How I Did It: Held a 100-Person Wedding for Under $4,000

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When my husband and I got engaged back in 2010, I felt simultaneously thrilled … and like I needed to brace myself for an oncoming wave, whose only purpose was to sweep over me and pull all of my money out to sea.

The engagement wasn’t a surprise—being mature, rational adults, my then-fiancé and I had discussed marriage, finances, child-rearing and any number of important topics we thought we should cover before agreeing to be legally bound for life—and I had already been poking around the internet, looking at wedding-themed websites and blogs.

I‘d therefore had plenty of time to feel my heart drop into my stomach as I looked at people’s budgets. From lovely outdoor weddings where tent rentals ran up to $20,000, to charming hotel affairs that cost $175 per person, I knew that a conventional (and expensive!) wedding wasn’t for us. We’re in our mid-twenties and have savings, but we certainly didn’t want to spend them on a one-day event.

While I would have been happy to run off to City Hall and cover dinner for a few close family members, my husband had other ideas. He has a big family that expected a wedding … so we gave them one, on our budget.

The Surprising Thing We Booked Sight-Unseen …

After examining our finances, and considering our spending priorities, we thought about what kind of wedding we could agree on—and came up with relaxed and simple. That is, lacking tiny, expensive details that would stress me, and by extension, him, out.

The venue needed to be somewhere we could hold both the ceremony and the reception. Once we realized that a full meal was out of our budget (given that we would likely host about 100 guests!) we decided on a dessert reception. We also considered flowers and photography, as well as necessities like an officiant and invitations, and decided on a budget of $4,000.

A lot of crafty wedding blogs feature weddings where everyone involved seems to have some kind of incredible talent—

“My graphic designer brother designed all of our invitations!”

“My best friend is a professional florist and put together all of the flowers!”

I know my limitations. I am not even a little bit crafty. I can repair buttons and socks, poorly, and that’s about it, and I felt uncomfortable outsourcing details to my friends and acquaintances.

But we found our perfect (and fantastically inexpensive) venue in Southern Virgina, where my husband is from. My mother-in-law had suggested looking at local parks for venues, and one option had a beautiful lakeside gazebo for a ceremony, and an indoor facility with a wraparound porch that would be a great location for the reception. We booked it sight-unseen (minus a largely ineffective Google search for “Claytor Lake State Park”) for $1,000.

(Getting married away from home? Keep this in mind.)

Flowers, Food and More

After receiving another excellent recommendation, we met with a local florist who very kindly took the few magazine photos I’d torn out and put together 12 beautiful mason-jar centerpieces with hydrangea and delphinium, and a bouquet and boutonnière for $400. She also very politely listened to me say “No” to just about everything—“No, we wouldn’t be having a bridal party”; “No, we don’t need flowers for the gazebo”; etc.

I found our photographer during a late-night Craigslist search. Her photos looked lovely, and she was just starting her business in the area, so when I asked her if she could photograph our wedding day for $600, she agreed. After seeing constant reminders that wedding photography can start at $2,000, I was incredibly happy to have found someone willing to work with our budget (and the photographs turned out beautifully).

Especially since our reception was dessert-only, our most important expense was the cake and pie we’d be serving, as well as the drinks (an open bar was a non-negotiable). We found a local baker who makes wedding cakes as a hobby; she created a delicious three-tier confection for $200. We picked up a dozen pies the night before the wedding, and we bought beer and wine from a wholesale liquor store, bringing our total food and drink cost to $650.

A wonderful friend made pennant flag bunting for the reception venue as her wedding gift to us, and it was the perfect (and only) decorative detail, in addition to the flowers. My mother bought my wedding dress, which came in at $750, because she knew I would buy something cheap rather than something I loved, and wanted me to be happy with what I was wearing.

My mother-in-law anticipated we’d need extra hands on our wedding day, and found a few local students who served drinks and cake (and kept it all replenished) for $100 each. We rented the cheapest chairs available for $316 (even though they were a less-than-attractive brown) because I reasoned that people wouldn’t be paying much attention to what they were sitting on. They didn’t.

When we started planning, I kept things simple because I didn’t want to add stressful detail after stressful detail to my plate. In the end, the simplicity made our wedding lovely, and kept us under budget.

The End Result

I did my own hair, a friend did my makeup and I felt perfect.

Once we threw in the incidentals—the official’s fee of $150, the invitations I found at an online press for $275, the $40 guestbook, the $30 marriage license, and the quirky $70 cake-toppers that sit on our mantle now—we came in a few hundred dollars under budget.

Most importantly, the things we’d said “no” to didn’t matter. Guests commented on how much they’d enjoyed the wedding, and no one seemed to notice that we didn’t have a DJ (we used an iPod and speaker system), or that a professional hadn’t done my hair, or that my husband wore a navy blue suit he’d owned for years.

We even ended up in the DC/Maryland/Virginia edition of The Knot, and our photographer threw in a CD of our photographs to thank us (for which some photographers charge extra).

The wedding industry constantly attempts to up-sell brides and grooms on so many items, and it was reassuring to realize that none of those (expensive) superfluities mattered.

At the end of the day, we have photographs we love, memories of delicious cake and happy friends, and the relief that we could throw a party without drowning ourselves in debt or liquidating our savings.

Image Credit: Lauren D. Rogers

  • Mercurialis Sky

    “He has a big family that expected a wedding … so we gave them one.”

    While I think it’s awesome that you did an amazing wedding under $4,000 – I don’t agree with the mindset that you had a wedding, despite the fact that you would have been happy with just something else, just because FAMILY expected it. It’s not about family and their feelings, it’s about a day for the bride and groom. My philosophy is that if our family wants a wedding, then they should get up and pay for it. Otherwise, I don’t want to hear complains because we are having a private ceremony.

  • Sjdemo

    my hub has a big family, too, and my m-i-l said she wanted to be there even if we were just going to city hall. frankly i don’t have the wedding gene. i care nothing for flowers, colors, wedding music, etc. i don’t like being on display no matter the celebration. i wanted to sign the paper and be done with it. i even said she could cut his ex-wife’s face out of their wedding pictures and paste mine in if she wanted.

    still, we couldn’t get around it. so we had my best friend — who introduced us — get internet minister-ized and had our wedding in a private room at a restaurant. my mother’s good friend made me a beautiful dress, and that was that. in total we had about 18 people and almost no expense. 

    i realize my way isn’t for most people, but i have a lot of friends who’s parents shelled out thousands for a wedding, and after the fact told them they would have given them the money if the kids had eloped. all of them were disappointed because they would have rather had the down payment on a house than the wedding.

    something to think about for anyone getting ready to marry….

