the final shortlist. The strongest themes are the ones with layers. Some guests can go full costume. Others can join in with one solid piece, a colour brief or a few accessories and still look part of the group. That keeps dropouts low and avoids the usual problem where three people look fully committed and everyone else looks like they forgot.

Rewear value matters too, especially with mixed-age groups or hens where not everyone knows each other well. Disco pieces, cowgirl boots, satin pyjamas, white dresses and bridesmaid-style colour coordination tend to get a better response because guests can justify the spend. Full novelty costumes still have their place, but they work best when the bride actively wants chaos and the itinerary stays mostly private.

Once the theme is chosen, build the weekend around it in a practical order. Confirm the property first. Then lock the main photo moment, the meal plan and the one activity that suits the outfits. After that, brief the group with a simple dress code, not a long essay. People follow clear instructions. “Black dress plus neon accessories” works. “Rave goddess but make it classy” usually does not.

Property features should earn their place. A games room helps disco, neon and superhero themes because the house can carry the fun before you go out. A hot tub suits pyjamas, bunny styling and softer glam themes where the group wants more time in the property. A grand dining room or well-kept garden does a lot of heavy lifting for Gatsby, all-white and matching bridesmaid looks. Hen Hideaways is one option if you want to filter hen-friendly UK properties by group size, hot tubs, pools, games rooms and location.

If the bride is already stretched thin, keep the hen admin light. One shared mood board, one outfit brief, one deadline for ordering, then stop tweaking it. If she needs help switching off before the wedding itself, this helpful guide for couples on de-stressing before the wedding is a useful send.

Ready to match your theme to the right venue? Browse Hen Hideaways to find hen-friendly city apartments, beach houses, lodges, cottages and country houses across the UK, with filters for group size, hot tubs, pools, games rooms and more.