Katie Price says her "best wedding" was when she married Peter Andre.

Katie Price and Peter Andre

Katie Price and Peter Andre

The ‘Celebrity Big Brother’ winner - who has been married three times - admitted the 2005 ceremony she shared with the ‘Mysterious Girl’ hitmaker, 50, was her "dream wedding" because it was an "extravagant" day with the perfect dress - a pink gown with a seven-metre train - and "proper bridesmaids".

Speaking on her podcast ‘The Katie Price Show', the 45-year-old former glamour model explained: "The best wedding, I'd have to say the Pete one because it was extravagant. It was my dream wedding, my dream dress, and I felt it was done properly."

Katie was married to Peter from 2005 until their divorce in 2009 and they became parents to two children together - 18-year-old son Junior and 16-year-old daughter Princess.

The reality star was later married to Alex Reid from 2010 to 2011 and she was wed to husband number three Kieran Hayler - the father of her nine-year-old son Jett and eight-year-old daughter Bunny - from 2013 until 2021.

Katie - who is also mum to son Harvey, 21, from a previous relationship - confessed she thought she would be with Peter “forever” and that's why she made sure the wedding was so lavish.

She continued: “I thought i'd be with him forever and it was proper. the families there, the proper bridesmaids, it was just done how you expect a wedding to be. It was all done properly.”

The ‘What Katie Did Next’ star - who broke off her engagement to Carl Woods, 34, in March - added of her other weddings: "The other two [weddings] ... what was I doing? The dresses were nice. I must say I love getting married and I love a dress … which has been my favourite dress? Obviously, I liked the one with Pete, but then with Alex I like that one. That was nice."

The former ‘Celebrity MasterChef’ star also lifted the lid on how she dealt with an unwanted guest at her and Pete’s special day.

Katie said: “At mine and Pete's wedding there was one person I really, really didn't want to come to our wedding and I had perfectly good reasons.

“But he said, ‘I can't, Kate, it's impossible they have to come I can't,’ and I said ‘Well I want that person to know that I don't want them here and the reasons.’

“But he didn't do until the evening. I was sitting at a table and clocked them with my eye; this person was sitting and had a few to drink, so I thought I’d take advantage of it.

“I said ‘Can you do me a favour please? Can you go up to that person over there and say, Kate wants you to know that she didn't want you to come to the wedding,’ and I told her to explain the reason why.

“I had great satisfaction of watching her go over there and say it. I didn't want that person to think that I didn't know anything.

“Anyway, I am a nice person.”