Anonymous wrote:SAVE MONEY AND DON'T DO GOODIE BAGS
Anonymous wrote:Normally around $500-$800 if at home. Depends on how many people come.
We invite all classmates, neighborhood kids, my friend's kids, kids from EC and their parents and siblings. Usually we will have around 30 kids and around 30 parents. We buy pizza, cake, fruits, soft drink, beer and wine from Costco. I have the set-up at home to cook and serve in bulk so cooking for up to 40-50 people is not a problem. I buy all raw ingredients from Costco or ethnic grocery stores. Many of our guests (adults) are from our culture so I always provide a full Indian spread in addition to the pizza, so that all guests can choose to eat what they want.
I keep the decor very simple. I buy around 30-40 mylar balloons from dollar tree and use that as decoration and photo background. I also tie each balloon with a goody bag so on the way out the kids can pick up a goody bag and a balloon. I do not buy themed table cloth, goody bags, plates, hats etc. Goody bags are basically in brown lunch bags and consist only of costco bought snacks. I figure that no one needs the goody bag junk.
The biggest cost is of getting an entertainer for the kids and that alone runs to $200-$300. Apart from that my SIL has a bounce-house that I borrow and set up too. I have additional chairs and tables at home, so my family pitches in for setting it up. I have also done kids parties without the entertainer, but I have close friends who will supervise games for the kids, so that works for me. If you are hosting the party alone at home and have no helping hands, entertainers are a Godsent.
Between family and friends we have the full infrastructure to throw any large or small party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.
Anonymous wrote:25 kids is a lot. Either cut the guest list (5 friends!) or make it simple and meet at a playground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.
Guys I think this person is joking
Do kids even like crepes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.
Why do you need a taco truck or crepe truck…why not just order tacos and crepes?
Because who’s going to assemble them for the kids? Because when you pay for a service they bring all the supplies, do all the set up and do the breakdown. It’s better quality food. To me, it’s worth it.
Guys, don’t you understand? She iS bEtTer ThaN yOu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.
Why do you need a taco truck or crepe truck…why not just order tacos and crepes?
Because who’s going to assemble them for the kids? Because when you pay for a service they bring all the supplies, do all the set up and do the breakdown. It’s better quality food. To me, it’s worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I go all out on my birthday parties, but they're DIY. Intricate games, scavenger hunts, crafts. They typically run me $250-400. I hold them in my huge, open basement, bake my own cakes and have tons of food that I make. I actually think it's a better party room than any place I've ever been to (those bounce house places I mean). I have hired babysitters to help me run different stations.
It takes me a while to cook and set up, but I enjoy that stuff a lot, so it doesn't bother me.
My kids have enjoyed attending birthday parties at home or parks a lot. I disagree that you don't need activities though. I think you should always have at least 3 organized activities with a party (musical chairs, pinata, pin the tail on the donkey, craft, relay race). It gives a bit more structure to the whole event while still leaving time for free play.
You must be paying the babysitters shit, huh? Two babysitters for let's say ... two hours each, at $20 each is $80 without tipping them. So you're spending $170 on all the food, decor, crafts, and supplies and that's enough? How many kids are your kids having at these parties, three?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.
Guys I think this person is joking
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you people smoking?
We have 2 kids. Their bday parties this year:
Kid 1’s party was $350. He invited 8 friends and then his sibling was also there for a total of 10 kids. We had it at sky zone—it was $300 for the 10 kids and they had 1.5 hrs jumping time plus 1/2 hr w a table to eat at and the price included pizza, pitchers of soda, plates, cups, tablecloth, napkins. Then we paid about $50 that covered cupcakes & goodie bags.
Kid 2’s party was even cheaper…$250. She also invited 8 friends and her sibling was also there for a total of 10 kids. We had it at a gymnastics place and the price covered 1.5 hrs gymnastics activities and 1/2 hr w a table for refreshments. For her party we purposefully picked a time slot (2-4pm) where we didn’t need to provide a meal so we just did cupcakes and drinks and goodie bags which saved $.
You do not need to invite the whole class! And if you have a home party, you do not need a freakin taco truck or ice cream truck. Depending on age of kids and size of group, you could easily do a home party without even hiring entertainment. Kids can just play together. Or go to a playground and just provide cupcakes, drinks, maybe some snacks. The kids will have a blast and parents will likely be relieved you’re setting the tone for future, simpler (and cheaper) parties.
Good for you. Maybe you missed the part where OP said it was customary at her child’s school to invite everyone. We invite the whole class for one kid because his birthday is early in the school year and we want to meet people. My summer BD kid is able to limit his guests to a few good friends without hurting feelings.
If OP is going to do less than the whole class, it needs to be VERY small or single gender.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do more home and playground parties! We enjoy them just as much. Do some organized games. With that many kids you could have teams even!
As I said, just the taco truck we had at our backyard party was $1,000. When we had a playground party the permit was $120, $400 for the bubble man, over $2,000 for the crepe truck (entitling each party guest to one savory and one sweet crepe), etc.