  • Lv2goshop

    We both have big families and I have to have a wedding because my in-laws want it too, I share her sentiment–it keeps things peaceful for your brand new family! But I’m running in to trouble finding people who “do cake as a hobby”, and my own mother isn’t willing to throw in a red cent. I have a feeling my own impending nuptials will not be as budget-friendly as hers. :/

    • Cmoody975

       look in to Michael’s wilton cake classes, often the instructors are doing this kind of thing :)

  • Guest

    We had a big wedding and paid attention to all of the little details and walked around stressed for over a year. We were gifted money that would have been given to us anyways had we thrown the wedding or not and a year later I can say I am definitely not disappointed or have a single regret about it. It was the best day ever. If you’re disappointed with what you decided to do after the fact, then you didn’t do a very good job prioritizing what was important to you.

  • Deborah @ImpulseSave

    What a great story and an inspirational reminder of what you really need. I think it’s great how even though you wanted something simple and frugal, you still spent some money because you wanted your husbands’ family there and wanted to make a special event. On so many of the details (from the local photographer to your mom buying your dress) you seemed to get pretty lucky and were certainly blessed with great people to help you out. However I think that it sounds like just a lovely day and you didn’t even miss the little things that cost so much and don’t mean too much. I have a great big family, and wedding costs (even though far off in the future, if ever) are something of a fear of mine. But this makes me feel much better and I think you have a great perspective on the whole thing!

  • Lakin25

    You are an inspiration… 

  • Lara Dickerson

    My fiance and I are on the same track! I got a wedding dress from a department store for $70, flowers for $200 (decorating the actual venue with other things I can make), designed and printed my own invitations, and are hiring a friend just starting a baking business for cupcakes. The luckiest part has been my church letting me use their building for free. What incredible generosity. I can’t take that much credit for how inexpensive our wedding is. But having it nice and casual will be so much more fun for me and him!

  • Jillianyc

    This all sounds very similar to my wedding last fall.  While my parents paid for everything, I still managed to have an NYC (in Manhattan!) wedding for about $17,500, which sounds like a lot, but is a fraction of what most NYC weddings run.  I used only real flowers for the bouquets (I found some amazing fake ones at a flea market next to Brooklyn office and my mom created arrangements for the staircase and tables), the ceremony and reception were at the same venue – a townhouse in the West Village for $1,000 in the afternoon, my dress was $800 (bought at a boutique is Dallas, where I’m from), a friend DJed, our cake was cupcakes from Magnolia Bakery, our photographer, too, was just starting out (we paid $1600, most photographers in NYC run upwards of $5-$7K), you get the idea.  Simply put, it is definitely possible to have an amazing wedding and not have to mortgage a house or creating serious amounts of debt! 

  • Sarah

    I’m in the process of planning a wedding now, so this is a great article to come across. My issue is that I feel obligated to throw a nice wedding and serve a meal rather than just dessert because so many people will be flying in from out of state, and I want them to enjoy themselves and feel taken care of. They are going to trouble and expense to join me, so I feel like I should put together something special. 

    • http://www.laurendrogers.com/ Lauren D. Rogers Photography

       Hi Sarah, I’ve seen couples that I’ve photographed do something along the lines of a “comfort food buffet”. These types of food are generally more filling and cheaper than the type of fancy finger foods or sit down meals that offer 3 kinds of meat. My favorite was an event that had a mac n cheese bar with fancy crumbled cheese and bacon and things like that to top the white cheese macaroni. Baked potato bars are usually a great budget saver and are filling and indulgent. Maybe also a taco bar or chili bar. Many Mexican restaurants don’t specifically cater, but can do large amounts of food for much cheaper than a specifically catered meal. Here in the south, a big bbq smoker is often not that uncommon to see parked out back of a reception hall either.

    • Jane Briggs Gamez

      Hi Sarah,  I looked for restaurants that have fixed price meals served with coffee and tea to keep the cost down.  I found a really nice Mexican restaurant with a beautiful setting that has reasonably price buffet meals for our wedding. 

    • maracujation

      I feel the same way… :S

    • Megan

      We did a buffet with huge sub sandwiches purchased at Blimpie’s cut into smaller portions. We added lots of foods purchased at Costco like meatballs and Caeser salad. Hired a couple of teenagers to help keep the buffet stocked. Everyone got plenty to eat. We purchased a keg of beer and had soda for drinks. We used a Costco cheesecake and put it on a cake stand for our cake. We tied a ribbon around the cheesecake and added a topper. We served Costco sheet cake to the guests. I feel like the people we invited were happy to celebrate the day with us and that mattered more than fancy food.

    • Tiffany

       Hi Sarah,

      I’m not sure if you have any food trucks in your area, but my husband and I got married in Santa Barbara three weeks ago and we hired a food truck for dinner. It was half the cost of a typical caterer, the food was excellent (and locally sourced) and many of our guests said it was their favorite part of the day.

  • http://www.laurendrogers.com/ Lauren D. Rogers Photography

    As advice on cake, I’ve photographed several weddings where the couple bought sheet cakes from a grocery or small bakery and served those to the guests (and themselves), but did a small 1 tier 8″ cake for the cutting. You can even get really pretty mini cakes at Whole Foods.  I wrote an article awhile back, if anyone is interested, on other options than cake as well. Hope that helps any of you looking for budget hints!
    http://www.readbreathe.com/food/wedding-cake-alternatives/

  • Kelly

    Our wedding, 13 years ago, was under $3000.  And we still have people talking about how awesome it was. 

    Someone recently told me that $25k was the average American wedding budget, which is ludicrous.  I’m living proof that you can do it right for less, and my girls will hear it from us over and over as they get older.

    It’s not about the day, it’s about the marriage.

  • Amber

    How refreshing to read about a bride who not only followed a very reasonable budget, but also didn’t stress herself or others out over a thousand DIY details. What matters most is the marriage that is beginning, not how fancy the food was. Great article, and I hope it inspires other brides!

  • Mathilda

    We just got married a few weeks ago, and I feel like we did a great job of having an entire wedding weekend for less than the cost of your average wedding…we live in Boston, but are from the midwest, so we went back to Nebraska where I grew up to get married. That cut our wedding cost in half, right away. We found a venue where we could get married and have the reception onsite, and it was super important to us to have it somewhere where our guests could stay as well…so that no one had to drive anywhere after.  Both of our families felt strongly that since our guests had traveled so far for our wedding that we needed to host them for the weekend. Luckily they both helped out financially and we were really frugal where felt like we could be ($500 for all the flowers, rehearsal dinner for 120 with open bar was cost effective when we had BBQ sandwiches catered and served at the local Eagles lodge, my mom and her friends made all the cookies for our dessert bar and I ordered our cake from a local woman who makes them in her spare time for $200, and I got my dress at a sample sale for $200).  We also rented our table decor instead of buying it which saved us a ton, and we were lucky to find our location which had onsite catering at a fraction of the cost for amazing food…a similar menu would have been triple in Boston.  We did a lot of things remote, always asked for a discount (you would be amazed what you can get if you just ask – we got $150 off our DJ cost based on a referral from our photographer). So don’t be afraid to explore alternative locations, or go back to your roots. Our guests had a great time, we partied all weekend and we served 120-150 people 3 full meals (dinner fri and sat and brunch Sunday) all for under $30,000.

