Anonymous wrote:The bride's parents pay for the wedding
Groom's family pays for rehearsal dinner
Groom pays for honeymoon.
Those are the rules
Anonymous wrote:I do not owe my kids a wedding. I certainly do not owe them college. Every single court in US, expects divorced parents to get/pay for child-support only till they were 18 yrs old.
My AC should have no expectation of anything from us. We have paid for college, first car, and allowed them to stay with us (all expenses paid) for their first jobs for several years.
They cannot expect that they will start off their adult lives with the same standard of living that we have after decades of working hard. If our relations with them is such that we want to give them the world, then we will make it happen. But other than that, anything that we give to them after 18 is our blessing to them and is dependent on our whim and fancy.
Anonymous wrote:There is no point in inviting lots of extended family and family friends, most of whom couple couldn't care to have there.
Anonymous wrote:Should say (the groom’s parents)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can well afford it, why not pay for your DD's wedding?
If I were in a position to do that, it would give me great joy to pay for my DD's wedding. That is what my parents did for me in 2000, and I am still so grateful.
Why create drama with the future in-laws when you could just agree to pay, and give your DD this really nice gesture?
What gives a groom’s parents the right to dictate what another set of parents does for their ADULT son’s wedding? If this were any other scenario(like parents paying for college) other than a wedding they would get chewed out and get told they are out of line. Why is it seen as ok behavior for the groom’s parents to meddle in what the brides parents do? Why is it even any of their business who pays anyway? Don’t you traditionalists like to spout the whole groom’s mom wears beige and just shows up and shut up?
Anonymous wrote:If you can well afford it, why not pay for your DD's wedding?
If I were in a position to do that, it would give me great joy to pay for my DD's wedding. That is what my parents did for me in 2000, and I am still so grateful.
Why create drama with the future in-laws when you could just agree to pay, and give your DD this really nice gesture?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I change my answer. I have 2 boys and a daughter. I would want my daughter to have a dream wedding and no problem paying for it. I would want to go all out and be part of planning.
If my sons were getting married, I would not just foot the bill. If the girl was wealthy, they could pay for it. I would give for down payment on a house.
So you would give your son a house downpayment but not your daughter? What if she would rather have the downpayment? Of course, paying for a house downpayment doesn’t do as much for appearances does it?
Anonymous wrote:I change my answer. I have 2 boys and a daughter. I would want my daughter to have a dream wedding and no problem paying for it. I would want to go all out and be part of planning.
If my sons were getting married, I would not just foot the bill. If the girl was wealthy, they could pay for it. I would give for down payment on a house.
Anonymous wrote:BG: our DD and her fiancée are both seniors in college and recently got engaged. DD is accepted into medical school and the fiancée into a top MBA school. Neither has debt from college. We will pay for DD medical school and his parents will pay for MBA school. Both families are well off with family all in the US.
The fiancée’s parents are going to traditional route and want us to pay for our DD’s wedding. While we can, we also have a second DD and their’s is an only child. We also feel we are keeping the young couple out of debt (but so are they). I want to suggest we split the costs but I don’t want to offend them.
DS says he and the fiancée will contribute but they don’t have much to contribute and we don’t want them to.
The fiancée doesn’t want a fancy wedding but we both have big families.
Should we ask the fiancée’s parents to contribute? How should we word it?