Are you paying or contributing to your kids weddings?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If a couple can’t afford to pay for their own wedding, they aren’t ready to get married.

Yes, that may mean downsizing the event, but maybe it will help the couple focus on tbings that are actually important.

A gift check from parents is nice, but only if it is truly a gift and not a way to weasel into planning the wedding.


Except some kids would prefer to just elope, yet their parents want to be there. My aunt and uncle refused to give their son (gave their daughter 50k the year before) any money for his wedding and he eloped instead. They were devastated. Actions have consequences. A lot of parents have massive demands. You can't demand anything when it's not your own wedding.


Except some places like Long Island and New Jersey people write the check at the reception, I would give $1,000 at a fancy wedding the one where there are food trucks and tap beer I might give tops $200 bucks. So cheap weddings can cost more. The trick is not to go over the top, but not so cheap people give you $100 buck gifts.


Wow. How well do you know these people? $100 seems like a pretty good gift, depending on how close you are to them.


$100? Are you on crack? Also closeness does not matter that much. I went to an old neighbors daughters wedding of a women we have not seen in 8 years. Just me, wife and younger daughter. I gave $800 and thought cheap as nice weddings are at least $250 a person. A few weeks early went to my nephews really fancy wedding the three of us gave $1,000 and that wedding must have been $350 a person so I was actually cheap.

Even a DJ, tent, open bar, decorations, catered food in backyard is above $100 a person

I hardly call covering my plate overly generous.

Generous was in 1998 at my wedding which was $150 a person I got a few $500 to $1,000 per couple gifts. Most gave $200 a couple which was nice but not overly generous and one or two gave $75 which was FU money even in 1998.


Covering your plate is a low class Long Island gypsy mentality.



I’ve never thought paying for the wedding to be the job of the guests. That’s a very novel concept to me. How much someone chooses to spend on their wedding is on them.



So if I go out to a steak house with you and bill is $500 for two of us I guess I can pay $50 as I don’t have to cover the plate.

My cheapest guest was my cheap ass one uncle who gave $75 at my wedding for two people on 1998. Cost me close to $300 for two of them, my wife was spitting fire writing thank you note.

He died last year and my wife goes heard your cheap uncle died. Like 9/11 wonen never forget who gave cheapest gift


If you throw a holiday party, do you expect your guests to bring a present that is somehow equal to the estimated cost per person of your holiday party...or better yet, do you expect they give you a cash gift?

Our holiday parties have bartenders, entertainment, we hire wait staff...I actually don't want anyone who attends to give me anything except an invite to a party they through (and we don't care if that invite is just a barbecue or something informal).


But you are not a 25 year girl spending every cent she owns on a wedding inviting Millionaires who screw over the bride by being cheap. I throw big bashes now I dont want anything. But when I was married without a pot to pee in throwing a wedding where I rolled every last penny I had to make it nice for my guests I have no love for Millionaires pulling up in Mercedes handing out $75 checks. Stay home. My poor widowed aunts I appreicate even a $5 dollar check. But not you rich folk.


Show me a girl like this and I will show you a girl who is financially illiterate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If a couple can’t afford to pay for their own wedding, they aren’t ready to get married.

Yes, that may mean downsizing the event, but maybe it will help the couple focus on tbings that are actually important.

A gift check from parents is nice, but only if it is truly a gift and not a way to weasel into planning the wedding.


Except some kids would prefer to just elope, yet their parents want to be there. My aunt and uncle refused to give their son (gave their daughter 50k the year before) any money for his wedding and he eloped instead. They were devastated. Actions have consequences. A lot of parents have massive demands. You can't demand anything when it's not your own wedding.


Except some places like Long Island and New Jersey people write the check at the reception, I would give $1,000 at a fancy wedding the one where there are food trucks and tap beer I might give tops $200 bucks. So cheap weddings can cost more. The trick is not to go over the top, but not so cheap people give you $100 buck gifts.


Wow. How well do you know these people? $100 seems like a pretty good gift, depending on how close you are to them.


