Logistics

Choosing a DJ for a Jewish Wedding: Klezmer + Variety + Hora

The dance floor makes or breaks a wedding. For a Jewish wedding, the DJ needs to handle 3 musical worlds. Here’s how not to get it wrong.

By The Tov team

6 min read

A Jewish wedding has 3 distinct musical moments: the hora (traditional Jewish music, high-energy, circle dancing), the variety set for the couple and friends (international classics), and sometimes a modern Sephardic or Israeli set. A generalist DJ who’s never done a Jewish wedding will stumble on the hora. A pure klezmer DJ won’t know how to get the floor moving on Beyoncé. You need the right balance of both.

Question 1: "How many Jewish weddings have you done?"

The single most important question. A DJ who’s done 20+ Jewish weddings knows the hora by heart, knows when to slow it down, knows how to handle traditional chants like Siman Tov u-Mazal Tov. A DJ who’s done none will panic the moment the hora starts. Require a minimum of 5 Jewish weddings before you sign.

Question 2: "Can you share a hora playlist?"

The hora typically lasts 20-45 minutes (depending on your family). The DJ should have a playlist prepared — not improvised. Ask to see it before signing. It should include: Hava Nagila, Siman Tov u-Mazal Tov, Od Yishama, Yerushalayim Shel Zahav (dance version), Mazel Tov V’Siman Tov. If the proposed playlist is just Hava Nagila plus Hava Nagila plus Hava Nagila, run.

Question 3: "How do you handle the chair-lifting?"

During the hora, the couple gets lifted up on chairs by the strongest guests. The DJ needs to know how to: slow the music down during the actual lift to avoid falls (literally), match the circular dance around them, and know precisely when to bring the chairs back down. It’s a genuinely dangerous moment if mishandled. Ask the DJ how they coordinate it.

Question 4: "Can you mix hora with variety?"

Many couples want a smooth transition between the hora (the first hour of the party) and the variety set (the rest of the night). The DJ should know how to build "medleys" that blend a traditional Jewish backbone (a Siman Tov bassline loop) with a modern beat on top. Not every DJ can do this. It’s a sign of a real pro.

Question 5: "How many hours are included + hourly rate beyond that?"

A Jewish wedding rarely wraps before 2am. Check: how many hours does the quoted price cover? What’s the hourly rate beyond that? Many DJs charge $220-$440/hour past the initial 6 hours — over 4 extra hours, that can add up to $1,600+ you didn’t plan for. Negotiate a flat rate "until 2am" instead of an hourly one.

The modern Israeli playlist (bonus)

For your Israeli guests or the younger crowd, a set of modern Israeli music (Eyal Golan, Omer Adam, Static & Ben El) often brings a lot of energy. Tell the DJ if you want this set — many DJs outside Israel don’t know this repertoire.

2026 average rates

  • Experienced generalist DJ familiar with Jewish weddings (200 guests, 6 hours): ~$1,600-$2,700
  • Klezmer + variety (4-5 piece live band): ~$3,800-$6,500
  • DJ + live band (15 min live hora, DJ for the rest): ~$2,700-$4,300

To share your music playlist + vibe on your invitation (your guests love knowing), create your invitation on Tov.events — free, in French + Hebrew.

About — Written by the Tov.events team, who build the tools Jewish families — Sephardi, Ashkenazi, Mizrahi, secular — use for their simchas.

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