  • http://www.makingsenseofcents.com/ Michelle

    Wow good job!

  • anthonysmom

    Finally!!  An article that’s not about spending to excess and then making excuses for why it’s not their fault. 

    Bravo to this smart young couple for looking for ways to save, yet still having a lovely wedding!!

  • Jane Briggs Gamez

    My husband and I spent about $5,000 on our wedding…we had about 85 guests at a restaurant with a full meal and the wedding cake. We had the wedding ceremony at our church. We found my husband a nice Italian suit at a men’s resale shop and even with paying for the alterations, it was very inexpensive.  My dress I found at Brides Against Breast Cancer, a non-profit which sells both new and used wedding dresses with the profits going to breast cancer research.. I found a beautiful Alfred Angelo dress for only $400 and one of my best friend’s did the alterations for me as a wedding present.  I found a photographer who followed us from the wedding to the reception for only $600.  I put together the wedding favors and decorations myself, so that kept the cost down.  We used Invitations by Dawn, on online invitations company which was also very inexpensive.  Overall, I feel good that we had a beautiful day and we did it all on a budget.

    • Dgb8585

       Did you have food and music?

  • maracujation

    having this article in my email made my day today.  I have been engaged since November and my fiance and I haven’t plan anything because we are waiting to be out of debt this summer (finally!!!!)…then we hope to save some money and have a ceremony. Last thing I want is to get in debt again and I have been so down lately because I went from not been one of those people that thought about their wedding since they were 5 years old to someone that developed a little wedding dream after getting my engagement ring but realize that considering average wedding budgets we either won’t have one or be completely broke after it..again.  We have many friends and family that I want to share that special day with but most likely we won’t have a $10,000 budget and even a $5,000 budget seems crazy now.  But this article gave me hope…I am crafty, I am a fan of simplicity and I don’t want to stress out.  I honestly want to be barefoot in my wedding and have it outside..both ceremony and reception if possible.  
    Thank you again for making me feel like that day will be possible :) we may be the couple engaged for 5 years but oh well..what’s the rush

    • Dgb8585

      Do your parents or a family member have a large backyard? Do you live near a beach. If it’s a nice day you can have a short ceremony at the beach..short enough so people can stand. Then everyone can meet back at the house for good food and drinks, and with the use of iPods today you can even record your own music!! Come to think of it let a teenager do that!
       Then maybe for your 10th anniversary you can have a big blast..or take a vacation of your dreams. Right now the prices offered by book it .com to Mexico are AMAZING..just do it in the summer or Fall to get a great deal.
      remember..you can decorate the trees with tons of little white lights..and the white nettings is so inexpensive! The one thing you will have to rent will be a tent just in case and tables and chairs.
      In the late summer or Fall you can buy pots and pots of colorful mums..3 or 4 for 10 dollars…flowers everywhere.

  • Laura

    This is an inspiration! Thank you for sharing!

    In NYC, this would have cost double so well done for JilliaNyc as well!

  • Claudiaorleans

    I think whatever suits the bride and groom is key, whether it be a cheap wedding or a bling bling wedding. In the end, you have to live with those memories.

  • Sophia

    Loved this article!  My husband and I had an inexpensive wedding and I think it’s one of the best things we’ve done.  It sounds like you made a bunch of smart choices that saved you thousands.  It’s nice to read about people having affordable weddings and not starting their lives together in debt. So smart!   Best wishes to the happy couple!

    • Dgb8585

       The bottom line is a wedding is when two people marry. Once you choose to have a reception it is now a party, and whether it be plain or fancy, it has to be done with consideration for the guests attending, or don’t bother inviting anyone at all.

  • Gardeblund

    My husband I were also frugal when we tied the knot 25 years ago.  Our wedding day was immediate family and witnesses only with dinner afterward.  We then threw the party of the century at our house 2 weeks later after we returned from our autumn honeymoon in Door County WI. We had about 100 people at our home in an open house that went from 3pm until daybreak the next morning.  I got to wear my “bought from the rack” wedding dress twice! I would not have done it any other way, It was the beginning of a most wonderful marriage!

  • Jmariebenitez

    My husband and I recently got married, we had a wonderful wedding  - Dress $300.00 (with slip) Veil $20.00, Shoes $25.00, Husband’s dress blues (just needed to take it to the cleaners), Wedding cake $225.00, flowers ($25.00 – safeway!), makeup and hair $150.00, boys suits $400.00, (3 boys), Photography ($0 – kids worked the camera) – Wedding official $100.00, Married on the Glass Bridge in Tacoma (glass museum) – ($0), Reception ($400.00 – that’s with drinks) beautiful waterside private room 12 guests…. perfect peaceful and simple wedding! total price ($1,655.00)  It was the most amazing day!  

  • apushkal

    Don’t forget off-season weddings. We had our wedding in February and saved big on photographer, DJ and hall.  We made our own table decorations and had the party in a modest church hall.  It was more important to us to invite all the people we wanted to celebrate with than to show off with an expensive Bridezilla extravaganza.  It was the most awesome party ever and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    • http://www.laurendrogers.com/ Lauren D. Rogers Photography

      Very good point. I know that personally, my rates are about half for an off-season/non-traditionally weekday simply because those just aren’t in the same demand. If you’re getting married in February or November, I would be far more able to work within a budget than if you’re aiming for a Saturday in mid June. 

  • SharpeMama

    My Husband and I got married in private at the court house.. inviting his parents of course. I wore my prom dress & shoes haha and bought an $8 tiara and did my own hair.. ($28 total).. then a month after we held a reception at my mother in laws house.. making my own invites with a kit (costing $18).. and then we paid about $210 on food.. and unfortunatly.. $60 for a cake that nobody enjoyed.. We made easy foods (since I am a culinary student.. I did not make the cake however).. Afterward, everyone seemed pleased. We are simple and didn’t need the fancy flowers or music or crazy things.

  • Khavinna

    This is a cute article!

  • Slacker

    Oh I came up with something in mind, but hardly anyone was ever brave enough to really attempt the idea. I realize how very “cheapskate” and absurd it sound, but it’s – ‘How to create a wedding free of any charge’. :)

  • Joanne

    I was married 21 years ago.  We are from Wisconsin, so I do realize our cost will be considerably less than the larger cities.  Our wedding came to $1600. 

    I wore my mother’s wedding dress and had it madeover and used it as a tea length dress because she is shorter than I am.  The headpiece was made by a friend out of the lace overlay I used for the makeover of the dress.

    I used the same hairdresser for many years, so she did my hair for me  as a wedding gift, and did my nails for me as a gift.  I still gave her a good tip in appreciation.

    I used the same florist as both my grandmother and my mother so the florist gave me a large discount for pictures of the wedding party and the other floral pieces, and the bragging rights of having three generations of the same family use them as a florist. 

