Figuring out your wedding budget is no easy feat. Your wedding will likely be the biggest party you've ever hosted and the priciest. To make a budget, you'll need to tally up your savings, maintain a detailed spreadsheet so you don't go over during the planning process, prepare for unexpected costs, as well as make meaningful cuts if you do exceed your total budget. It's hard work, we know, but putting in the time and energy now ensures you'll live happily ever after (wedding debt free). Here's exactly how to set a wedding budget you can stick to:
Count Your Cash
How much you have to spend on the wedding is directly proportional to three sources of money:
- You and your fiancé's individual savings: This isn't as simple as checking your bank account. Ideally, you and your partner each have three months of living expenses set aside in case of a job loss or health setback (separate from retirement funds). Subtract that in case of emergency amount from your total balance in the bank, and that's how much you could put toward wedding costs.
- The amount you can set aside from your current income: After you've made payments for existing debts, like student loans, set aside up to 10 percent of your earnings each month. Establish direct deposits into a separate account for wedding expenses so it isn't just leftovers that get saved.
- Any contributions from parents or loved ones: "Never assume your parents or other loved ones are willing and able to help cover the cost of a wedding.
Track Your Spending
Create a spreadsheet with three expense columns: Estimated, Modified, and Actual. Amounts under Estimated will be driven by researching costs in your area, proposals from the vendors you choose will go in Modified, and the final amount you pay them will go in Actual.
Adjust your estimates after calling in vendors' costs. Start with the venue because it's the biggest piece of the wedding pie and a major factor in determining guest count. When vendors give you estimates, verify if tax is included. If not, do the math yourself with state and local tax rates to adjust the proposal.
Add a column for the estimated tip. Write "included" if gratuity is factored into the vendor's price. (For example, caterers automatically tack on 15 to 20 percent of the total, which you pay in advance.)
Add a line item called Extras that equals 15 percent of your total budget to cushion for things you'll likely forget (invitation postage, parking valets) or won't anticipate in advance (corkage and plating fees). Never spend this money upfront; you'll need it throughout the planning process as incidentals arise. Trust us.
Prepare for Surprises
Before you sign on the dotted line of vendor contracts or start buying gift bag items, read the fine print, because expenses that seem small early on could add up quickly. If the total of the line item isn't in your overall budget, cut it.
Vendor Transportation
Hiring an out-of-town band or photographer? You might need to pay for a rental van or plane tickets. Double-check the contract to see what exactly is covered.
Setup and Breakdown Fees
Cleanup isn't always included, and you may have to pay overtime rates depending on what time your reception ends.
Custom Cocktails
Signature drinks and spirits can add $3,500 to a 200-person wedding, says Calder Clark, a top wedding planner in Charleston, South Carolina.
Digital Access
Some photographers charge as much as $1,200 to view and share your photos online.
Envelope Stuffing
Some stationers charge as much as $7 per invite. To save, call your bridesmaids over, drink some wine, and DIY instead.
Planners
A full-service event designer can charge as much as $25,000 or even 20 percent of the total budget for a Kardashian-scale affair, but a day of coordinator costs an average of $1,500. Before you enlist a pro, know what you have to spend and factor in that rate. Many venues require you to contract their in-house wedding coordinator or bring in your own outside wedding coordinator.
Charge Responsibly
No matter how tempted you are to boost your cash flow with credit cards, don't go overboard. Never charge anything that you can't pay off in 30 days. That is unless you qualify for a card with a zero percent purchase APR, which lets you skirt interest payments as long as you pay your entire balance within a certain time frame (usually 12 to 15 months).
Torabi advises mapping out a plan for how you intend to do that before swiping the plastic. For example, register for cash gifts that you can put toward a portion of the wedding and create a savings plan to cover the rest. If you do use a credit card, choose one with a generous cashback program.
Find Ways to Save
Over budget? These ideas will slash your spending in a meaningful way.
Change the venue.
Raw spaces like barns and lofts seem like a steal, but you could spend a lot making them wedding-beautiful. "You may have to bring in tables, chairs, china, glassware, silverware, kitchen equipment for the caterer, even restrooms and AC or heat. Before you commit, estimate the total price of a wedding at that space versus one that includes all the basics.
Edit the guest list.
Each attendee costs far more than his or her meal when you consider the invitation, welcome bag, transportation, slice of cake, and favor. Never have a B-list, and be ruthless with your A-list. For the average 135 person reception, shrinking the guest list by 15 people saves you approximately $1,300.
Go off-peak.
Have a winter wedding. Choose a Friday or Sunday. Or celebrate with mimosas over brunch instead of hosting a four course, wine paired dinner.
Build-in time.
To save for the wedding they want, 57 percent of brides said they were willing to prolong their engagement. Negotiating is a lot more difficult when vendors know you're in a time crunch.
Host the ceremony and reception in the same place.
Doing so could save as much as $4,000 on transportation for the wedding party and guests.
Forgo a live band.
The big name ones can charge upwards of $30,000, while a DJ will cost a few thousand bucks.
Order all of your own paper items yourself.
This means ordering or creating your own wedding invitations and appropriate inserts. Later, you'll be ordering place cards and table numbers and maybe programs and other things, too. Technology has made it easy to do a lot of this stuff on your own at home. The newlyweds to be choose the appropriate paper (most companies online will send free samples) and print them on their own printer, then assemble, stuff, and mail them. Even if you choose to order printed materials through a stationer, be sure to do it yourself. When you have your wedding planner assist or do it for you, it will cost you more, whether through her markup or because she'll likely be getting a thank you commission from the shop.
Address your own invitations.
Paying for calligraphy is not cheap. If you must have calligraphy on your invites, consider buying a calligraphy pen and practicing until you get it right. It's not that difficult. And only an expert would notice it wasn't done by a professional. As a starting point, there are tons of tutorials online.
Say no to upgrades.
Another key strategy for how to budget for a wedding is saying no to unnecessary upgrades. Take what comes with the package, or the least expensive option you can stand. Couples sometimes add literally thousands of dollars to their budgets because they don't like the design of the white on white tablecloths, for example. Or they can't stand the chairs provided for the ceremony.
Use fewer vendors.
If your DJ also offers lighting services for your venue or your cake lady also offers edible wedding favors, consider hiring that vendor to provide more than one service for your big day. You'll always get a better rate if you're getting more from one vendor, plus you won't be paying multiple setups or delivery fees, the way you would be if you had hired separate vendors for each individual task.
By: Katie James Watkinson & Alexis Dent
https://www.brides.com/story/5-steps-to-wedding-budget