Who Pays For What
Staying In Control Of Your Budget

I Now Pronounce You Paid In Full:                                                       
Who Pays for What During the Wedding Celebrations

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There’s no two ways about it: weddings are expensive. 
Paying for every detail is enough to drain any family’s 
financial coffers and – even worse – leave them wrestling 
with debt. Especially for new couples paying their own 
way during the wedding, the expenses quickly add up. 
The following is a traditional guide to dividing expenses 
equally and fairly among the four major participants in 
planning the four main parts of the wedding celebration: 
rehearsal dinner, ceremony, reception, and honeymoon. 
These are guidelines more than rules, and are intended 
to show tradition more than carved-in-stone etiquette. 
The Bride’s Family
There’s a popular misconception among the unmarried
of the world that the bride’s family foots the 
entire bill. That’s not entirely true, though unfortunately

it may feel that way for the father of the bride! 
Traditionally, the bride’s family finances the reception 
dinner with all its facets: the food, drink, venue, 
service staff (including tips), flower arrangements, 
wedding favors, and any other miscellany. The bride’s 
family also pays for many of the necessities leading up to the ceremony: these usually include the bridal 
gown, the
wedding invitations and save-the-date reminders, as well as the engagement and wedding 
photographs. Finally (!) the wedding ceremony costs, the photographer and videographer fees, the cost 
of the ring bearer and flower girl accessories, the transportation costs and bridesmaids bouquets are all 
picked up by the bride’s family. Honestly… if you’re the parent of a young girl, start saving right now. 
The Bride
Compared to her family, the bride gets off relatively easy. Brides traditionally pay for the groom’s wedding 
band,
gifts for her bridesmaids, the bridesmaids’ luncheon, her blood test fees, and the wedding day lingerie. 
In the strictest traditional sense, the bride should also pay for her out-of-town bridesmaids accommodations.

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Okay, guys. Time to pony up. Following the engagement ring (that two-month’s salary guideline is passé, by the way) you’ve still got a few things left to buy. You’ll pay for the honeymoon, the marriage license, and 
gifts for your groomsmen. The gentleman groom, however, also pays for the bridal bouquet and corsages for your mother and your new mother-in-law. You’ll also pick up the boutonnieres, ties, and accessories for the groomsmen, and finally the bride’s wedding ring. Gifts for the ushers and for your parents go the extra distance to showing your class. You should also pay the honorarium for the judge, justice of the peace, or clergyman who officiates the ceremony, too. 
The Groom’s Family
Besides their own attire, the groom’s family is responsible for the rehearsal dinner and all its details.
The Maid of Honor
Bachelorette parties and
wedding showers are the responsibility of the maid of honor. This includes all the details, top to bottom. 
The Best Man
The best man is master of ceremonies and godfather of the bachelor party, from the planning to the execution to pouring all the guests into cabs at the end of the night. It’s a dirty job, but someone’s got to do it.
The Groomsmen and Bridesmaids
Most of the attire – for example, the tuxedo rental and costs of the gown – are the responsibility of the individual wedding party member. They also give a gift to the newlyweds. Groomsmen arriving from out-of-town are also 
expected to pay for their accommodations.

Weddings - More Than Just Saying "I Do"
Submitted by: Sachin

Ask anyone who’s got married and most of them will tell you the same thing - what started as a simple, quick affair suddenly grew into something massive. There’s something quite magical about weddings. The moment the engagement ring is on a girl’s finger, friends, relatives and acquaintances crawl out of the woodwork to offer advice, to ask about the how, when and where and generally be a part of what started out purely as a fantasy trip for two.
It’s much like having a baby actually - you realize that even strangers stop and ask and give you advice. So what do you do? Do you go with the flow or do you put the brakes on everything and go ahead with a small, private ceremony? It’s so tough actually to say "No" to the well-meaning members of your family, the hordes of friends who would just love to have a great time at your wedding, and to your colleagues for whom a wedding is fun too. Somehow, weddings have become the glue, that keeps the social fabric from disintegrating. There’s a coming together, a sharing, a camaraderie and a letting the hair down.
Now this is not just in Western societies. In fact, it is even more so in the more traditional societies all over the world. It really is a time to enjoy oneself. So when it is your wedding, where do you draw the line? When do you say enough is enough? Or do you just go along?
Well, very often, the engagement is a twosome affair - though more and more people are throwing engagement parties too. After that, the fun begins - there’s the running around for the invitations, there’s the choosing, the planning, the wedding clothes, the fittings, the rings, the bridal shower, the preparations for the wedding, the honeymoon - it just goes on.
The trick is to keep your cool right through if you are the bride or the groom. And to try and figure what you want and then stick with it. There really are a great number of things that need looking into, so if you can delegate, do that. And be extremely organized about it. Once you delegate, do not keep following up - it goes without saying that you delegate to responsible souls!
Then, relax. Never mind what goes wrong or right, just steer clear of all tensions so that when you are up there, taking your wedding vows, you do it with a smile, tension-free, looking forward to your wonderful life ahead. That really is what it’s all about. That is the crux of the whole show - the culmination. As a bride or groom, never lose sight of that focus and everything else will just fall into place. It really is the first step to happily ever after.
About Author: Sachin is a freelance writer. Read more about <a href="http://www.greatwedding.info">wedding planning</a> at
<a href="
http://www.greatwedding.info">http://www.greatwedding.info</a>.
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