Anonymous wrote:I earmarked $100k for each child (DD and DS). If one of them goes for a smaller wedding, I will probably give them the rest in cash.
Anonymous wrote:They should, but they don't.
In 2026, weddings are planned and dominated by what the bride and occassionally her mother wants.
Rare is the bride that lets her future husband have a significant voice in the wedding planning.
Even rarer is the bride that gives the groom's parents a voice in the wedding planning.
Until brides join this century and give the groom's side equal voice in the wedding planning, the bride's family should be respinsible for the bulk of the wedding cost
Not our experience at all. Please provide support for all these claims - or is this just all opinion and assumptions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will give my daughters a gift for them to spend as they see fit. It won’t be enough to pay for the wedding, probably the max fed amount is (19k in 2025). I’ve paid for private education and I’m paying for undergrad and medical/law school. Then they are on their own. I also have some stock and a vacation property in trust for each - profit generating ski condos in CO. That will be with a prenup, so definitely not a gift to the couple, but to my girls. Their spouses will obviously benefit from using them.
A donor owes gift tax only after exceeding the lifetime exemption, which is $13.99 million in 2025 and $15 million in 2026 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s tax savings. Until that point, amounts above the annual exclusion simply reduce the remaining exemption. This structure means that large gifts often have no immediate tax cost as long as the donor’s total lifetime gifting and estate transfers stay under the limit.
https://smartasset.com/estate-planning/gift-tax-explained-2021-exemption-and-rates
Anonymous wrote:If the alcohol is not charged per person, but per drink and a fewer % of people drink, you can save a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DD is getting married next summer. We are paying for the wedding, which will cost around $250k for over 200 guests. The groom’s family did not offer to contribute, but is hosting a welcome party (and FWIW, the groom is equally involved in all the planning). Our HHI and NW are in the top 1%.
$250K weddings are the new $100K weddings. We’re seeing a big split where people either go $250K+ (some over $1M) - or they do the courthouse route.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For mine, if they choose to marry it will be on them. I’d gift them a few thousand, but they could use it for whatever they like.
Similar. Probably give them like $10K each, and it will be my gift.
We paid for our wedding ourselves, the parents gifted us photo and video.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest is only 15, and a boy, but if/when he gets married, I work contribute whatever they need if the bride’s parents aren’t paying or we’d do rehearsal/honeymoon. DH and I were able to fund our $100k wedding 20 years ago, and I’d want something at least as nice for them.
You expect the women’s family to pay?! Why? Because it’s tradition? It’s only tradition because historically women didn’t work or receive an education. Now that’s not the case. Don’t continue your sexist way of thinking when the world has changed.
Yeah, team boy mom.
When the bride is willing to relinquish all or half of the decision making to the groom and future mother in law, then your post would make sense.
But weddings are planned almost 100% by the bride, even today, down to the shoes the groom wears, and approval of or guidelines for the dress that the mother in law wears.
A wedding is one of those things where the old adage of if you are going to expect money from someone, then get ready to earn the money in the form of their (often unwelcome) opinions
Unless a bride is willing to let the groom's side be involved in decision-making and planning, then weddings should continue to follow the traditional route of the bride's side paying for it.
Really! Your response is another sexist post. The is 2026 not 1786. Of course the groom’s family should get a voice in the planning and everything else! And you should expect to pay equally for your sons and daughters.
(Well, maybe not you. You will reap what you sow.)
They should, but they don't.
In 2026, weddings are planned and dominated by what the bride and occassionally her mother wants.
Rare is the bride that lets her future husband have a significant voice in the wedding planning.
Even rarer is the bride that gives the groom's parents a voice in the wedding planning.
Until brides join this century and give the groom's side equal voice in the wedding planning, the bride's family should be respinsible for the bulk of the wedding cost.
Anonymous wrote:Our DD is getting married next summer. We are paying for the wedding, which will cost around $250k for over 200 guests. The groom’s family did not offer to contribute, but is hosting a welcome party (and FWIW, the groom is equally involved in all the planning). Our HHI and NW are in the top 1%.
They should, but they don't.
In 2026, weddings are planned and dominated by what the bride and occassionally her mother wants.
Rare is the bride that lets her future husband have a significant voice in the wedding planning.
Even rarer is the bride that gives the groom's parents a voice in the wedding planning.
Until brides join this century and give the groom's side equal voice in the wedding planning, the bride's family should be respinsible for the bulk of the wedding cost