Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Get with the times. People are getting married later in life and would rather have experiences than a pot they don’t need or some formal chins they will never use. If you accepted gifts at your wedding, you should celebrate others with gifts, too. And if they want experiences instead of junk, so be it. Honestly give nothing if you are so cheap you give $50.
Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Get with the times. People are getting married later in life and would rather have experiences than a pot they don’t need or some formal chins they will never use. If you accepted gifts at your wedding, you should celebrate others with gifts, too. And if they want experiences instead of junk, so be it. Honestly give nothing if you are so cheap you give $50.
Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Anonymous wrote:$100 is the absolute minimum I give for a wedding gift, $200 for a relative or close friend but I would actually probably give more at this point because inflation.
Anonymous wrote:Well, only you know your budget, but this sounds incredibly cheap for an aunt to give a nephew, especially if you are not incurring any money to travel. I think $100 minimum, but my first instinct for a nephew is $250.