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Forum Thread

How to Host an Inexpensive Wedding

286 229 April 6, 2016 at 06:49 AM in Wedding & Bridal (3)
So I recently got engaged, and holy shit was I surprised when I found out how much the average wedding in the U.S. costs (about 30k for those unaware). Being a slickdealer I was immediately suspicious at what appears to be an outrageous cost, for basically throwing a large party. Like anything else in life, I know that there are ways to save money when hosting such an event, but I'm having a really hard time figuring out how. I have tried posting in specific wedding forums, but have been met with tons of negativity, and claims that it can't be done, from people who's opinions seem very suspect to me.

Maybe I'm just being an arrogant misinformed dick, but I find it very hard to believe that a wedding HAS to cost this much money. I feel like the slickdeals community can resolve this question for me once and for all, so here it is:

Were you able to have a relatively inexpensive wedding? Estimate what your cost was per guest? How did you save money? What were the sacrifices/compromises that you made?

Personally, I have a pretty specific idea of what I want at my wedding. If you have any saving ideas that apply to my plans specifically please let me know.

What I envision:
Outside wedding in a beautiful field under a tent in New England early September with about 150-200 guests (no church/priest, so saving money there). I want to host my guests appropriately so I want an open bar and a fully catered wedding with music. I feel like location/space, food, booze, music, and bathrooms are all you need to host a fun filled wedding, so why does it cost so much?

What I think I need:
1. Venue, large field, requires lots of parking, access to electricity, bathrooms (or option of port-a-potties). How do I get this cheap?
2. Booze, seems pretty self explanatory, buy it yourself and you'll save way more money than if you purchase through a middle man.
3. Food, I believe you can get pretty good catering for about 25 bucks a person. What did you guys pay? Does it make a difference in price that it is being held outdoors?
4. Bathrooms, hopefully on site, but if not renting port-a-potties. Any specific way to get nicer ones on the cheap?
5. Music, probably rent a sound system and make my own playlist. Are there businesses that offer this type of thing at a lower price bracket?
6. Tent, this own is expensive, I can't seem to find large tent rentals that seem like they are fairly priced. It is a very unique item, so maybe this is something I will have to pay for.
7. Various rentals, tables, chairs, linens, dinnerware, wineglasses, dance floor, stage.

Thanks for the help Smilie
-Ben

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SnakePlisken
04-06-2016 at 10:06 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:06 AM.
Quote from BostonGirl :
That pretty much sums up any wedding that someone else is paying for. laugh out loud
Sums up everything, not just weddings. Somebody should come up with a catching saying like my way or the highway for situations like that
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BostonGirl
04-06-2016 at 10:06 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:06 AM.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
I have, I grew up in MA and now live in southern ME. Fall is my favorite time of year, and September is usually beautiful. The average temperature in Boston in September is between 57 and 73 degrees, which I consider just a little bit lower than perfect if I am wearing a full suit. The rainfall also averages 3.5" which isn't really that much higher than the rainfall during the summer. http://www.intellicast.com/Local/...n=USMA0046

This is not meant to negate the fact that shit happens, but this is the case even in mid-Summer. There is a risk involved, but it is a risk I am willing to take.
We also got a snow storm in the other day and was 70 on Christmas. The worst place for an outdoor wedding is New England. Not saying it can't be done, but weather is not even close to predictable here.
FTR if I was outside in 57 degree weather in my wedding dress I would be freezing, same goes for most guests.

Quote from Sun_shine :
Sums up everythying, not just weddings. Somebody should come up with a catching saying like my way or the highway for situations like that
laugh out loud
Thats why we paid for our own wedding so I had it the way I wanted. Plus we are old hags so ain't no one paying for it at our age. Rofl2
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Last edited by BostonGirl April 6, 2016 at 10:07 AM.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 10:12 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:12 AM.
Quote from DC :
OP...

1 Hire a "Cradle to Grave" Wedding Coordinator. You've already stated the bride is having trouble keeping track of all the decisions to make, etc..
In a business sense, this person is now your Project Manager and the project happens to be a wedding.

2 Don't discount the experience of those you eventually hire. That should be part of what they bring to the table. Do you take your car to a shade tree mechanic or a shop that specializes in your model of car?

