Anonymous wrote:Amen, 17:20. What the hell is wrong with everyone on here? Throughout my 20s, and even now that I'm in my mid-30s, I regularly was invited to birthday dinners for friends. I never once considered that the person organizing the event was paying for all of us!! We always pay for the birthday girl or boy but then we each pay our own way. We do usually split the bill evenly, which means I'm paying for my friend who consumes 3x more booze than me, but I know that going into the dinner and have learned to just suck it up. And for clarification, we are all highly paid professionals with good manners.
OP, the responses you are getting here are in no way reflective of the way the rest of the world thinks about this subject. Good lord. Enjoy your dinner and don't stress that your friends will assume you are paying or will consider it rude if you don't. They won't. 17:20's wording is perfect.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
The birthday girl is paying for herself, too?
I'd send out an email saying "We're getting together to take so and so out for his birthday. Please let us know if you'd like to join us. I'll be hosting cocktails at my house ahead of time." Include a link to the menu. I never assumed that a friend who invited me to a mutual friend's birthday party at a restaurant was going to pay for the whole thing. I assumed I'd pay for myself plus chip in for the birthday girl/guy. Anonymous wrote:How do I word the invitation so people know what to expect?
Will be having a dozen or so people over to my place for cocktails to celebrate a friend's birthday, then we're all going to dinner. But each person will be paying for their own dinner. Will include name of restaurant so they can look at menu & pricing ahead of time. They're of course welcome to just come for the cocktails part of the evening.
Will people assume that the cost of meal is individual? We're in our 20's and a mix of singles and married.