Are you serious? I got married 20 years ago and most people gave more than $100! |
I got married in 2009. We received multiple gift cards of $100 from groups of more than 10 people. |
| I got married in 2018, coworkers gave $250. Extended family gave between $400-$1500. Here in DC. |
Unless the coworker gift was a group gift, you're not a fed. This leads me to assume you're in a more lucrative field. |
Not fed, didn't realize that was mentioned in OPs post. |
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It is a cultural thing. Normally range from $250 - $500 for friends. 1K-5K to kids of relatives.
I actually made the check out to my BIL, whose son was getting married. In the memo, I wrote "Congratulations to Larlo and his bride on their wedding". The amount was for 10K. There was no need to give it to my nephew because he did not pay for the wedding. My BIL paid for the wedding and so as a close relative we pitched in. |
It wasn't, but there are rules about how much feds can give to each other and $250 is well above the limit. |
People put in $10 each???? |
This is odd. |
Your friends are either very cheap or very poor. |
Gross.money-grab. |
Some less than $10 because the groups of people giving $10 had more than 10 people in them. |
It was mostly friends of our parents and retirees who, I assume, were freaked out by the 2008 stock market crash? |
Oops. Some of the groups of people giving $100 (not $10) |
Not at all. Bil can give the money to the son or he can use the money for the wedding cost. It is cultural. |