Princess Beatrice's wedding to Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi is one of the highly anticipated royal events of the year. Though the couple has not yet disclosed the official details of their wedding, there are speculations that Princess Beatrice might follow the same rules as her sister, Princess Eugenie, when she married Jack Brooksbank in 2018.

According to Daily Express, Princess Eugenie had three specific rules for her guests during her fall 2018 wedding ceremony and it looks like Princess Beatrice will also have the same set of rules. In particular, guests at the forthcoming royal wedding are expected not to carry mobile devices or post some snaps of the wedding on their social media. Instead, official photos following Princess Beatrice's wedding to Edo will be released by Buckingham Palace days after the event.

The guests are also not expected to give wedding gifts to the couple. In lieu of this, the guests are enjoined to make a charitable donation on behalf of Princess Beatrice and Edo.

The couple is also not going to have a wedding registry like Princess Eugenie and Jack. However, Daily Express reported that if guests are still coming with gifts, then they may likely be asked to course these through Prince Andrew's office. They will be discouraged from bringing anything to the royal event.

Because this is a formal royal engagement, Princess Beatrice will likely expect all of her guests to be in their best formal wear. This is the third rule that Princess Eugenie imposed on her guests. She even required her male guests to wear a morning coat while the female guests were asked to have a hat and royal observers speculate it should be the same for Princess Beatrice's wedding.

Meanwhile, Princess Beatrice and Edo's wedding might not be televised, unlike Princess Eugenie's or even their cousin Prince Harry and Meghan's 2018 wedding ceremony. According to reports, the elder York princess wants a more intimate celebration sans the media fanfare.

A report from Tatler cited that BBC and ITV confirmed it will not be broadcasting Princess Beatrice's wedding live. BBC stated that it will, however, feature the royal wedding on its news programs across its channels.

The report cited that BBC holds the rights to air royal events for free. The network, however, decided against covering the weddings of the York sisters, the ninth and tenth in line to the British throne.