Anonymous wrote:My parents paid for my entire wedding. We are so thankful for their kindness and willingness to pay for it. They offered to pay for it all. My husband comes from a divorced family, he lived with his mom and step dad 90% of the time as a child. They didn’t offer to pay for a single thing. My parents asked them if they would be willing to split the cost of the photographer and they said no. They didn’t get us a wedding gift either ( not that it matters). But for the rest of the next year we heard they couldn’t afford to travel or do anything because they had to pay for two weddings. (My husbands sister also got married the same year).
It was disrespectful to me and my parents to hear my in laws say they paid for two weddings, when they didn’t lift a finger for our wedding.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so weird to me that people on DCUM are so judgmental about people spending money on fancy weddings. Posters are constantly bragging about their 6k square foot house in Bethesda, $20k European vacation, new Tesla, and kid who’s a lifer at Landon, but for some reason when it comes to weddings, everyone acts like you’re a vapid moron for having an expensive wedding.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so weird to me that people on DCUM are so judgmental about people spending money on fancy weddings. Posters are constantly bragging about their 6k square foot house in Bethesda, $20k European vacation, new Tesla, and kid who’s a lifer at Landon, but for some reason when it comes to weddings, everyone acts like you’re a vapid moron for having an expensive wedding.
Anonymous wrote:My parents paid for my entire wedding. We are so thankful for their kindness and willingness to pay for it. They offered to pay for it all. My husband comes from a divorced family, he lived with his mom and step dad 90% of the time as a child. They didn’t offer to pay for a single thing. My parents asked them if they would be willing to split the cost of the photographer and they said no. They didn’t get us a wedding gift either ( not that it matters). But for the rest of the next year we heard they couldn’t afford to travel or do anything because they had to pay for two weddings. (My husbands sister also got married the same year).
It was disrespectful to me and my parents to hear my in laws say they paid for two weddings, when they didn’t lift a finger for our wedding.
My in laws paid for rehearsal dinner only. We didn't know what that meant so we did what we're could afford. I spend days making pulled pork butt and sides. Total cost was $100. That's all my inlaws gave us. Didn't even pay for their plates at my wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are not on solid financial footing then why in the world would they spend a lot on a wedding? If I were you, I would offer a set amount of money for them ($5K?). If I were them, I would take that money to help get in better financial shape and have a tiny, budget-friendly wedding or elope.
That sounds like a reasonable contribution and a reasonable plan to me.
I guess I don't see 5k as a reasonable amount for a wedding contribution. Maybe if you paid 100% of college. 20k is more normal if you make about 100k. So maybe if you make less than average 5k might be okay.
LOL, as if you get any say over how other people spend their money?
My parents paid $0 for our wedding - DH and I paid for the entire thing.
We have only sons, not daughters, but regardless, we do not value a big blowout party that lasts several hours on one day. We are getting our kids through private colleges with zero debt, because we value that. We will contribute what we can to our kids' weddings, but will not fund anything extravagant.
I was grateful when my father gave us $1,800 towards our wedding. He'd just survived my mother's financially catastrophic illness and death, so I certainly didn't expect anything. You're just as married if you go to a courthouse as you are if you spend $5k on a wedding or $500k on a wedding. And people wonder why kids around here feel entitled ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are not on solid financial footing then why in the world would they spend a lot on a wedding? If I were you, I would offer a set amount of money for them ($5K?). If I were them, I would take that money to help get in better financial shape and have a tiny, budget-friendly wedding or elope.
That sounds like a reasonable contribution and a reasonable plan to me.
I guess I don't see 5k as a reasonable amount for a wedding contribution. Maybe if you paid 100% of college. 20k is more normal if you make about 100k. So maybe if you make less than average 5k might be okay.
LOL, as if you get any say over how other people spend their money?
My parents paid $0 for our wedding - DH and I paid for the entire thing.
We have only sons, not daughters, but regardless, we do not value a big blowout party that lasts several hours on one day. We are getting our kids through private colleges with zero debt, because we value that. We will contribute what we can to our kids' weddings, but will not fund anything extravagant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the posters that say it depends on your social circle. My parents specifically had a wedding fund for me and my sister so that they could pay for the entire wedding. I was always told about this growing up so it wasn’t unexpected. I was 26 when I got married and in law school so paying for my own wedding would not have been an option.
Objection!
Paying for your own wedding is always an option. Perhaps you would have just had to spend a lot less money on it...
Or gotten married a year or two later than you did. Yes, you could have paid for your wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, or give a set amount. If they have been living together for years, they are adults and should pay for their own.
They clearly aren't adults if they are still living with mommy and daddy. You offer to contribute what you would like OP. It should have nothing to do with the fact that you are thrilled with the engagement or not. Some people pay hundreds of thousands of dollars, some people kick in $5000. Do what feels right to you.