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Wedding Bartenders in Omaha: Raise a Glass, Skip the Line

2 mobile bartending services around Omaha, Nebraska show real evidence of wedding work — 2 with weddings confirmed on the service's own site — receptions, cocktail hours, rehearsal dinners, the lot. The planning math travels well: one bartender per 50–75 guests, and roughly two drinks per guest the first hour, one per hour after for the shopping list. Most services here operate dry-hire — in most states the host supplies the alcohol and the service brings the bar, the bartenders, mixers, ice, and everything else; confirm the rules for your state and your venue. With two services serving town, a second quote for your date is one email away — and it's the single best negotiating tool a couple has. Rated services are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count), and where couples' reviews talk about weddings, the quote is shown — that's the reputation you're choosing between.

1. Platinum Pours

5 ★★★★★ 8 reviews

Omaha, NE · serves the area

Weddings Tap truck Corporate events

“We had Platinum Pours provide drink service at my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary party and they were amazing! The drinks were incredible, Scott and Allie were so friendly and…” — Rachel

Wedding packages confirmed on their website.

2. With A Twist Bartending Service Omaha

5 ★★★★★ 1 reviews

Omaha, NE · serves the area

Weddings Licensed & insured Corporate events

Insurance evidence on file — still ask for the certificate your venue will want to see.

See their weddings page →

Booking the wedding bar in Omaha: the short checklist

  1. Confirm the date and the venue first. "Are you free on our date, and do you serve our venue's area?" is the whole first email. Travel radius and travel fees vary service to service — a venue twenty minutes out of town is usually fine, but ask.
  2. Do the guest-count math before the call. One bartender per 50–75 guests — say your count and let them staff it, then get the bartender number written into the contract. If a quote staffs 150 guests with one bartender, that's your answer about the service.
  3. Ask about insurance early. Most venues require liquor liability and general liability coverage with a certificate of insurance. A professional service sends the COI without drama; hesitation here is the biggest red flag in the category.
  4. Get the shopping list from them. In most states you'll be buying the alcohol yourself (dry-hire is the legal norm — confirm your state and venue's rules). Any experienced wedding service will turn your guest count and menu into an exact shopping list — two drinks per guest the first hour, one per hour after, is the rule they'll be working from. Buy a margin; unopened retail bottles are usually returnable.
  5. Compare two quotes on the same menu. 2 services around town do weddings, and they know it. Same guest count, same hours, same menu — then compare what's included: setup and teardown, mixers and ice, glassware, cocktail-hour staffing. The cheaper quote with three "not included" lines usually isn't the cheaper quote.

Wedding bartenders near Omaha

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