    We had a friend who was just starting a photography business.  He asked us if he could use us as a reference and in his portfolio.  He gave us a large discount.  The church was in a beautiful setting and the day was gorgeous.  We were able to get wonderful outdoor pictures, indoor pictures and candids.

    We used our church and their kitchen to feed 100 people.  Because I regularly tithed there, I was able to just use the church and kitchen along with the dishes, tables and chairs. Family members by connections, found wholesale discounts on food for me. We as a family did all of the cooking and then I asked certain people to plug in the nescos when needed.  I hired a friend who worked as a head waitress hosting and serving banquets as a living to oversee the other friends and their families who I hired to work on tables, and keep the punch and appetizers filled until the meal was to start because we had a lull between the ceremony and the meal.  We could not serve alcohol because the church has a policy against alcoholic beverages on the premises, so that was cheaper than having alcohol.

    The officiant was a friend and gave the cost to officiate to me as a wedding gift.

    An aunt made the wedding cake for me as a wedding gift and I paid for the cost of ingredients.  We then used the cake with ice cream for dessert for the meal, which the servers cut and served for us.

    This was pre-internet days, so I by word of mouth found out of a person who had a small home business of paper items and gave us a discount in appreciation of our business. 

    It was work, but I was determined to stay out of debt for the wedding.  Also, I had many people who helped so I can’t take all of the credit.  I had 9 months to prepare, which helped to plan, sort out and determine what was feasible.

  • Randi

    Congratulations! Thank you for sharing your story and ideas.

  • Ceciliafh

    What a great article!! I hope that my daughters will follow this couple’s example.  I would rather have them save for a house that they will live in than just for a day to remember.

  • Lmericle

    Wow – good for you!!!  And I bet it meant a lot more than a $50,000 wedding would have meant.

  • KatyD

    When my husband and I got engaged, a local wedding planner told us that in order to have a “memorable” wedding, we would have to spend at least a year’s salary! Frankly I wanted to elope, but like the author, we both had families who expected a “real” wedding. It took a year and a lot of planning, but we managed to pull off a very nice wedding for less than $10,000. We got married in the winter, which was “off-season” and allowed us to save significantly on flowers and photography. (We also used a florist and photographer that our families had done business with for years, and benefitted from “hometown discounts.”)  A winter wedding also pared our guest list by discouraging distant, out-of-state relatives from attending because they wouldn’t risk traveling in bad weather. We further trimmed the guest list by getting married at our church, a small place with a sanctuary that seated only 100 people (we ended up with about 85 guests.) The reception was held at a local restaurant run by friends of my parents. We had a buffet-style luncheon with piped-in music from the restaurant’s music service (no DJ or dancing, which frankly no one seemed to miss) and served beer and wine. We splurged on a few bottles of very nice champagne for the wedding party and our parents for a toast, and had champagne provided by the restaurant for everyone else. Our cake was made by a co-worker of mine who had a cake decorating business, and she gave us a nice discount in exchange for us letting her put a stack of her business cards on the table next to it. I bought my dress for $50 off the rack at a thrift store, and paid another $200 to get a veil made and some alterations done. Bridesmaids dresses we also bought off the rack, and I had only my sister and sister-in-law as attendants. My husband had his two brothers as his attendants and they all wore good suits they already owned, with new ties and shirts purchased for the occasion. A crafty friend and another who did calligraphy helped me make and assemble the invitations over several weekends. Our biggest expense was probably our honeymoon, a long weekend in the French Quarter in New Orleans, which my in-laws paid for as their wedding present to us.
     
    Twenty years later, we are still together, and people still remember our wedding fondly.
     
    By contrast, my sister got married ten years ago in a wedding that was a picture of American overindulgence. She and her husband (a corporate executive who admittedly could afford it) had a destination ceremony at a fancy resort in Arizona for 180 guests. Her dress cost nearly $5,000 and her rings were easily twice that. The bridesmaids dresses cost $350 each, which they paid for (for six attendants) but we were all expected to foot our own bills for professional hair and makeup services at the insistence of the photographer, who they chose because he had photographed celebrity weddings (and he had a fee and attitude to match.) The reception was a lavish sit-down dinner followed by dancing to a live band, and they took a cruise to the Carribean for their honeymoon. The whole thing cost nearly $50,000.
     
    Ten years later, they are going through a nasty divorce that is probably going to cost at least that much.

  • DebG

    For my daughter’s wedding (in California no less) we had the wedding at a beautiful park nearby ($40), had the reception at our home for around 75 people catered as a fish taco buffet $550) and hosted our own bar with beer and wine bottles (Costco) (2 kegs + wine $500). Before the food was served, we had set out a berry (blueberries, blackberries, strawberries) and fine cheeses table, spread with a lovely lace tablecloth and silver accessories. Cake $300. Dress $400 ordered from J.Crew website. Tux $100. The male attendants wore matching shirts = $80) All of the flowers I ordered wholesale ($75) – they were beautiful, fresh and came in 3 buckets. I made all the centerpieces with fishbowl vases(10 @ $4 from Michael’s = $40) with river rocks, succulents; boutonnieres, cake decorations and ring of flowers for her hair (she insisted on not carrying a bouquet). The photographer was a friend retired from the city newspaper ($200, for enlargements, etc. only). The videographer was my brother-in-law. I bought all the matching plates, cake plates, table clothes and napkins at a bargain store $100). The justice-of-the peace charged $200 It was beautiful, simple, relaxed and a wonderful memory for all who attended and participated.

  • Gina

    Thank you so much for this article!  I am newly engaged and am dreading the cost of an expensive wedding.  The info in this article gives me hope that I can have a nice, simple wedding that won’t put me and my husband-to-be in future debt.

    • Jen

      you can do it! As someone who’s been planning for over a year- by best advice to not only set a total budget, but do a little research and break that down by category so that you’ll know when you go to figure things out whether you’re spending too much on any aspect. Next advice is figure out your guest list next, and talk to your and your fiance’s parents- because the number you want to include will make a big difference in how much you can spend per head! And 3rd, like others have said- figure out what things are most important to the 2 of you (photos or cake? the rings or the dress? the flowers or the venue? the booze or the honeymoon?) whatever those things are, figure them out/book them first because then whatever money is left over you can use for the less important things. 

  • lyzl

    I just love this! This sounds so similar to our wedding, which we did for just under $5k. You look lovely and I think spending less on a wedding allows you to focus on the more important aspect of the wedding…you marriage.

