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Charity Fun Night Scotland — How to Run a Fundraiser That Raises More

1 11th May 2026 by James Veal Leave a Comment

Planning a charity fun night in Scotland? If so, you’re looking at one of the most flexible and entertaining fundraising formats available — and one that consistently raises more than a single-activity event. A Premier Disco Charity Fun Night combines horse racing, a live smartphone quiz, interactive games and a DJ into one evening, so guests have reasons to stay engaged from the moment they arrive to the last song of the night.

charity fun night Scotland - Premier Disco fundraising event with races quiz and games

What Makes a Charity Fun Night Different from a Race Night?

A standard race night is a brilliant fundraiser — we run dozens of them every year and they consistently raise £1,000–£3,000+ for clubs and charities across Scotland. However, if your group runs a race night annually, you’ll eventually notice that the same guests stop spending as much. They know the format, they’ve been before, and the novelty has worn off.

A Charity Fun Night solves this problem. Instead of one format running all evening, guests get a mix of activities. As a result, there are no flat moments — when the races are on, racing fans are leaning in. When the quiz starts, the people who aren’t bothered about horses suddenly get competitive. When the games begin, the tables that haven’t won anything yet get another shot. In short, everyone stays in the room and everyone keeps spending.

What Happens at a Charity Fun Night in Scotland?

A typical evening runs something like this:

  1. Guests arrive and horses are sold — the first race is set up while people settle in
  2. Races 1 and 2 — betting, commentary and prize payouts using our electronic tote system
  3. SpeedQuiz rounds 1 and 2 — every guest plays on their own smartphone, live leaderboards on screen
  4. Races 3 and 4 — energy builds as the auction race approaches
  5. Live games — Spin the Wheel, Play Your Cards Right, Chase the Ace or whatever suits your crowd
  6. SpeedQuiz final round and winners announced
  7. DJ closes the night — guests who want to dance stay on, everyone else leaves happy

The exact order and mix of activities is flexible. We’ll plan it with you in advance based on your venue, your crowd and what you want to achieve on the night.

How Much Can a Charity Fun Night Fundraiser Raise?

With multiple activities comes multiple ways to raise money. Here’s how the income streams stack up across a typical Charity Fun Night:

  • Ticket sales — entry fee with an initial stake included
  • Race sponsorship and horse ownership — sold in advance using our Race Pack
  • On-the-night race betting — per-race stakes throughout the evening
  • Quiz entry — small per-head charge or included in the ticket price
  • Game participation — spin the wheel, cards, cash grab games
  • Raffle and bar — additional income running throughout

In practice, a well-run Charity Fun Night with 100 guests typically raises £1,000–£2,500+. Furthermore, because guests stay more engaged all evening, the per-person spend tends to be higher than at a single-format event.

The SpeedQuiz — Why Guests Love It

The SpeedQuiz is one of the elements that gets talked about most after the night. Every guest plays on their own smartphone — no answer sheets, no team captains collecting papers, no waiting. Questions appear on the big screen and on each phone simultaneously. After each round, the live leaderboard goes up on screen and suddenly everyone at every table is comparing scores.

It works for all ages. In fact, the over-60s are often the most competitive players in the room. The phone-based format requires no technical knowledge — if you can send a text, you can play.

Charity Fun Night Ideas to Boost Takings

Beyond the core programme, there are several easy ways to raise more on the night. For example:

  1. Sell quiz team names to sponsors — a named team on the leaderboard is a fun, low-cost sponsorship option for local businesses
  2. Add a heads and tails game — simple, fast, and everyone participates. A £2 entry pot builds quickly in a 100-person room
  3. Run a prize raffle between activities — ask local businesses to donate prizes in exchange for a mention on the night
  4. Theme the evening — a fancy dress theme boosts ticket sales and gets people posting on social media in advance
  5. Add giant games or Banging Bingo as a warm-up — great for getting guests talking before the main programme starts

Who Runs Charity Fun Nights in Scotland?

We work with football clubs, rugby clubs, bowling clubs, school parent councils, church groups, hospice fundraising committees and community organisations across Edinburgh, the Lothians and Fife. In addition, the Charity Fun Night format works well for corporate fundraising evenings where a standard race night might feel too one-dimensional for a mixed professional audience.

If you’re not sure whether a Charity Fun Night or a straight race night is the better fit, get in touch and we’ll help you decide based on your group, your venue and your goals.

For more ideas on planning charity events, the Institute of Fundraising is a useful resource for anyone new to organising fundraising evenings.


Book a Charity Fun Night in Scotland

Autumn and pre-Christmas dates fill up fast. Therefore, if you have a date in mind, the sooner you get in touch the better. We’ll confirm availability straight away and take care of everything from there.

Check Availability and Get a Quote

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a charity fun night fundraiser in Scotland?