3 For the actual ceremony, the Minister is the "Master of Ceremonies" for the wedding...the whole part why you and the bride are actually showing up. There is no Do-Overs for the ceremony. I strongly urge you not to throw some family member or friend up at the alter with something to read. They are the ONLY one that can break the 4th wall and direct things should something not go as planned and they have the experience to see this, react to it BEFORE your guests see there is a problem.

4 Venue and Food...simply put, you get what you pay for. Period. They have to pay the wait staff and food prep people and pass that along to you. Rent a hall and get food delivered in the chafing dishes and have a buffet...only have to open the lids on stuff and you are done...or PAY for full service..if you want FULL service.

5 DJ...aka the Master of Ceremony of your PARTY!!!! as others have mentioned, they keep the flow and direct your guests to each phase of your party...some buddy with an iPOD ain't going to make this happen...did you rent a Mic for the PA also...? Details, details...

6 Do you want your close family to WORK your party or actually BE A GUEST (honored ones that that I'd hope)?

7 Your bridal party can't be in 2 places at the same time. Don't have them "Help" and be in a tux or nice dress...you can't be the DJ and be in the group photos at the same time.

8 this goes on and on...but the #1 thing to do is at the top of this list.
I'm surprised I'm getting this sort of advice form a slickdealer Stick Out Tongue

I think we will end up going with a wedding planner, but I do not think that this advice applies to everyone. I know that if the burden of wedding planning was placed on my shoulders instead of my fiancés I would take on the task myself.

I just don't agree with 3. I do not think you can apply this advice wholesale to everyone. I have at least 2 people in my family who would make great masters of ceremony, they are natural public speakers and very funny to boot. They are being included in the ceremony, and I would not consider this being "put to work".

4) The age old "you get what you pay for" argument. You are using a car analogy, I can use my own. When you go to buy a new car do you shop around? Why do you bother? You have decided on a car, does it matter where you buy it? Of course it does, shopping around and playing the competition against each other saves you money for the exact same product.

If I can sit down at a restaurant and get an amazing meal for 30 dollars, why can't that meal be catered for a similar price? There are obviously different variables involved, but I find it hard to believe that it costs the catering service more than double the cost of a restaurant to supply the same quality food.
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acesmuzic | Staff
04-06-2016 at 10:18 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:18 AM.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
I have, I grew up in MA and now live in southern ME. Fall is my favorite time of year, and September is usually beautiful. The average temperature in Boston in September is between 57 and 73 degrees, which I consider just a little bit lower than perfect if I am wearing a full suit. The rainfall also averages 3.5" which isn't really that much higher than the rainfall during the summer. http://www.intellicast.com/Local/...n=USMA0046 [intellicast.com]

This is not meant to negate the fact that shit happens, but this is the case even in mid-Summer. There is a risk involved, but it is a risk I am willing to take.
keep in mind that ~half your guests will *not* be wearing a full suit, including your lovely bride. it could be fine temperature wise but it might not be, and you have to decide so far in advance that it's hard to make an informed decision. if your fiance is easily stressed that's not a good combination of factors when planning one of the biggest days in your life, that's all i was saying.

congrats on the upcoming nuptials Smilie
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Majide
04-06-2016 at 10:23 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:23 AM.
You lost me at 150-200 people.

I managed to do our wedding for around $6k. We planned for 52 guests. $32 per guest for food/drinks.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 10:28 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:28 AM.
Quote from Majide :
You lost me at 150-200 people.

I managed to do our wedding for around $6k. We planned for 52 guests. $32 per guest for food/drinks.
This situation doesn't apply to me, but how did you manage to get costs so low? Why can't this $32/guest be scaled up to a larger wedding? If I managed to only spend $32/person, that would only be $6400 for 200 people.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 10:32 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:32 AM.
So even polling the SlickDeals community, the consensus still seems to be that there aren't any consistent/repeatable ways to save money on a wedding. The costs are set, and any savings are going to come with compromises or lowering the quality of the services being provided.
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mmathis
04-06-2016 at 10:50 AM.
04-06-2016 at 10:50 AM.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
I just don't agree with 3. I do not think you can apply this advice wholesale to everyone. I have at least 2 people in my family who would make great masters of ceremony, they are natural public speakers and very funny to boot. They are being included in the ceremony, and I would not consider this being "put to work".
If they are at the mic all night, they are likely not enjoying themselves the way your other guests are. Simple fact. You may not consider it being put to work, but they might. If it is simply for the ceremony, that's different.

