🇻🇳 Vietnam · wedding
Lễ ăn hỏi — the engagement procession that is half the photos of a Vietnamese wedding
The morning the groom's family walks to the bride's house with red lacquer trays of betel, areca, and tea is when the village turns out — and films every step.
A Vietnamese wedding (*đám cưới*) traditionally unfolds across two main days. The first is the **lễ ăn hỏi** — the engagement / betrothal ceremony — and the second is the **lễ cưới**, the wedding day itself. The lễ ăn hỏi is older, smaller, and consistently produces the photos that hang on a Vietnamese family's wall longest.
The procession
On the morning of the lễ ăn hỏi, the groom's family walks (in modern times, drives partway and then walks the last block) from his home to the bride's home, carrying an odd number of red lacquer trays — usually 5, 7, 9, or 11 — covered in red cloth. Each tray holds something different: betel leaves and areca nuts (*trầu cau*), a roasted pig, sticky-rice cakes, a tray of jewellery, fresh fruit, the bride's wedding áo dài, and so on. The bride's family receives them at the door, and the trays are placed on the ancestral altar.
The procession itself draws every neighbour out onto the street — Vietnam's traditional houses face the street, and lễ ăn hỏi happens in full public view. Phones are out the whole time. The trays themselves are an art form; families compete (gently) on the embroidery, the arrangement, and the elegance of the red lacquer.
What happens inside
After the trays are placed, the elders of both families speak. The groom is officially welcomed to the bride's family. The couple lights incense at the ancestral altar to inform the bride's deceased ancestors of the new union. They serve tea to the bride's parents, grandparents, and uncles/aunts in seniority order — very similar to the Chinese *jìng chá* (敬茶). Photos: the tea moment, the incense moment, the trays being uncovered.
The lễ cưới
The wedding day proper — the *lễ cưới* — happens within days or weeks of the lễ ăn hỏi. The groom's family arrives at the bride's home with the official wedding *xin dâu* ("asking to take the bride") procession, the bride is escorted to her new home, and the evening reception (usually 15-30 tables at a hotel or banquet hall) runs from 6 pm to about midnight. Multiple courses, multiple toasts, every table photographs the bride and groom with their table's gift envelope (*phong bì*) tucked into a basket beside them.
What guests photograph
- The procession arriving at the bride's house — wide shots of the trays - Each elder receiving tea — close-ups - The incense at the ancestral altar - The bride's first appearance in her áo dài (traditional dress) - The send-off to the groom's home
The áo dài
The bride wears at least two outfits across the wedding events: a traditional red or pink *áo dài* with a *khăn đóng* (turban-style headpiece) for the lễ ăn hỏi and the morning of the lễ cưới, then a Western white gown for the evening reception. The *áo dài* photos are typically the ones the bride's parents frame at home.
Citations & further reading
- Wikipedia (Vietnamese): [Hôn lễ Việt Nam](https://vi.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%B4n_l%E1%BB%85_Vi%E1%BB%87t_Nam) - Wikipedia: [Vietnamese wedding](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_wedding) - Vietnam National Museum of History: *Traditional Vietnamese wedding customs*
Frequently asked
What is lễ ăn hỏi?
The Vietnamese betrothal / engagement ceremony, held in the days or weeks before the wedding itself. The groom's family processes to the bride's home carrying red lacquer trays of betel, areca, and gifts.
How many trays are carried in the procession?
Always an odd auspicious number — usually 5, 7, 9, or 11. Each carries a specific item: betel and areca nuts, a roasted pig, sticky-rice cakes, fresh fruit, jewellery, the bride's wedding áo dài.
What is the áo dài?
Vietnam's traditional long-sleeved tunic dress worn over trousers. Brides wear a red or pink ceremonial áo dài with a khăn đóng (turban-style headpiece) for lễ ăn hỏi, then a Western white gown for the evening reception.
Does the bride still go to her in-laws' home after the wedding?
Traditionally yes — the xin dâu procession escorts the bride from her family home to her new husband's home on the wedding day. Modern urban couples often skip this and live independently.
Other cultures in the series
Hosting your own Vietnam wedding?
Galeira gives you one QR code that turns every guest's phone into a camera and mirrors every photo to a cloud you already own. Free to start.
Create your album →