A Charity Fun Night is a combined fundraising event that runs several activities in one evening — horse races, a smartphone quiz, live games and a DJ. It gives guests more variety than a standard race night and, as a result, keeps them engaged and spending throughout the whole event.

How far in advance should I book?

We recommend at least 6–8 weeks to give you time to promote the event and sell tickets and sponsorships. Autumn and pre-Christmas dates go quickly, so earlier is always better.

Do guests need smartphones for the SpeedQuiz?

Yes — the quiz runs through each guest’s own smartphone. In practice, this isn’t an issue at most events. However, if some guests don’t have a smartphone, they can simply share with a neighbour or skip the quiz and join back in for the races and games.

Filed Under: Corporate events, Race Nights Tagged With: corporate entertainment, Edinburgh DJ, fundraising, Scottish DJ, wedding entertainment

Silent Disco Hire Scotland 2026 — Everything You Need to Know

1 11th May 2026 by James Veal Leave a Comment

Premier Disco Silent Disco event

Silent disco in Scotland is one of the fastest-growing entertainment options for Scottish weddings and events — and it’s easy to see why. Guests wear wireless headphones and choose between multiple DJ channels, meaning everyone gets the music they love while the room stays noise-compliant for venues with sound limiters.

Why Silent Disco is Perfect for Scottish Weddings

Scotland’s wedding venues are stunning, but many historic buildings and outdoor sites have strict noise restrictions. Silent disco solves this completely — the music stays in the headphones, the atmosphere stays electric, and the venue stays happy.

It also works brilliantly for outdoor summer receptions, marquee weddings, and hen parties across Edinburgh, Glasgow, and beyond. See our full silent disco hire page for package details.

Popular Venues for Silent Disco in Scotland

We’ve delivered silent disco experiences at a wide range of Scottish venues, including castle settings in East Lothian, waterfront function suites, and urban event spaces in Edinburgh city centre. Whether you’re planning an intimate 50-person gathering or a 300-guest celebration, the setup scales effortlessly.

How Much Does Silent Disco Hire Cost in Scotland?

Pricing depends on guest numbers, duration, and the number of DJ channels you want. As a guide, packages for up to 100 guests typically start from a few hundred pounds and include full headset provision, equipment setup and a dedicated operator. Get in touch for a personalised quote.

Silent Disco for Hen Parties and Corporate Events

It’s not just weddings. Silent disco has become a firm favourite for Edinburgh and Glasgow hen parties, university events, charity fundraisers and corporate away-days. The multi-channel format means guests can vote with their ears — pop on one channel, indie on another, and classic anthems on a third.

Curious how it compares to a traditional ceilidh? Read our guide: Ceilidh hire in Scotland.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many headsets do you provide?

We provide enough headsets for all guests, fully charged and tested before your event. Spares are always on hand.

Can you do silent disco outdoors?

Absolutely — outdoor silent disco is one of our most popular setups for summer marquee weddings and festival-style events across Scotland.

How far in advance should I book?

We recommend booking at least 3–6 months ahead for peak summer and festive dates. Check availability now.

Silent disco is now recognised as one of the UK’s most popular event formats — the National Association of DJs (NADJ) has seen demand for headphone disco packages rise significantly year-on-year as more couples discover how well it works in noise-restricted venues.

Filed Under: Weddings Tagged With: Edinburgh DJ, Scottish DJ, silent disco, wedding entertainment

What to Expect When You Book Premier Disco for Your Wedding Reception

1 26th January 2025 by James Veal Leave a Comment

When couples get in touch with me, they usually know roughly what they want — good music, a full dancefloor, someone who’ll handle the evening so they don’t have to. What they’re less sure about is what that actually looks like in practice, and what separates a DJ who delivers it from one who doesn’t.

This is my attempt to answer that honestly, from the inside.

The Evening Reception Isn’t Just About Music

By the time the evening reception starts, your guests have been at a wedding all day. Some are well-fed and relaxed. Some have had a few drinks and are ready to go. Some are tired and will leave by 9pm. A DJ who just plays music to a room doesn’t account for any of that — the good ones are reading those dynamics constantly and adjusting accordingly.

I’ll typically start the evening with something accessible — well-known songs that get people comfortable on the floor without it feeling like a nightclub yet. Then as the night builds and the room shifts, the music shifts with it. That’s not a formula you can write down, it’s something you develop from doing it a lot.

The Ceremony and Wedding Breakfast

A lot of couples don’t realise I can be there from the very start of the day, not just the evening. Covering the ceremony means handling the processional, the signing of the register, and the recessional — all timed carefully and played live, not pre-programmed. During the wedding breakfast I’ll act as MC for the speeches and keep background music running at a level that actually lets people talk.

Having the same person handle all of this means one consistent voice throughout the day, and one less supplier for you to brief and coordinate. The all-day wedding package covers everything if that’s the route you want to take.