  • Liz J-D

    As the author states, the most important thing for a couple is to figure out what wedding stuff they don’t care about. My husband and I picked different things to cut out than the author (no professional photographer, no wine or liquor, no cake, no dancing, no mailed invitations, no favors, no honeymoon) . . . our non-negotiable was that we wanted the wedding to last for days, because we had so many people traveling to it. Rather than hire a DJ or a band, we had an open mike for all our guests
    the night before the wedding in my parents’ barn. Some of my most treasured memories are those performances by family and friends. That party was catered
    by the grocery store and featured the same kegs we had the next day at
    the wedding. We had an amazing morning wedding in a state park on a lake with delicious brunch food (that was much cheaper than a dinner would have been), fun activities (softball, croquet, frisbee, swimming), and ice cream truck. We stayed in the park all day and ordered pizza for the people who kept celebrating with us into the evening. The next morning we had breakfast tacos and more swimming at the same park before everyone had to leave. It was a 3-day affair that cost us about $10,000. But again, we figured it out by understanding which parts of the wedding were important to us and which weren’t. Nothing we said no to was any kind of hardship.

  • Margaux

    You go Mrs. Newlywed!  :-)   My husband and I did the same thing pretty much. We also managed to move back from California to Texas 4 months before our wedding (in which, I’d barely started planning out in CA) and had our early March wedding.  We found a free ceremony location, had our bar-owner friends allow us to rent out their bar (closed to the public) for several hours for a very nominal fee, we made all of our friends and family buy their own drinks and we provided a small finger foods appetizer lunch to guests.  My dress was a handmade vintage dress purchased for $9.99 at a thrift shop, it only needed minor alterations that my grandmother could do.  My mom put together our flowers and all of our attendents wore their own outfits (in complimentary colors).  It turned out to be the loveliest day!  We did run out of food, people did leave early because of it, and our iPod over speakers messed up a few times but we were in complete bliss with each other.  Everyone said how much heart and soul they saw in our wedding. So many people have told me how I should write a book on how I put together (with the help of family and friends) a heartfelt wedding for under $4,000. 

  • Vwhitehead88

    Your story is inspiring! I am attempting a wedding on the same budget and everyone keeps telling me it’s not possible. Thank you, you have given me so much to think about and the reassurance that it can be done! <3 Victoria

  • Maria Rossini

    Sounds like a great day! We got married in London on a budget but still wanted lots of people – so ended up doing many of the same things. I wrote a blog about it all too if anyone finds it useful- http://www.budgetcitybride.wordpress.com 

  • Rockstar_chick87

    Or… just skip the whole marriage ceremony thing altogether… Or…. don’t get married. Most people get divorced anyway. I only know a handful of people that are still married to their 1st wife/husband.

    • Connie

      Cynical much?

      • Dgb8585

         you think??? LOL

  • MzNatural

    I love this post!  I hope when it comes to my wedding day I can pul off something as spectacular :)

  • medgirl

    It’s great that you were able to avoid spending tons of money on details that did not matter to you for.  I would say, however, that reading this article (and the attending comments) made me feel a little sad.  I was married just about a year ago.  We had ~130 people with us that day, and spent about $13,000.  Granted, this is not even remotely over-the-top when you compare it to some of the extravagant weddings people put on these days, but it certainly wasn’t a rock-bottom budget for a wedding in our area, and it certainly wasn’t what you’d call “simple”–and I feel like this article is somehow trying to make me feel guilty for that.

    While we planned our wedding with the budget closely in mind, we skipped no detail.  We served a full dinner. We had (the world’s most beautiful) cake from a well-know wedding cake bakery. I spent hours maing party favors and programs.  There were chair covers because I just didn’t like the ugly brown chairs.  And we paid other people to do a lot of things (cook and clean up, play music, take our pictures, drive us to the reception site in a limo, and even fix my hair–thank God, as I’m sure it would have melted in the July heat without some professional attention).  I enjoyed putting all the little details together and that feeling of looking around the room during the party and knowing how great everything came out because of all that effort.  Quite frankly I was proud of how far I was able to make $13,000 stretch (even if that is an objectively large amount of money). 

    It was a very special day for my husband and I and our families, and I don’t think spending time during our engagement excitedly doing craft projects or reading wedding blogs for inspiration was a ridiculous use of time or somehow “distracted” me from the important fact of our marriage itself.  I actually somewhat resent the implied sentiment that going to all of this trouble and spending a considerable amount of money on a one-day event is silly, wasteful or financially irresponsible, or that I am nothing but a tool of the wedding industry for doing so.  Yes–it’s just one day, and yes I do know that I could have bought a new midsize car (not a particularly fancy one, granted) with that cash.  But that one day was very important to us.  We had a budget for the day and came in safely below it.  We didn’t impoverish ourselves or our parents to fund this wedding.  And we don’t need a new midsize car (fancy or otherwise).

    LearnVest touts itself as being about helping women live their richest life.  For me, part of having a rich life means having the freedom to throw a non-simple wedding, one for which we spent a considerable amount of time and money on a lot of little details.  I understand that such details are not important to every bride (and need not be!)–but they are important to some.  I can 100% get behind articles that urge readers not to throw away money on things they don’t actually care about (wedding-related or otherwise), and I can appreciate some of the practical tips in this article on how to stretch your wedding dollars as far as possible.  What I don’t love is the implication that large weddings are necessarily a wasteful way to spend, or the feeling that those who consciously choose to have a more elaborate wedding are being judged or looked down upon as frivolous or unwise for doing so.  I realize it’s possible to treat your wedding day as an important and meaningful day without dropping more cash than you want to on it–which I think was the intended thrust of this article.  However, it would be great to also leave room for the thought that weddings–like vacations, fancy clothes, or luxury vehicles–are things that some people budget and save for and consciously decide to spend more than the bare-minimum amount of money on.

    • Dgb8585

       It sounds like you did a wonderful job and put lots of love and effort into your wedding!!! 13,000 dollars is not an over the top price for such a memorable day. I will be proud of my daughter if when she marries, she can do the same :)

      • Jen

        and if she can’t, will you foot the bill? Or will you make her feel miserable for not being able to afford as much? Or would you rather she elope and you not be there on her wedding day?

        • Dgb8585

           Jen, you are just a miserable person so save it. My daughter had a sweet 16 that blew away any wedding I have ever been to. We are in a recession and times have changed. Our guests were well fed, the kids ate and danced and behaved and I provided transportation for all who came back to my home to the ,”after” pool party.
          I might never be able to afford anything like that again but there are 125 people, mostly my daughter, that will never forget it.
          When my daughter’s wedding time comes we will work within the means we have and make sure she has a beautiful day. I will also make sure the guests are fed even if I have to do all the cooking myself! The wedding will be balanced with the honeymoon. There will be no selfishness involved. And noone will go into deep debt. If people have to travel I will accommodate them with extra care. Everyone who walks into my home never walks out hungry and is always left with a happy memory. You know nothing about me. But I am probably the most generous person I know, and my family will attest to that.
          I feel that many young people are very selfish these days. Fancy party buses to Atlantic city for bachelorette parties..expensive bridesmaids dresses…those are the things that seem to be expected from guests these days that need to be cut back on.
          A beautiful wedding, fancy or plain, need not be expensive with proper planning. You see, that was my wedding 29 years ago. A Sunday brunch at a restaurant with a DJ. A buffet. It was a wonderful day for all. My mom had passed at 45 and money we did not have. We borrowed a small amount and were able to pay it back with the gifts which left us where we started from, except we had a wonderful memory. And through thick and thin, we are still married and happy. We started with nothing..worked VERY hard to achieve great success and got slammed by the recession. So I have known life every which way. I am also a breast cancer survivor. With a will, even when it comes to weddings, there is a proper way.