$100? Are you on crack? Also closeness does not matter that much. I went to an old neighbors daughters wedding of a women we have not seen in 8 years. Just me, wife and younger daughter. I gave $800 and thought cheap as nice weddings are at least $250 a person. A few weeks early went to my nephews really fancy wedding the three of us gave $1,000 and that wedding must have been $350 a person so I was actually cheap.

Even a DJ, tent, open bar, decorations, catered food in backyard is above $100 a person

I hardly call covering my plate overly generous.

Generous was in 1998 at my wedding which was $150 a person I got a few $500 to $1,000 per couple gifts. Most gave $200 a couple which was nice but not overly generous and one or two gave $75 which was FU money even in 1998.


Covering your plate is a low class Long Island gypsy mentality.



no it is something most people think about. I give differently if attending a wedding that costs $300/person versus $100/person.


No, it is not.

Expecting your guests to give you enough cash to pay for their food is low class and trashy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If a couple can’t afford to pay for their own wedding, they aren’t ready to get married.

Yes, that may mean downsizing the event, but maybe it will help the couple focus on tbings that are actually important.

A gift check from parents is nice, but only if it is truly a gift and not a way to weasel into planning the wedding.


Except some kids would prefer to just elope, yet their parents want to be there. My aunt and uncle refused to give their son (gave their daughter 50k the year before) any money for his wedding and he eloped instead. They were devastated. Actions have consequences. A lot of parents have massive demands. You can't demand anything when it's not your own wedding.


Except some places like Long Island and New Jersey people write the check at the reception, I would give $1,000 at a fancy wedding the one where there are food trucks and tap beer I might give tops $200 bucks. So cheap weddings can cost more. The trick is not to go over the top, but not so cheap people give you $100 buck gifts.


Wow. How well do you know these people? $100 seems like a pretty good gift, depending on how close you are to them.


$100? Are you on crack? Also closeness does not matter that much. I went to an old neighbors daughters wedding of a women we have not seen in 8 years. Just me, wife and younger daughter. I gave $800 and thought cheap as nice weddings are at least $250 a person. A few weeks early went to my nephews really fancy wedding the three of us gave $1,000 and that wedding must have been $350 a person so I was actually cheap.

Even a DJ, tent, open bar, decorations, catered food in backyard is above $100 a person

I hardly call covering my plate overly generous.

Generous was in 1998 at my wedding which was $150 a person I got a few $500 to $1,000 per couple gifts. Most gave $200 a couple which was nice but not overly generous and one or two gave $75 which was FU money even in 1998.


Covering your plate is a low class Long Island gypsy mentality.



no it is something most people think about. I give differently if attending a wedding that costs $300/person versus $100/person.


That's ridiculous. You are not being invited to reimburse the hosts.


Has this become the expectation? The last few weddings we have been invited to had things on the registry specific to the wedding, plus the honeymoon flight, AirBnB, dinners, etc. The registry was like a Sign-Up Genius of sorts with a number of slots available at specified payment amounts to pay for each item. I think we even saw an ask for money towards a house down payment and another couple, who already have a house, asked for money to go towards landscaping.

We held the wedding we could afford and didn’t go on a honeymoon because we couldn’t afford it.


That is soooooo tacky.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If a couple can’t afford to pay for their own wedding, they aren’t ready to get married.

Yes, that may mean downsizing the event, but maybe it will help the couple focus on tbings that are actually important.

A gift check from parents is nice, but only if it is truly a gift and not a way to weasel into planning the wedding.


Except some kids would prefer to just elope, yet their parents want to be there. My aunt and uncle refused to give their son (gave their daughter 50k the year before) any money for his wedding and he eloped instead. They were devastated. Actions have consequences. A lot of parents have massive demands. You can't demand anything when it's not your own wedding.


Except some places like Long Island and New Jersey people write the check at the reception, I would give $1,000 at a fancy wedding the one where there are food trucks and tap beer I might give tops $200 bucks. So cheap weddings can cost more. The trick is not to go over the top, but not so cheap people give you $100 buck gifts.


Wow. How well do you know these people? $100 seems like a pretty good gift, depending on how close you are to them.