The Planning Part

Every couple I work with gets access to an online planning portal where we build out the running order and music together before the day. You can submit your first dance choice, the songs you definitely want played, and just as importantly, anything you really don’t want played. (You’d be surprised how often that list saves an awkward moment.)

Guests can also submit requests through the same system in the run-up to the wedding, which gives me a feel for the crowd before I’ve even set foot in the venue.

What I Actually Bring

Full PA system sized to the room, disco lighting, uplighting if you want it, a microphone for speeches and announcements, and everything backed up with a second copy. PAT-tested, public liability insured, and all the paperwork venues ask for handled without chasing.

I’ve played at venues across Edinburgh, the Lothians, and beyond — castle ballrooms, hotel function suites, marquees, outdoor spaces. Each one handles sound differently and I’ve learned most of them the hard way. That venue familiarity is worth more than it sounds on a night when the sound limiter cuts in unexpectedly or the load-in is more complicated than the venue described.

Getting in Touch

If you’re at the stage where you’re thinking seriously about wedding entertainment, the best thing is to have a conversation. Tell me your date, your venue, and what kind of night you’re imagining — I’ll tell you honestly whether I’m the right fit and what I can do for you.

Get in touch here, or take a look at the wedding reception page for more detail on the full package.

Filed Under: Weddings Tagged With: Edinburgh DJ, wedding DJ Scotland, wedding entertainment

What Actually Makes a Good Wedding DJ?

1 21st January 2024 by James Veal Leave a Comment

I’ve been DJing weddings for a long time now. Long enough to know that there’s no such thing as a perfect wedding DJ in the abstract — there’s only the right DJ for your wedding. What that actually means in practice is worth talking about honestly, because a lot of what you’ll read online is marketing fluff.

So here’s my take, from someone who’s actually done this hundreds of times.

Experience is Everything — But Not in the Way People Think

Years of gigs matter, but what really counts is whether a DJ has done your type of event. A DJ who’s brilliant at nightclubs might be completely out of their depth at a wedding, where the crowd shifts from toddlers to 80-year-olds over the course of a night. Wedding DJ experience means knowing how to handle a dancefloor that’s half-empty at 8pm and absolutely rammed by 10pm — and not panicking about either.

It means knowing that when the father of the bride asks for something you’ve never heard of, you either have it or you know how to handle the moment without making him feel embarrassed. That kind of thing only comes from doing it.

Planning Makes the Night — Not the Night Itself

The best wedding receptions I’ve done weren’t the result of inspired in-the-moment decisions. They were planned well. I use an online wedding planner with every couple so we’ve worked through the running order, the first dance, the must-plays and the absolutely-nots before I ever load a van. When I arrive at the venue I already know the couple, the songs, and what matters to them.

The improvisation happens within that framework — reading which direction the room is going, spotting when to shift tempo, knowing when to take a guest’s request and when to smile and quietly park it for later. But none of that works without the groundwork.

Equipment Matters, But It’s Not the Point

I use good kit. Professional-grade speakers, proper lighting, backups for everything. But couples who get too focused on equipment specs are asking the wrong question. You’re not hiring a sound system — you’re hiring a person. The best setup in the world sounds terrible if the DJ doesn’t know how to use it, and a competent DJ can make modest equipment sound great.

What you should care about is whether the DJ has a second copy of everything critical. The night I’d hate to have is the one where something fails and I have no fallback. That’s never happened to me, and I intend to keep it that way.

The MC Role is Underrated

Half of what I do at a wedding has nothing to do with music. I’m coordinating with the venue, making sure the photographer knows the first dance is two minutes away, keeping an eye on whether the speeches have run over and the timeline needs adjusting. When I get on the microphone to welcome guests onto the dancefloor, the tone of that matters — too loud and shouty and people cringe, too quiet and nobody hears it.

A good DJ who can’t MC is only doing half the job at a wedding. It’s worth asking specifically about this when you’re speaking to potential DJs.

How to Find the Right One

Talk to them. Not just by email — actually speak. You’ll know within five minutes whether this is someone you trust to be the voice of your reception. Ask how they handle requests on the night. Ask what happens if they’re ill. Ask whether they’ve played your venue before. The answers matter less than how they answer.

If you’d like to have that conversation with me, get in touch. Or if you’d like to know more about how I work a wedding reception, the wedding reception page covers it in detail.

Filed Under: Weddings Tagged With: Scottish DJ, wedding entertainment, wedding tips

Why Choose Premier Disco for Your Wedding?

1 11th March 2023 by James Veal Leave a Comment

There are a lot of DJ listings online, and most of them say roughly the same things. Professional service. Extensive music library. Competitive pricing. It all starts to blur together, and it’s genuinely difficult to know what you’re actually getting until the night itself — which isn’t when you want to find out.