Quote :
4) The age old "you get what you pay for" argument. You are using a car analogy, I can use my own. When you go to buy a new car do you shop around? Why do you bother? You have decided on a car, does it matter where you buy it? Of course it does, shopping around and playing the competition against each other saves you money for the exact same product.
Yes, in principle. You of course want to shop around, but you're not looking at just the price here. If one dealer offers free oil changes for life does that factor into your decision of where to buy the car? And in this case, it is not the exact same product. No two photographers are the same, no two caterers are the same, no two venues are the same.

Quote :
If I can sit down at a restaurant and get an amazing meal for 30 dollars, why can't that meal be catered for a similar price? There are obviously different variables involved, but I find it hard to believe that it costs the catering service more than double the cost of a restaurant to supply the same quality food.
That was a question I asked myself a lot. Turns out that doing everything in the confines of your own restaurant is different than doing half of it in your own restaurant and the other half in a completely different location. Catering services typically also provide more servers / staff than are needed at the restaurant (you ever sat down at a restaurant when 200 other people got seated at the same time?). Then there's also extra food they bring (you definitely don't want to run out of food). Even if your guests reply with their meal choice of 100 fish and 100 chicken, the caterer will bring ~120 fish and ~120 chicken, to account for people who changed their mind, forgot what they marked, spoilage, dropped food, their own staff to eat, etc. Sternos, serving trays, serving utensils, all that junk that you typically don't need at the restaurant. Some caterers also provide dinnerware, linens, etc which may or may not be factored in to the price. There may also be economies of scale in there, too (caterers are usually only busy 3 days a week, and prepare different dishes each day; whereas restaurants are busy every day serving the same dishes)


Have you actually gotten quotes from anyone yet? If not, I strongly suggest you do and you can ask some of these same questions. You'll also get prices appropriate for your area.

Quote from jonsnow84 :
The costs are set, and any savings are going to come with compromises or lowering the quality of the services being provided.
This does not just apply to weddings, but most things in general. You generally compromise on the quality or quantity to get a lower price for whatever you buy
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Last edited by mmathis April 6, 2016 at 10:52 AM.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 11:07 AM.
04-06-2016 at 11:07 AM.
Quote from mmathis :
If they are at the mic all night, they are likely not enjoying themselves the way your other guests are. Simple fact. You may not consider it being put to work, but they might. If it is simply for the ceremony, that's different.

Have you actually gotten quotes from anyone yet? If not, I strongly suggest you do and you can ask some of these same questions. You'll also get prices appropriate for your area.

This does not just apply to weddings, but most things in general. You generally compromise on the quality or quantity to get a lower price for whatever you buy
I definitely agree with you. If they are on the mic all night that would definitely be work, and detract from their enjoyment. I guess I just envisioned them talking during the ceremony itself and not really much else, that's like 20 minutes, and for someone who is a natural speaker theirs really not much practice or planning involved if you don't mind it being informal. I'm not really sure why you would have someone on the mic throughout your reception, that would be very annoying.

I have gotten quotes, and I'm constantly finding less expensive options that don't seem much different in terms of quality or service. I understand that everyone's view of quality is different, but I'm interested in what the bottom line is that people have been able to pay for these services. Not through a friend or anything, but through an actual company that regularly supplies the services. Once a price range is established, it will be much easier for me to assess if I'm getting a good deal.

"You generally compromise on the quality or quantity to get a lower price for whatever you buy" Sure, this is true as a general rule, but in actual practice you can break this rule 100 times over. If I want to buy headphones for 100 dollars there are so many options, some will be an awesome deal at that price, lots will be ok, and some will be a terrible deal. Even better I can wait for a sale and get a pair of headphones valued at 100 dollars for significantly less. It is much harder to make these sort of assessments when purchasing services, but I believe that it can be done.

