Anonymous wrote:DS1 is attending a classmate's 6th birthday at a play place this weekend. Theres no "siblings welcome" note on the invitation, so assume they arent included....totally fine. Because of timing and logistics, I need to bring DS2 (2.5 yo) and will pay for his entry fee and snacks separately. Do I let the host parent know or just show up and do our own thing?
Yes, I know this is a small issue and I don't care about the cost but am curious what the etiquette is.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sending out invites for my 6 yr old’s party shortly. Although it is a public venue in theory (there are days they have open play), for parties there is a strict headcount / capacity (40). After kids and parents we could be close (depending how many can make it). I think I’m going to specifically note that we can’t accommodate siblings due to venue capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Some people are really uptight. I have three children, 12, almost 7 and 4. There have definitely been times one has been invited and I couldn't leave one or both at home. I took them, paid their way, all good. It's a PUBLIC venue.
My son's 7th birthday is next weekend at a trampoline park. I didn't add anything about siblings on the invite but a few parents asked and I just added them to the rsvp. The venue allows it and we could accommodate financially so no biggie. We always make sure to have extra goody bags and extra food at our get togethers so it's never something where I'm counting down to the exact slice of pizza or cake 🙄
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter had a pool party this summer. I purposely kept the invite list fairly small knowing that most parents would absolutely want to attend even if their children were competent swimmers. Two parent approached me and said they needed the siblings to attend as well. I think one of them offered to pay for the sibling but I just told them everybody is welcome.
I think it's just very miserly to not include siblings.
I probably make a lot less money than compared to a lot of the people who post on this forum but I wouldn't dream of expecting my guests to pay to attend a party
Then why did you keep the guest list small? Saying all are welcome but then inviting just a handful doesn't make sense. If a kid wants to invited all the boys/girls in their class but doesn't want everyone's sibling and cousin, then so what? The other people aren't guests of the birthday child. They are just freeloaders. I don't mind being miserly to people looking to take advantage of hospitality. Everyone knows how these parties work after they've attended at least one. There's a space limit. It's not a "come one, come all!" situation.
You missed the point. All are welcome from the families invited. Not all as in the entire class/school etc.
Exactly. I wanted to invite her close friends and their families to attend. I didn't invite every kid in her class
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter had a pool party this summer. I purposely kept the invite list fairly small knowing that most parents would absolutely want to attend even if their children were competent swimmers. Two parent approached me and said they needed the siblings to attend as well. I think one of them offered to pay for the sibling but I just told them everybody is welcome.
I think it's just very miserly to not include siblings.
I probably make a lot less money than compared to a lot of the people who post on this forum but I wouldn't dream of expecting my guests to pay to attend a party
Then why did you keep the guest list small? Saying all are welcome but then inviting just a handful doesn't make sense. If a kid wants to invited all the boys/girls in their class but doesn't want everyone's sibling and cousin, then so what? The other people aren't guests of the birthday child. They are just freeloaders. I don't mind being miserly to people looking to take advantage of hospitality. Everyone knows how these parties work after they've attended at least one. There's a space limit. It's not a "come one, come all!" situation.
You missed the point. All are welcome from the families invited. Not all as in the entire class/school etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter had a pool party this summer. I purposely kept the invite list fairly small knowing that most parents would absolutely want to attend even if their children were competent swimmers. Two parent approached me and said they needed the siblings to attend as well. I think one of them offered to pay for the sibling but I just told them everybody is welcome.
I think it's just very miserly to not include siblings.
I probably make a lot less money than compared to a lot of the people who post on this forum but I wouldn't dream of expecting my guests to pay to attend a party
I am hosting an all class party at a party venue. I don’t care about the $35 extra per sibling, I literally do not have the space. I can either accommodate siblings or a classmate.
We have a seven figure income and a large house. I originally wanted to have the party at our house but DH does not want 20 kids and their families in our home. A few hundred dollars for siblings makes no difference to us. I still think it is rude to bring uninvited guests to a party. I have 3 kids and do not bring siblings unless they are specifically invited.
Anonymous wrote:Op here! Wow, I didn't realize how much of a hot issue this was. Our schedule changed and now we don't need to bring DS2. But now I know that future party hosts may feel strongly about sibling attendance. I also did not realize drop off parties start so early. 6 feels so young!
I also saw a lot of "find somebody to watch DS2" ...are there really people that pay a babysitter to watch siblings for 2-3 hours? I can't imagine paying someone to do that but maybe will have to in the future.
Thanks to everyone for your opinions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter had a pool party this summer. I purposely kept the invite list fairly small knowing that most parents would absolutely want to attend even if their children were competent swimmers. Two parent approached me and said they needed the siblings to attend as well. I think one of them offered to pay for the sibling but I just told them everybody is welcome.
I think it's just very miserly to not include siblings.
I probably make a lot less money than compared to a lot of the people who post on this forum but I wouldn't dream of expecting my guests to pay to attend a party
Then why did you keep the guest list small? Saying all are welcome but then inviting just a handful doesn't make sense. If a kid wants to invited all the boys/girls in their class but doesn't want everyone's sibling and cousin, then so what? The other people aren't guests of the birthday child. They are just freeloaders. I don't mind being miserly to people looking to take advantage of hospitality. Everyone knows how these parties work after they've attended at least one. There's a space limit. It's not a "come one, come all!" situation.
You missed the point. All are welcome from the families invited. Not all as in the entire class/school etc.
So, it's a very different kind of party and not relevant.