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The Nigerian Wedding Security Checklist: What Actually Goes Wrong at the Gate

Weddings are the highest-stakes event type for gate crashing. Here is what typically goes wrong and how to prevent it.

8 April 20266 min readPrivePas

Weddings carry a particular kind of gate-crashing risk that corporate events rarely see: the couple wants a warm, open atmosphere, but the guest list is often large, blended across two families, and shared informally by dozens of people before the day arrives. That combination is exactly how uninvited guests end up at the reception.

What Typically Goes Wrong

The forwarded screenshot. One invitation image gets sent to a group chat, then forwarded again, and again. By the wedding day, people the couple has never met are showing up holding a screenshot that was never meant for them.

The "plus one" that becomes plus four. Without a way to verify exactly who was invited, a single approved guest can bring an unapproved group, and staff at the door have no way to know the difference.

Two families, two guest lists, no coordination. When the bride's side and groom's side each manage invitations separately, duplicate names, missing names, and confusion at the gate are almost guaranteed without a single shared source of truth.

How to Actually Prevent It

  • One unified guest list both families' invitees on a single platform, not two separate spreadsheets
  • Unique QR codes per guest, so a forwarded screenshot simply doesn't work at the gate
  • A real-time check-in view so whoever is coordinating can see arrivals live from their phone, without needing to be physically at the entrance

The Bottom Line

Weddings are emotional events, and nobody wants a confrontation at the gate on someone's wedding day. The best way to avoid that confrontation entirely is making sure it never has to happen a unique code per guest means there's nothing to argue about at the door.

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