I am in search of the best deal, I may not be able to replicate it, but at least I can attempt to get close or get a price where I don't believe I'm getting screwed.
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Kabn
04-06-2016 at 11:16 AM.
04-06-2016 at 11:16 AM.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
So even polling the SlickDeals community, the consensus still seems to be that there aren't any consistent/repeatable ways to save money on a wedding. The costs are set, and any savings are going to come with compromises or lowering the quality of the services being provided.
yes, we're still in the real world, so there are tradeoffs for every decision. if you want a wedding outside, there's going to be a lot more risk and organization for a (likely) small cost benefit. if you want individually served, gourmet food, it's going to cost a lot more than hors d'oeuvres or a simpler meal buffet style. if you want an open bar, it's going to be quite expensive regardless of how you do it, especially if you want to offer any real selection. if there was an easy, repeatable way to lower these costs while maintaining the same service level, everyone would be doing it.

as you've mentioned, there's such a thing as playing one vendor against the other, but the wedding industry is somewhat unique in that the good service providers can basically have a "take it or leave it" stance because demand is relatively static; people are always getting married, usually during the same two time frames in a year. good venues know they're going to book one to two years in advance, so they have zero incentive to negotiate price/terms. weddings are the least favorite/profitable gigs for most caterers, so established ones, again, have almost zero incentive to negotiate. we at Slickdeals deal mostly in physical products, where there are incentives for retailers to discount specific units for a variety of reasons. the service economy is simply different, especially in the wedding industry.

the best overall advice i can give is to make use of professionals you know and limit the side stuff (flowers, centerpieces, decorations, favors, and other accoutrements). i'm not nearly as against utilizing friends/family as mmathis: i knew a good/established photographer, so i got a big break on that; same with the videographer. one of my relatives was a baker, so we got the cake as a wedding present. again, some of the best MC work i've ever seen was by friends of the couple, and i've seen very expensive DJs try to put on a show or misread the room and clash with the crowd all night. one friend of mine has been in music in some capacity since high school, and he's probably done a dozen weddings for friends. he prefers that because, let's face it, most guys don't like attending weddings, so he at least gets to enjoy it by playing music. as i said above, unless you have a personal connection that can get you one of the major things at a discount, you're going to have to make compromises to save a significant amount of money.

of course, you can always try looking into less established/smaller providers who might be able to give you the same level of service at a lower cost because they're still making a name for themselves, but that obviously carries a level of risk.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
I definitely agree with you. If they are on the mic all night that would definitely be work, and detract from their enjoyment. I guess I just envisioned them talking during the ceremony itself and not really much else, that's like 20 minutes, and for someone who is a natural speaker theirs really not much practice or planning involved if you don't mind it being informal. I'm not really sure why you would have someone on the mic throughout your reception, that would be very annoying...
100% disagree here. you are going to need someone on the mic to announce everything from the cake cutting to the first dances to the speeches, as well as tell the guests when they can eat and any other information they need to know. good ones will also interact with the crowd to keep the mood up, calling out fun stuff happening on the dance floor and passing the mic if anyone has something they want to say.
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Last edited by Kabn April 6, 2016 at 11:21 AM.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 11:34 AM.
04-06-2016 at 11:34 AM.
Quote from Kabn :
yes, we're still in the real world, so there are tradeoffs for every decision. if you want a wedding outside, there's going to be a lot more risk and organization for a (likely) small cost benefit.

100% disagree here. you are going to need someone on the mic to announce everything from the cake cutting to the first dances to the speeches, as well as tell the guests when they can eat and any other information they need to know. good ones will also interact with the crowd to keep the mood up, calling out fun stuff happening on the dance floor and passing the mic if anyone has something they want to say.
To be clear, although I originally thought an outdoor wedding would be cheaper it was never my primary motivation. I personally enjoy outdoor weddings much more, that is the reason I want to do it. I am personally willing to take the risk, to have the possibility of a more enjoyable wedding.

Ok, but would you consider these small announcements work? It really depends on the individual, but if they enjoy being in the spotlight and aren't stressed by public speaking I could see it actually being enjoyable for some people. Even with these announcements I couldn't picture them being on the mic for more than 40 minutes total throughout the entire day. It may be annoying for them to have to keep track of some sort of schedule though, especially if they are engaged in an interesting conversation or something and realize they have to get up and make an announcement.
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mmathis
04-06-2016 at 11:36 AM.
04-06-2016 at 11:36 AM.
Quote from jonsnow84 :
I definitely agree with you. If they are on the mic all night that would definitely be work, and detract from their enjoyment. I guess I just envisioned them talking during the ceremony itself and not really much else, that's like 20 minutes, and for someone who is a natural speaker theirs really not much practice or planning involved if you don't mind it being informal. I'm not really sure why you would have someone on the mic throughout your reception, that would be very annoying.
You won't have anyone talking constantly throughout the entire reception, of course, but you want (or at least, I did) someone at the DJ table ready to put on a new song if the mood changes, whatever. You want the DJ taking requests. You don't want (or at least, I didn't) somebody to push play on an iPod and come back 4 songs later only to find that the dance floor is deserted cause the music you chose 3 weeks ago isn't working for the crowd at that time.

