Yes...except there may or maynot be a "wedding rehearsal" per se. |
| Thanks for the feedback. The venue host was suggesting tickets which we didn't like. The idea of limiting choices to beer, wine, soda and food seems good to me. |
OP this sounds great. Sometimes the groom's family hosts a rehearsal dinner/out of town dinner / out of town brunch, etc. In this case if it's all on you, Something light and controlled is good, and people will really not be miffed to figure out the "more" on their own. If they want to keep drinking or go to a post-bar or restaurant we have apps and maps galore. It is not your responsibility to fund the whole weekend. Out of town guests know this and factor it into their decision to attend or not. Which is why we also encourage people on here to decline travel/destination weddings without guilt if it is out of their budget! |
| Mother of the groom here. We include out of towners at the rehearsal dinner. |
| We had a welcome dinner, but it’s only for the people who flew in from out of town. No, we don’t limit drinks - nobody is getting drunk and making a fool of themselves. It’s a sit down dinner. People order from a menu we’ve arranged with the restaurant. |
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OP - you're on the right track with just beer, wine, and soda.
A buffet can be less expensive than passed appetizers. I would set a time limit for 2 hours, and just end it then, rather than transition to having some of it hosted (food) and some of it not hosted (drinks). We had a VERY casual welcome dinner and limited decor to tea lights in jelly jars and mason jars. I bet you're already doing flowers at the reception, so this is something different. |
| Most welcome parties I've been to were post-dinner and just had an open bar. Some had snacks and/or dessert. |
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| I've been to welcome parties where they told people they'd cover the first 2 drinks and had a 1k limit at the bar. If they hit the 1k, you didn't get a free drink. |
| I've been to welcome dinner/rehearsal dinners typically where it's a mini-reception at a restaurant. Open bar cocktail hour before, then everyone moved to a seated dinner. There are centerpiece flowers, welcome speeches and everyone wears party or cocktail dress. Out of town visitors are invited with the wedding party. |
| You do not invite guests to your event and charge them. If you can not afford an open bar, then just serve what you can afford. General custom has become you invite the bridal party and out of town guests to the rehearsal dinner. Just do that. |
This makes sense to me. I can't understand how so many people are saying drink tickets are tacky but only serving appetizers is not. But then I'm from an Italian family and we are more interested in eating than drinking. I wouldn't limit drinks either because we're not big drinkers. |
No drinks, just water, juice and coffee and few appetizers to meet and greet. A welcome sign but no fancy decor needed. Obviously you can knock yourself out going extra, that's legal. |
| We went to one last weekend that was done well. I would say 75% of those in attendance had traveled for the wedding (where bride grew up and grandparents who were unable to travel lived). So the groom's parents hosted one as a "everyone has traveled we should get together instead of people fending for themselves". Open bar with wine, beer , sodas, and things like iced tea and lemonade. It was all passed apps and some stations of meat and cheese and things like that. Honestly it was perfect. |
| It all depends on how many people are flying in. If less than 20, take them to a restaurant and have dinner, if 60 then just soft drinks and snacks. You'll be toasting with champagne at wedding so no need to do it twice. |