It's extremely tacky. |
I agree. The answer to this question is always “give what you can afford”. |
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I had a nice $150K+ wedding in a high cost area in 2022 and here is what we generally received:
$200-300 from older guests or people attending single $300/couple average from our friends $400/couple from higher earning friends $1000/couple from very close friends or family $5k-20K from immediate family (step-parents/parents/grandparents) We paid for our own wedding 100% -- had no prior knowledge of any family cash gifts |
Will also add that "per plate" at our wedding across 3 days of events would have exceeded $1000 pp so almost nobody covered their plate (or were expected to). |
That was your choice to have a three day event. No one would even consider those other days. Oh, and there is no way the lowest amount you got was $200 unless it was a very small wedding with only a select few invited. |
Ew. Money grubbing much? |
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I don't give cash as wedding gifts, which, to me, is extremely tacky.
I give a nice bottle of wine or something from the registry. It's rarely $200 unless I know the couple very well. I've been to destination weddings where I didn't give any gifts as the cost of going to the wedding was high enough. |
| I gave $500 to a young couple (nephew) last weekend. We were three attending. |
You're right -- some people also didn't give any gift or just gave us a card (we requested no gifts and didn't have a registry). The above amounts were were people who gave us something despite our request, probably 75% of guests still gave a cash gift. And yes, it was our choice to have a 3-day event and we in no way expected any gifts or anyone to "cover their plate" regardless. |
In Jewish culture, there's no registry for a wedding. You give a check. |
Same for Chinese culture. You give cash in a red envelope or card. |
Oh dear. “Cover your plate” is a gentle suggestion for wedding guests, not a rule, not a norm, and certainly not an expectation for the hosts. Otherwise only people who felt they would be able to afford your wedding would attend….is that what you want? You’re certainly not going to scale down your wedding so that less wealthy friends and family would be able to cover their plate, nor should you feel any pressure to do so. It’s supposed to be about gathering everyone important to you in celebration. You decide how much you’re spending on the wedding, your guests decide how much to spend on your present. Neither controls the other. |
I don’t think “nice bottle of wine” is a good wedding present at all, especially if you’re attending the ceremony and reception. A wedding deserves something better than a hostess gift to a fancy dinner party. Yikes. |
+ 1, especially if you are incurring travel costs to attend. |
| Everyone seems to be taking the "cover your plate" comment quite literally. Its obviously a rule of thumb and meant to serve as guidance. If you want to cover your plate - that's the rate for a plate these days. If you don't want to cover your plate - that's fine too. |