So rather than giving you another list of bullet points, here’s what I think actually sets Premier Disco apart, as honestly as I can put it.

You Deal With One Person, Start to Finish

When you book Premier Disco, you’re booking me — James. I’m the one you’ll speak to during the planning, I’m the one who’ll be on the other end of any emails or calls in the months before your wedding, and I’m the one who’ll show up at your venue and play your wedding. There’s no agency in the middle, no chance of a different DJ turning up on the night because the one you met isn’t available.

That matters more than it might seem. You’re trusting someone with the atmosphere of your wedding day. That trust needs to be in a person, not a company name.

I’ve Done This a Lot

I’ve been playing weddings for many years, across venues all over Edinburgh and the Lothians. Archerfield House, Melville Castle, the French Consulate in Edinburgh, hotel ballrooms, marquees on private estates. I know how different rooms behave acoustically, I know which venues have tricky loading access, and I know where the sound limiters are set low enough to cause problems if you’re not careful.

That kind of familiarity doesn’t show up on a price list, but it’s the difference between a smooth night and a stressful one.

The Planning Is Built In

Every booking includes access to an online planning system where we work through your running order and music together. First dance, father-daughter dance, must-plays, do-not-plays. You can invite guests to submit requests before the night, which gives me a picture of your crowd before I’ve even arrived.

Nothing about your evening should be a surprise on the day.

I’m Also Your MC

DJing a wedding isn’t just about the music. I’ll coordinate with your venue team, keep an eye on the timeline, and make all the announcements — first dance, cake cutting, last orders on the dancefloor. Done well, guests barely notice this is happening. Done badly, it makes an evening feel disjointed and rushed.

I’ve been doing this long enough to know the difference between a microphone moment that lands and one that falls flat. Getting it right is something I take seriously.

If Something Goes Wrong, I Have a Backup

Equipment fails. It’s rare, but it happens. I carry duplicate systems for everything critical, so a single hardware problem doesn’t end your evening. This is basic professionalism, but it’s worth confirming with any DJ you’re considering — you’d be surprised how many don’t bother.

Fully insured, PAT-tested, and I bring all the venue paperwork without being asked.

Let’s Talk

If any of this resonates, the best next step is a conversation. Tell me your date, venue, and what you’re imagining for the evening — I’ll tell you honestly what I can do and whether I’m the right fit. Get in touch here, or take a look at the wedding reception package for more detail.

Filed Under: Weddings Tagged With: Scottish DJ, wedding entertainment, wedding tips

Cost Of Living and its ‘Other’ Impacts On Your Event

1 11th October 2022 by James Veal Leave a Comment

The Cost Of Living Crisis Reaches Further Than You Think!

We are all acutely aware of the impact of the ‘Cost Of Living Crisis’ we are all currently living through. Everything from mortgages, rent, fuel, light and heating, shopping, and insurance, in fact, EVERYTHING is more expensive.

So What Impact Will This Have On My Event?

To state the obvious, your fees to the venue and all suppliers will rise. Your event will simply cost more.

There is now an additional expense that maybe you didn’t think about!

Already being reported, mainly from DJs in England but I am sure this will spread throughout the UK, is DJs are being invoiced by venues, in advance, for the use of electricity expected to be used during an event. What’s worse is they are being invoiced at a level far higher than the actual cost of what is used.

Now, what the venue seems to forget is that the suppliers to most events are generally contracted by the client, you. What else they appear to forget is, unless they have specifically included a clause in their contract with you, they cannot change the terms of that contract without your approval.

As DJs, we are responsible to you, our client. We have a contract with you and only you. The venue always has the last word when it comes to licencing conditions whether that be regarding timings or noise levels or any other substantial factor, but you are the person we listen to about anything else. If a venue approaches us before an event and asks for a fee towards electricity costs we then simply refer them to you since this has nothing to do with us.

When they contact you then simply state this was not part of your agreement and you don’t agree to any changes in the contract. They cannot change it in any way without your consent. They also cannot cancel your event due to you not agreeing to change the contract, and they know this. Don’t feel pressurised into doing something you do not want to do.

The Honest Way For A Venue To Deal With This

The best, most honest and genuine way for a venue to deal with this is to absorb the cost into the general event costs. Hopefully, this is the way they will go. But in a time when people are taking care of the pennies, they just might go down the route of many other industries. This involves pricing the booking as low as they can in an attempt to get a financial edge on their competitors, then loading up on the extras later.

How To Protect Yourself

Simply make sure everything is included in your quotations before you agree to anything.

Planning a wedding or event in Scotland? get in touch to discuss your wedding entertainment.

Planning a wedding or event in Scotland? get in touch to discuss your wedding entertainment.

Filed Under: News, Weddings Tagged With: cost of living, wedding entertainment, wedding tips

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