Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I are more "successful" than his parents, but for various reasons our net incomes isn't as high as it looks on paper. Lots of medical expenses, student loans, taxes from being business owners, etc.
DH's parents have helped us out several times over the years including the kids college education. We appreciate it very much. Help your kids, OP. You clearly can, so what's the problem? What else are you going to do with your NINE MILLION?!
Sounds like you aren’t as successful as your DH’s parents.
Don’t disagree about the $9MM, but you need the money.
Anonymous wrote:This seems like a situation where you should gift something meaningful instead of outright pay for the whole thing. For instance my parents paid for several relatives, who couldn't afford it on their own, to come to my wedding and that meant a lot to me. My husband's father sprung for an excellent band for the reception. Etc.
Anonymous wrote:I think a) only if they ask AND b) you have guest you want to invite. I think a nice thing to offer is to pay for a discrete vendors, like the photographer which regularly runs over $10K in a HCOL city
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would feel awful not offering to contribute to my child’s wedding after my parents paid for mine. Fund the honeymoon or something but if you’re not hosting…you’re guests.
All parents of 30+ year olds getting married are basically guests in the modern age. Even if you were paying 100%, it’s not like the old days where it was really the parents were hosts and invited all their friends and business associates (who the couple probably had never met before the wedding).
Surely you have many sets of friends family who were around as your child grew up at home; they alway get invited. We had 3-4 tables of 8 of them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would feel awful not offering to contribute to my child’s wedding after my parents paid for mine. Fund the honeymoon or something but if you’re not hosting…you’re guests.
All parents of 30+ year olds getting married are basically guests in the modern age. Even if you were paying 100%, it’s not like the old days where it was really the parents were hosts and invited all their friends and business associates (who the couple probably had never met before the wedding).
Anonymous wrote:I would feel awful not offering to contribute to my child’s wedding after my parents paid for mine. Fund the honeymoon or something but if you’re not hosting…you’re guests.
I think historically parents also paid because wedding guests were invited by the parents, not bride and groom. Nowadays the newlyweds want to invite their friends instead of distant relatives or dad's business partners.