        • Really?

          Budgets range from $25 for the certificate at city hall to a Kardashian shind-dig worth millions. As I read it, the author was just sharing how she budgeted hers. As a bride currently planning her own big day – I found hers be a very helpful perspective and one I relate to. I to have a budget of $4,000 TOPS because I am poor. I still love my fiance and want to throw an awesome party uniting our family and friends. It’s reassuring to know someone else pulled this off and loved their day, even though the wedding industry can you make you feel inadequate if you’re not willing to shell out for all the details.

  • Kat R.

    What a sweet story!  And what a beautiful, beautiful experience your day must have been.  DH and I did something similar 13 years ago, and we made the same discovery: people really enjoyed themselves and didn’t care about all the “must-haves” we left out.  A lot of guests said it was the most meaningful wedding they’d ever attended–I guess because we didn’t clutter the experience with a lot of fluff.  I think weddings today are emblematic of American life as a whole: a near-total lack of perspective on needs vs. wants and a constant drive to substitute Stuff for significance.

    • Dgb8585

       Do you really think the guests would tell you the truth? Wake up.

  • Mary

    You might have thought it was fine, but there is a huge difference between low-budget and expensive weddings.  I went to one recently with a live band, amazing food, multiple events, beautiful flowers/decorations, and everyone had a great time!  Do you really want your wedding to be remembered as – that wedding where they didn’t have food, fed us pie, etc.? 

    • Connie

      Really? Some people don’t have endless amounts of money.

      I honestly can’t even believe you posted a comment like that. How rude!

      • Dgb8585

         And some people do not have the money to buy themselves new outfit, travel to get to the wedding or the money to give a gift. I don’t care if they serve plain pasta. You have to feed your guests! Or have a wedding with 25 people so you can feed your guests. There are so many ways to have inexpensive but lovely affairs these days. The first way is to is to avoid Sat night..Have it Sunday at 11 and a brunch buffet at 12. DJ’s are MUCH less expensive than bands. Ask a friend to take pictures.
        I went to a wedding 1500 miles away..it was my nephew. The plane tickets were 700 dollars for my daughter and I. My son and husband could not afford to go. The hotel was 500 dollars..the car rental 350. Then a 400 dollar gift..i am immediate family. The wedding was held on a beautiful property in a small town far away from where my nephew lives in Fl. so it was not like the family got to spend time together. All that money is still, a year later sitting on my credit card.
        But what bothered me most..we went to so much trouble to go and the food was cheap…buttered noodles..dry pot roast and canned green beans. Her mothers baked cupcakes instead of buying a wedding cake.
        Then the couple spent two weeks at a luxurious resort in Mexico..and two more in Hawaii..do you see  something wrong with this picture?

        • Jen

          Yes, I do see something wrong with this picture- you spent money you could not afford to go to an event it seems you had no interest in being at, just to eat the food that was probably still pushing what the couple involved could afford, and now you are holding your not being treated like royalty against everyone who doesn’t want to take on credit card debt for years in order to treat rude and ungrateful family. Maybe instead of vilifying them, since I’m sure many of their guests had a fine time and were glad to share their day, maybe you should have saved yourself the money and just sent a nice card.

          • Dgb8585

            I certainly did not have to travel 1500 miles to eat!! That is ridiculous statement. But I struggled to go, as I said the money is still sitting on my credit card..2000 dollars..and the couple was able to travel to Mexico and Hawaii for a month. That is what is wrong with that picture. When the wedding was over you had many many people who were drunk and underfed, staying in a town without a 7 eleven or a fast food place. They needed to eat and there was no place for them to go. That creates a dangerous situation..and very inconsiderate by any standard. You skipped through most of my blog it seems.

          • Dgb8585

            And of course I wanted to go. So did my husband and son. The whole thing became impossible. So instead of two young people having credit card debt there are many older people with it instead. Like I said, once you choose to have a reception you are having a party, and the guests should be treated respectfully as well.

        • Jen

          I’d also like to add that you think the wedding should be all about the guests good time but that I should ask a friend to forego that good time in favor of following me around with a camera all day. And also, if they pared the guest list down to 25 to meet your standards, maybe you would have been one of the people cut! If you would have been offended or hurt by being cut, then maybe you can understand the position of those of us with large and close families and lots of friends- 25 people just isn’t workable for everyone. 

          • Dgb8585

             So then as I said before, have a pasta and potato station, or hero’s or sandwiches! You cannot expect people to attend an event that takes hours on pie and alcohol! This is almost ridiculous!

        • Rielle

          Again, you have the most bizarre arguments, Dbg8585. Weren’t you just arguing earlier that it would have been better to serve plain pasta than pie and alcohol? I think your direct word choice was “improper”. And, yet, you blast you immediate family member for doing as you suggested, serving pasta, green beans, and pot roast (which is more slightly more extravagant than you were previously arguing for). In fact, their “cheap” food is what bothered you the most.
          And in case you are far out of current wedding trends, cupcakes are quite popular.

        • Amberandrusak

          Dgb8585 sounds like you are slightly resentful and bitter. You made the choice to go into debt to attend and give a large gift. If you can’t afford it, send a gift and give them a phone call. Or, let them know how sorry you are that you can’t attend.

          If a couple tries to have an inexpensive wedding and it causes the food to be undesirable, don’t eat it. Are you using that time as your vacation? Then take yourself out to a nice dinner. Maybe you don’t appreciate their efforts but I’m sure that even the plain noodle meal was difficult on their budget.

          • ashley

            I don’t think she sounds bitter at all – I think she wanted to appreciate the couple’s day without being inconvenienced at every step!  I agree with 
            Dgb8585 and I think everyone here is being a bully – she is allowed to have a different opinion.

          • Skeeter319902

             Inconvenienced? Well. she did it to herself! I don’t mind that someone has a different opinion, just that it was HER CHOICE to go into debt for something it seems she didn’t want to attend to begin with!

        • Skeeter319902

           So first you say that you don’t care if they serve plain pasta but then you complain about the cheap buttered noodles? The couples priorities were in a different place; they chose to spend their money on Hawaii and Mexico or maybe someone gave them the honeymoon as a gift…duh!
          And why oh why did you go in debt for this? Next time, don’t go!

    • Meredith

      Wow. Who cares? It’s about the bride and groom becoming husband and wife, not the food, not the pie, not the live band, multiple events, flowers and how much everyone else enjoyed themselves. Kudos to this couple who entered married life with their priorities in line. 