$100? Are you on crack? Also closeness does not matter that much. I went to an old neighbors daughters wedding of a women we have not seen in 8 years. Just me, wife and younger daughter. I gave $800 and thought cheap as nice weddings are at least $250 a person. A few weeks early went to my nephews really fancy wedding the three of us gave $1,000 and that wedding must have been $350 a person so I was actually cheap.

Even a DJ, tent, open bar, decorations, catered food in backyard is above $100 a person

I hardly call covering my plate overly generous.

Generous was in 1998 at my wedding which was $150 a person I got a few $500 to $1,000 per couple gifts. Most gave $200 a couple which was nice but not overly generous and one or two gave $75 which was FU money even in 1998.


Covering your plate is a low class Long Island gypsy mentality.



I’ve never thought paying for the wedding to be the job of the guests. That’s a very novel concept to me. How much someone chooses to spend on their wedding is on them.



So if I go out to a steak house with you and bill is $500 for two of us I guess I can pay $50 as I don’t have to cover the plate.

My cheapest guest was my cheap ass one uncle who gave $75 at my wedding for two people on 1998. Cost me close to $300 for two of them, my wife was spitting fire writing thank you note.

He died last year and my wife goes heard your cheap uncle died. Like 9/11 wonen never forget who gave cheapest gift


Yeah, most people who invite someone to a $500.00 plate meal are treating.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If a couple can’t afford to pay for their own wedding, they aren’t ready to get married.

Yes, that may mean downsizing the event, but maybe it will help the couple focus on tbings that are actually important.

A gift check from parents is nice, but only if it is truly a gift and not a way to weasel into planning the wedding.


Except some kids would prefer to just elope, yet their parents want to be there. My aunt and uncle refused to give their son (gave their daughter 50k the year before) any money for his wedding and he eloped instead. They were devastated. Actions have consequences. A lot of parents have massive demands. You can't demand anything when it's not your own wedding.


Except some places like Long Island and New Jersey people write the check at the reception, I would give $1,000 at a fancy wedding the one where there are food trucks and tap beer I might give tops $200 bucks. So cheap weddings can cost more. The trick is not to go over the top, but not so cheap people give you $100 buck gifts.


Wow. How well do you know these people? $100 seems like a pretty good gift, depending on how close you are to them.


$100? Are you on crack? Also closeness does not matter that much. I went to an old neighbors daughters wedding of a women we have not seen in 8 years. Just me, wife and younger daughter. I gave $800 and thought cheap as nice weddings are at least $250 a person. A few weeks early went to my nephews really fancy wedding the three of us gave $1,000 and that wedding must have been $350 a person so I was actually cheap.

Even a DJ, tent, open bar, decorations, catered food in backyard is above $100 a person

I hardly call covering my plate overly generous.

Generous was in 1998 at my wedding which was $150 a person I got a few $500 to $1,000 per couple gifts. Most gave $200 a couple which was nice but not overly generous and one or two gave $75 which was FU money even in 1998.


Covering your plate is a low class Long Island gypsy mentality.



I’ve never thought paying for the wedding to be the job of the guests. That’s a very novel concept to me. How much someone chooses to spend on their wedding is on them.



So if I go out to a steak house with you and bill is $500 for two of us I guess I can pay $50 as I don’t have to cover the plate.

My cheapest guest was my cheap ass one uncle who gave $75 at my wedding for two people on 1998. Cost me close to $300 for two of them, my wife was spitting fire writing thank you note.

He died last year and my wife goes heard your cheap uncle died. Like 9/11 wonen never forget who gave cheapest gift


If you throw a holiday party, do you expect your guests to bring a present that is somehow equal to the estimated cost per person of your holiday party...or better yet, do you expect they give you a cash gift?

Our holiday parties have bartenders, entertainment, we hire wait staff...I actually don't want anyone who attends to give me anything except an invite to a party they through (and we don't care if that invite is just a barbecue or something informal).


I always expect my trick or treaters to bring me a full sized candy bar in exchange for their treat. Duh.

Anonymous
We’ll be traditional and pay for my two daughters’ weddings 100%.

None of our family are showy so no worries about paying for stupid things. They both have money set aside to buy their first homes and necessities to start living as married couples.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Teen boys.