All I (and others) am saying is that while it may look good on paper to fill up an iPod and just hit play for the reception, there are some very real reasons to spend more money and hire a DJ, and that maybe this isn't the area to skimp on.

Quote :
"You generally compromise on the quality or quantity to get a lower price for whatever you buy" Sure, this is true as a general rule, but in actual practice you can break this rule 100 times over. If I want to buy headphones for 100 dollars there are so many options, some will be an awesome deal at that price, lots will be ok, and some will be a terrible deal. Even better I can wait for a sale and get a pair of headphones valued at 100 dollars for significantly less. It is much harder to make these sort of assessments when purchasing services, but I believe that it can be done.
It can be, but you can't realistically say you want to buy headphones for $30 and expect to get something approaching the quality of $100 headphones (in general).


Quote from Kabn :
the best overall advice i can give is to make use of professionals you know and limit the side stuff (flowers, centerpieces, decorations, favors, and other accoutrements). i'm not nearly as against utilizing friends/family as mmathis: i knew a good/established photographer, so i got a big break on that; same with the videographer. one of my relatives was a baker, so we got the cake as a wedding present. again, some of the best MC work i've ever seen was by friends of the couple, and i've seen very expensive DJs try to put on a show or misread the room and clash with the crowd all night. one friend of mine has been in music in some capacity since high school, and he's probably done a dozen weddings for friends. he prefers that because, let's face it, most guys don't like attending weddings, so he at least gets to enjoy it by playing music. as i said above, unless you have a personal connection that can get you one of the major things at a discount, you're going to have to make compromises to save a significant amount of money.
I'm not against "using" friends and family (one of our friends officiated for us, and we had friends and family read some passages during the ceremony), but just be aware of what that implies. Photographers, DJs, wedding planners, etc work during the event and that is a different dynamic than making a cake the week of and having someone else from your bakery deliver it. The baker gets to enjoy the wedding just like any other guest, while the photographer is taking pictures all night. They may very well enjoy taking the pictures, but they don't get to experience the wedding the same way as your other guests.

It all depends on your particular situation, of course. You may have friends and family that would prefer to work at your wedding instead of attend it. Just make sure you understand the distinction.
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Last edited by mmathis April 6, 2016 at 11:40 AM.
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SnakePlisken
04-06-2016 at 11:46 AM.
04-06-2016 at 11:46 AM.
Quote from Frogstar :
Fine by me, I'm not keen on receiving gifts in general.

I'm not your guy then laugh out loud
My wedding was decidedly a non-traditional affair.
You had an affair at your wedding? KINKY!! Was it with one of the bridesmaids? your mil?
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idkist
04-06-2016 at 12:23 PM.
04-06-2016 at 12:23 PM.
My brother went for a cheaper wedding because they were inviting somewhere around 200 people. Food was catered buffet bbq. It was held at an outside venue which they had to rent the tent/chairs. They also supplied the booze and it was self service. There were bathrooms on-site and his wifes family is in a band and the mother was a florist. I think they got away with it for under 7500 or < $40/pp for the reception

I went the other route. We had maybe 110 ish at probably the premier venue in the area which I think ran us around $110/pp for the stations reception. We held it 11/1 instead of earlier because there was close to a $40/pp drop in price for the "winter" season which started on 11/1 which was a Friday night. If we went with a Saturday reception it would have been something like a 20-25k minimum.
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jonsnow84
04-06-2016 at 12:38 PM.
04-06-2016 at 12:38 PM.
Quote from idkist :
My brother went for a cheaper wedding because they were inviting somewhere around 200 people. Food was catered buffet bbq. It was held at an outside venue which they had to rent the tent/chairs. They also supplied the booze and it was self service. There were bathrooms on-site and his wifes family is in a band and the mother was a florist. I think they got away with it for under 7500 or < $40/pp for the reception.
Wow, that sounds extremely inexpensive. Do you know how they found rentals that cheap? The quotes that I'm getting for rentals including a tent, tables, and all that jazz, is already over 7500.
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