      • medgirl

        yes.  all married people should strive to begin their lives with their priorities in line.  and yes, the MAIN point of a wedding is the two people becoming man and wife and that remains the main point no matter the size of your wedding.  at the same time…if you’re inviting 100 other people to be there and share the day with you, it is a LITTLE bit about them too.  if you don’t care at all whether everyone else enjoys your day alongside you or not, why not just elope?  this is not to say that people can’t enjoy themselves at a wedding that only serves dessert, and i don’t think there’s any need to vilify this type of wedding as the original commenter does.  but let’s also not look down our noses at people who say “hey, i’m gonna just go slightly crazy and make this day the fanciest day of my life.”  doing so does not automatically  mean your priorities are out of line. some people actually like/care about party planning and their wedding is basically the most meaningful party they’ll ever throw.  i don’t think it’s a crime to if you consider putting on a certain type of more expensive wedding  to be a priority.  i neither think it’s a crime if you don’t really care about that stuff.  let’s all come down off our high horses.

        • Dgb8585

           You were right in saying that if you don’t care if your guests enjoy the wedding..elope. Once you invite them it is about the guests as well.

          • Frustrated with Extravagance

            A little egocentric, are you?

          • Kime

            Again the point of a wedding is for 2 people to come together and start a new life. Who wants to start of the beginning of the rest of their life in debt and doing things to make other comfortable even though iot may make you uncomfortable? Weddings are supposed to be intimate, sacred events that mark an unbreakable bond.

      • Dgb8585

         exactly, that is why the bride and groom should carefully consider what they can afford, and if it is only about them becoming husband and wife they should have a small family wedding.

        • Rielle

          For them, that probably was a small family wedding. Start thinking beyond yourself, Dgb8585.

          • Julie

            AGREED! My wedding included 100 people, and except for 10 of them or less, they were all relatives!

    • LeAnne

       While there is a huge difference between low-budget and expensive weddings, it doesn’t mean that everyone should have a wedding they can’t afford.  I personally think a pie reception is a bit tacky, but as long as the guests understood that they wouldn’t be fed before arriving, I’m not going to put down a couple who chooses that. 

      • Dgb8585

         Then you should not put down a guest who chooses to buy a ten dollar gift.

      • Julie

        Maybe you think it’s tacky, but remember that how a wedding should be is not set in stone. We all have different conceptions and preferences on what we want for our weddings. I personally think it’s okay and great if they wanted a brief, cozy reception. I think guests need to stop expecting too much. You go to a wedding to celebrate an important event in two people’s lives, not to get fed. Feeding guests is a courtesy, not an obligation. That always makes me mad! 

    • Raven

      I’ve probably been to at least 25 weddings in my life, from courthouse quickies to three-day blowouts. In my experience, how enjoyable a wedding is has less to do with how much money is spent, and more to do with the meaning and spirit behind the day. I was a bridesmaid in a sorority sister’s no-expense-spared country club wedding that was like something out of a bridal magazine. But it was full of guests who seemed to have been invited mostly so the bride’s wealthy parents could impress the groom’s even wealthier parents with all the important people they knew. It was all show and absolutely no soul. 

      On the other end of the spectrum, last year a good friend married her longtime boyfriend, who was about to deploy to Afghanistan, in an evening ceremony performed in front of the fireplace hearth in their home. As a friend who was a hospital chaplain officiated, they said deeply personal vows they had written to each other, then each of the guests stood up and said their own words of love and support for the couple. After a period of silent prayer and meditation, we all enjoyed a home cooked meal of beef burgundy stew, fresh-baked bread, and black forest cake, prepared by the couple themselves. There were no special clothes, no flowers or photographer, and only simple silver rings, but it was one of the most peaceful, beautiful and spiritual weddings I have experienced.

      IMHO, no one should spend more than they can afford on a wedding. Going into debt over one day in your life is just foolish. Question what you really want: are you inviting 100 people you barely know because YOU want to, or because your parents insist on it? Are you hiring a DJ because YOU want to dance, or because you think your friends will slam you on Facebook if you don‘t? Your wedding is your day; not your parents, not your friends. Just you and your betrothed’s. Ultimately if the two of you are happy with the decisions you make, and you keep the focus on the real reason you are there–to join your two lives together–your joy will be obvious, and everyone will remember that. If you have the money, time and desire to have a big, expensive wedding, by all means do so. But if you don’t, don’t let yourself get sucked in by the “wedding industrial complex!”

      • Dgb8585

         I agree with everything you say except the part about it only being ,”your” day. One you invite people, it becomes their day too. And that is where reasonable consideration comes into the plan. If a person can only afford to give 100 people pie and alcohol..that part is strange..then she cannot afford 100 people.

        • Rielle

          You clearly have missed the entire point of the article or comments. You, dear Dgb8585, are at the heart and soul of the “wedding industry” and should look at your own finances before you vehemently tear down another’s budget or proclivities because they do not match your own. Out of curiosity, how much did you spend on your wedding day?

      • Kime

        Amen! Ihave recently been saying to myself that my wedding CANNOT cost more than my college loans. If my 4 years in college amassed me $30K in loans, I do will not even spend half of that on my wedding.

  • Dgb8585

    I think that inviting guests to a wedding, and noting that they will be buying outfits, giving gifts and even traveling, with not serving them a proper meal is cheap and selfish. You should have eloped.

    • Dgb8585

       I meant to say without, not with not. I’m glad you had a good time. Do you think the guests would insult you by telling the truth..and you picked up a bunch of pies the night before!!! Please!

    • Dgb8585

       Also, Abigail had a saving account.

  • Jen

    Wow, the amount of judgement in these comments is incredible! Every couple’s budget is different, the size of their families is different, the location of their guests (what makes you think all this couple’s guests were travelling from out of town even?), the expectations of their families, and their own priorities- but there are a few things I think some of you should keep in mind. 
    1) I have never bought an outfit just to wear to a wedding unless I was in the bridal party. That is absolutely not a requirement for guests, even at over the top fancy weddings. If you are blowing your own budget to attend someone’s wedding, then perhaps you should spend a little more time here on learnvest. And if buying a new dress was in your budget, and you like the dress you bought, then its hardly something you should blame on the couple getting married! 2) If you spend $700 and lots of time to attend a wedding, not because you want to be a part of their day but because you want a tasty dinner and to get drunk, then frankly you can get a fancy meal somewhere near home for a lot less money. 3) Saying people should elope because they aren’t rich enough to throw an extravagant party is just silly. Many people’s close friends and family would be extremely hurt by not being able to attend someone’s wedding because they eloped- and most of the people who feel that way wouldn’t care whether the wedding had food or not, or cake or booze or flowers or anything else.4) For the person who said I shouldn’t be offended by people giving $10 gifts, I won’t be. Nor will I be offended by people giving no gift at all. I am not getting married to acquire stuff, and there are many members of my family and our friends who are really struggling- the last thing I would want is for them to think they have to go into debt to buy me something. 5) Its sort of ridiculous for you to say that if I spend $4000 on a 100 person party that means you shouldn’t give a gift (if its within your means to do so) that’s still a price tag of $40 per person, so even at an inexpensive wedding the wedding costs more than the couple will get in the value of gifts! Maybe what people should start doing is just charging a ticket price for weddings! You going to an “average” price wedding? Ok, that’s $250-$500 per guest for your “ticket!” Personally, I will be spending significantly more than this person because my fiance’s and my families are spread over about 30 states and 2 countries, so everyone will have to travel which makes things tricky, but even including our own travel expenses, we’ll be around half the national average for cost. Some of that is because we are DIYing a lot of things, some is because we’re getting married in a national park (fairly inexpensive venue) but I have been told having a buffet instead of served meal is “unacceptable” not serving liquor in addition to beer and wine is “tacky” and having itunes be our DJ is not ok as well. (notably, no one actually invited to attend our wedding has said these things)