If they don't have a destination wedding, we will pay for a very nice honeymoon of their choosing within a generous budget.

Obviously, having 2 boys, we will have zero say in the matter since the bride usually gets what she wants in every wedding detail.

We find destination weddings to be so tacky, gauche, shallow and selfish.

For these reasons and more, we would be really embarrased if our kids have a destination wedding that requires such imposition on guests and loved ones, just to get your guests to pay for your wedding and so you can get fancy beach photos for social media.

If they choose poorly and end up with a bride that insists on a destination wedding, we will zip our mouths, smile politely, gush about how pretty the beach photos will be, and pay for a block of rooms for the family on our side who are able to attend, to lessen their financial burden, but we will not pay for a honeymoon.


I have something even tackier. My daughter had to go to a bachelorette party in a South American country and the wedding will be in different South American country. Bride and groom are Americans.
Anonymous
We have two sons and we’ll contribute to the cost of weddings. We don’t expect the bride’s family to do any more than we would. It’s an adult decision and we expect our sons to have a financial plan for the event. This isn’t the 1950’s.

We’re also paying for college and probably will contribute to a first time home purchase. I do think that parents paying for a wedding is a tradition that can go away but to each their own.

Our parents did not pay for our wedding nor did we expect them to.
Anonymous
We have 3 DCs- two girls and a boy. We just finished paying for college and we are now putting 1/2 the money aside for their ‘wedding’ fund. It will be their choice on how they use this money, wedding/ honeymoon or down payment.
Anonymous
I would give a $10k gift to be used on a wedding or down payment on a home. That's it, especially if they are getting married too young or to the wrong person. I won't throw good money after bad on their bad decisions.
Anonymous
My niece announced she and her fiancé were going to elope. They had a stag and drag party, which they promoted heavily on social media. I had never even heard of such a thing before seeing her posts. If you haven’t heard of it either, look it up. They raffled off prizes, including guns with rounds.

We didn’t attend.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We have 3 DCs- two girls and a boy. We just finished paying for college and we are now putting 1/2 the money aside for their ‘wedding’ fund. It will be their choice on how they use this money, wedding/ honeymoon or down payment.


I am struggling a bit with whether I should just give them a set amount when they turn certain age and then have them decide how they want to spend it, or whether I should pay for their weddings. These are a bit different things. For example, a larger wedding means that more of my family will be invited, and I don't want to discourage it by providing a set amount. So at least at this point, I am thinking that I will pay for a (reasonable) wedding and then give each a set amount to start their adult lives.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We have 3 DCs- two girls and a boy. We just finished paying for college and we are now putting 1/2 the money aside for their ‘wedding’ fund. It will be their choice on how they use this money, wedding/ honeymoon or down payment.


I am struggling a bit with whether I should just give them a set amount when they turn certain age and then have them decide how they want to spend it, or whether I should pay for their weddings. These are a bit different things. For example, a larger wedding means that more of my family will be invited, and I don't want to discourage it by providing a set amount. So at least at this point, I am thinking that I will pay for a (reasonable) wedding and then give each a set amount to start their adult lives.


This interesting thing about this approach is the assumption that you will have input over the guest list. That’s fine and many parents do that. However I would view a wedding as the purview of the adults getting married.
Anonymous
If you are applying pressure to get married (religion), then you pay.
Anonymous

Anonymous wrote:


I am struggling a bit with whether I should just give them a set amount when they turn certain age and then have them decide how they want to spend it, or whether I should pay for their weddings. These are a bit different things. For example, a larger wedding means that more of my family will be invited, and I don't want to discourage it by providing a set amount. So at least at this point, I am thinking that I will pay for a (reasonable) wedding and then give each a set amount to start their adult lives.


This interesting thing about this approach is the assumption that you will have input over the guest list. That’s fine and many parents do that. However I would view a wedding as the purview of the adults getting married.


My parents paid for my wedding. It never occurred to me that they would not be able to invite family and friend guests. Of course my husband and I invited our own friends as well. There was not a problem with who would be attending. Everyone had a good time.
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