Anyone who’s ever planned a wedding – hell, anyone who’s ever talked to anyone planning a wedding – knows it’s not a cheap process.
Despite a recent trend towards Pinterest-style wedding crafts and inexpensive online invitations, the average cost of a wedding remains between $36,200 and $54,000 — and that often doesn’t include the honeymoon.
Gulp.
Now, a consumer watchdog has revealed one disturbing reason those costs are so high: it seems suppliers ramp up their prices as soon as they hear the W-word.
CHOICE sent out two undercover shoppers to ask suppliers for quotes, with one woman saying she was planning her partner’s birthday party and another saying it was a wedding.
And of the 36 suppliers contacted, the watchdog found a number of florists, venues and hire car companies quoted the ‘bride-to- be’ more.
The categories most guilty of inflating their prices were:
Venues
Half of the venues — three of six — turned out to charge more for weddings, despite the fact both ‘celebrations’ involved the same number of guests and identical requirements.
The watchdog also reported: “one venue told (the ‘party’ shopper) they don’t accept bookings for any kind of function other than a wedding on Saturday nights, while another told her she would have to pay ‘wedding prices’ if she wanted to secure a Saturday.”
Photographers
CHOICE reports that photographers’ quotes were ‘very mixed’, but that one upmarket photographer quoted the ‘bride-to-be’ more than double the ‘birthday’ planner.
The bride was quoted a whopping $4750 for a five-hour package, despite her insistence she only needed two hours of photography– compared to the $1495 quote given to the woman planning a ‘party’.
Top Comments
I think you can legitimately save on lots of things without misleading the vendors. I got a cheap wedding package deal for a florists because I wasn't fussy about the flowers (I wanted roses and my only stipulation was no 'babies breath'! ). Same with a dress - I found a pattern and fabric and got a dressmaker to make me a nice dress similar (but way less elaborate) than my preferred -simple- wedding dress style. And because we had a small wedding we had it at a restaurant, and had the ceremony in their courtyard - they knew it was for a wedding but because we didn't worry about decorations, or the other part of the restaurant being open, we got a good price.
The only thing i regret skimping on was the photographer. We got a 'friend' who was a photographer to do it on the cheap. We had seen the photos he did for his sisters wedding and they were good. Ours were not :( I suspect he either put mor effort into his sisters wedding, and/or he didn't have the skills for dusk/nighttime photography. Either way - they were crap photos - and they aren't some thing you can redo.
The simplest way to cut wedding costs these days is easy- Don't get married! I don't know why people bother going to all the trouble and expense of a "Dream Wedding" only to be divorced within a year or two.I think its a case if having more money than brains! Honestly,just because you splash out and spend all this money doesn't make you any more married and doesn't mean the marriage will last any longer.
If I had my time over,I wouldn't bother.At the end if the day,it's only a piece of paper.
Sorry to sound so negative,but I just call it how I see it.If you've got the money,don't whinge and if you can't afford much and you really feel that it is imperative to get married - go to a Registry Office or have a Civil Celebrant marry you in the park or similar.These days,couples have lived together and have already had children before getting married and they still get divorced! So like I said at the start- Why bother???