    Frankly, if any of our guests feel the way some of you do about our wedding, I hope they don’t come. We are pinching pennies and foregoing other things we would like in order to afford to treat our friends and families to this party, and frankly, its still expensive. So if people think that expensive things we can’t afford is what it takes to have fun, I’d rather not pay for them to be there. 

    • Dgb8585

       As I said at another point. A Wedding is when two people get married. Once you choose to have a reception it becomes a party, and the guests should be treated respectfully as well. Spending the day and or evening with out eating anything but pie and alcohol is not only improper, but dangerous. A pasta station could be set up ..pasta is an inexpensive as it gets but is filling and it is food. What are these people supposed to do, drive through the local Macdonalds? If you read her blog carefully you will see that people will be traveling. She booked the place without even taking the time to see it herself! As I said, a wedding and reception go on for hours. Alcohol and desert is dangerous. A very ridiculous plan. I wonder how much money this couple plans on spending on their honeymoon?

  • Monalisset

    Well done Abigail! You show tremendous wisdom and security to do your wedding within what you can afford. What a good example you’ve shown. I wish you the very best in your future…I have a feeling you’ll do very well. (And never mind the naysayers…you’ll be the one laughing all the way to the bank…if more people had this kind of sense we wouldn’t be so deep in the red as individuals and as a nation!).

  • Michelle Clayton

    i have to say that i admire this young couple for refusing to ruin their finances for one day; they have a lot of sense.  i was curious to find out what Abigail spent on her wedding dress; i didn’t see that mentioned in the article.  that can be a major expense, and there are lots of ways to avoid overspending on that element.  when i got married, i spent about $125 for a brand-new dress on ebay.  also, i think that there could have been ways to feed her guests a meal for not too much more than they spent on the venue.  i had my reception in a restaurant which had a party space; if you were ordering items from their catering menu, they didn’t charge for use of the space. we selected items from their catering menu to feed everyone buffet-style, and their pricing was very reasonable.  it cost us $1200 to feed 80 guests.  although i think Abigail and her husband could have fed their guests a very simple meal without much expense, i am awed by their ability to correctly set their priorities.

    • Nadine

      “My mother bought my wedding dress, which came in at $750, because she knew I would buy something cheap rather than something I loved, and wanted me to be happy with what I was wearing.”

      • Julie

        That happened to me, too. Sadly, I am curvy and hard to fit, so buying online wasn’t much of an option. I also have weird tastes so most dresses, being white and strapless or with long trains, were just not my thing. I still think that my $700 and something dress was a bargain considering how luxurious it looked; everywhere else I went, dresses could go for $1,000 or more, and rentals weren’t that cheap either. I think the good thing is that many people are realizing that they have options – and spending a ton on each aspect of the wedding is not a requirement. As for Abigail; everyone has different priorities and different guests. She surely adjusted the food to her budget and knew what would please her guests. Location also affects your choices. I have the feeling she picked the best thing for her and her guests. And it must have been great for those who don’t like to sit still or stay in a wedding for too long! 

    • Dgb8585

       Abigail s mother bought her 750 dollar dress because Abigail said she would not be comfortable in a “cheap” dress..but she had no problem with feeding her guests liquor and cheap pie for dinner!

    • Dgb8585

       And their priorities, unlike yours, were purely selfish.

      • Dgb8585

         I still want to know what that spent on their honeymoon!

  • Shazzer4400

    I got married in September. We picked a location about a 90 minute drive away from us in the Florida Keys. We booked the entire resort so that our guests wouldn’t have to pay for lodging. During the day, people kayaked, swam and went out on boats (we rented one and 2 people brought their boats). We got the booze from Total Wine and the food from Costco. We had food all day – I cooked most of it ahead of time, but I was manning the BBQ grill for lunch. After our sunset ceremony, we fired the grills back up and had TONS of food. The cake came from Publix. I loved our wedding, and so did our 50 guests. We spent less than $4k, including covering the lodging for everyone. My only regret is that neither of our parents came.

    • Shazzer4400

      Oh, and I forgot to mention that I didn’t buy a wedding dress, either, which I’m sure cut down on costs, but I just didn’t want to factor in the time to get all dolled up when I busy having so much fun with my guests. I wore a hawaiin print sundress and hubby wore board shorts and a hawaiin shirt!

    • Dgb8585

       Sounds unique and wonderful. I live in the keys part time. Paradise. If you don’t mind me asking, why did your parents not come? I am in marathon. Where did you stay?

  • Lololecrapaud

    Abigail, hats off to you and your husband. You obviously have your priorities straight. I am shocked at the negative responses. Your family and friends wanted to be there to witness the joy of your wedding day, and I’m sure they could not care less about any of the details! They were just happy to take part. I also believe that this idea of what is socially acceptable to spend on weddings has become distorted and completely blown out of proportion. Hardly anybody has that kind of savings at a young age, and there are more important expenses when you are starting out, like a down payment on your first home and creating a solid foundation for starting a family. Wedding debt is no way to start out in a new life together, especially when you’re young. A wedding day is not about all these material things. I admire your efforts to be as creative as possible to create what sounds like a beautiful and successful wedding. Congratulations!

    • Dgb8585

       No where did Abigail mention their age. Abigail also had a savings account which was probably more than people who attended her wedding. i will say it again. A wedding is when two people marry. When a couple chooses to have a reception the decision to have a party has been made, and the guests deserve at least a meal, whether it be plain or fancy. Asking people to attend a several hour function on only pie and Alcohol is dangerous and rude.

  • http://twitter.com/savvybride Jessica Bishop

    Kudos to you for pulling it off. It’s definitely a frustrating thing to see that many of the ‘budget’ weddings featured always include talented family and friends donating their services for free. You made it happen for less! Would love to share your wedding with the readers of The Budget Savvy Bride to show them how it’s really done, if you are interested! You can email me at jessica@thebudgetsavvybride.com!