| We alternate years and kids birthdays aren’t close together. One year a party and the next year a special outing with a family birthday celebration. Works out better for everyone. |
| Kids 4 days apart. We did joint parties for a few years, then separate parties on same weekend so family could be present for both. Now that they’re older, they just want to hang with their friends so we don’t invite family any more. |
Then decline the invite. |
| 3 girls all born within 2 days of each other. So. Much. Cake. I power through it and make sure each child feels special and they have a wonderful birthday. It is what it is. |
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I have two boys that are two weeks and two years apart. We have always done one big party for both of them at our house. We try to pick the weekend in the middle. It worked really well in preschool when most of their friends had siblings the same age. The invite list got bigger in early elementary when it wasn’t mostly sibling pairs anymore. I do think my oldest is going to want to switch to a small sleepover or outing in the next year or two and when that happens we’ll gladly roll with it because it seems more manageable to do that twice rather than the big blow out party twice.
Each kid does get a special dinner and family presents on their actual birthdays. |
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Why would you alternate years for birthday parties?
I’m genuinely curious. Why not just have small parties for both or a joint party every year? My kids love and wait for their birthdays every year. My kids bday is one day apart. They would be upset watching their sibling have a party and then having to wait a full year to celebrate theirs. |
| I have three within 3 weeks of each other. No twins. Everyone gets a party. It’s exhausting and expensive. |
| Mine are 28 days apart but given the difference of ages and friendships wouldn't do a joint birthday |
Some families alternate between a birthday party and an outing with one or two friends |
| Mine are two days apart and they both had parties every year untiil they were about 12. Then just if they wanted something or not. Otherwise, I think you're just being lazy. |
I have seen PP in other birthday threads if people have chill birthday parties and don't serve a full meal. Its so stupid. The point of a birthday is to celebrate a child not to bean count the cost benefit analysis of buying a gift. We also do no gift parties and (my kids get gifts from their nuclear familygrandparents and aunts/uncle's and that's plenty) |
| I’m also confused as to why their being born within a few weeks of each other would impact how many birthday parties they get? You noted that you’re talking about friend versus family parties so it’s not like the guest list would overlap. You’re would end up paying the same amount per year regardless of whether your kids have parties a couple weeks or 6 months apart. It’s just a question of budgeting appropriately. |
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We alternate years and our kids b-days aren’t close together. We always have. One year they get a party and the next year they get a special outing. My older child, now 8, always just wanted the outing. We do a special dinner with cake and presents on their actual birthday.
When we do a party, it includes a full meal for adults and kids and some form of entertainment for the kids. I’m not a fan of the cupcake and pizza parties at the park either. They just are not special. |
For us the guest list would definitely overlap with family friends and extended family (lots of cousins). We do fairly special parties with full meals for everyone, entertainment, and invite the child’s entire class. Every year with their birthdays a month apart would be too much. On the off year, like others have said, the kid gets a special event outing. |
“Chill birthday parties” or “cheap birthday parties”? NP here and cupcakes in the park just isn’t special. |