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AIBU?

to ask people to pay for their own drinks at my wedding?

140 replies

TheLastKingdom5 · 17/03/2019 15:30

We are having a small wedding in the summer with around 12-15 people.

Money is tight and we never wanted a big do - we don't really have many people we would want to invite in the first place, and the hought of spending thousands to be the centre of attention all day makes me shudder.

So we're having a registry office wedding, followed by a buffet lunch in a pub (£13 pp). We will obviously be paying for this, but drinks are not included - AIBU to ask people to buy their own drinks? We don't drink alcohol (I'll also be driving), but I know certain people in the party would literally take the piss, and drink a lot if it was an open bar.

OP posts:
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Wallywobbles · 18/03/2019 06:09

As long as everyone knows what to expect not a problem.

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DizziLizzy · 18/03/2019 07:11

At my small wedding we offered Buck's Fizz or orange juice on arrival. Wine for the table (1/2 bottle per person) and glass of fizz for the toast. £500 behind the bar and then buy your own.

I have never been to a wedding with an open bar. It's either cash or an amount behind the bar. Obviously the amount can be adjusted to suit a budget.

Provide something as it's bad form otherwise. As PP said your guests will be spending more money than you, not on!

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PinkSparklyPussyCat · 18/03/2019 09:06

Sounds quite mean. Just put £100 behind the bar and people can pay for themselves after that

Having been to a party where a certain amount was put behind the bar I think it's an awful idea. Certain people kept going back and ordering doubles and the rest of us didn't get anything. I think it's got to be all or nothing.

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OrangePot · 18/03/2019 09:15

I have no issue with buying my own drinks - but then I don't drink alcohol and never benefit from complimentary fizzy or table wine.
I'd agree that offering a toasting drink or 'first drink free' is generous enough.

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flowery · 18/03/2019 09:23

You don’t need an open bar but providing nothing when you’re only paying £13pp and only having 12-15 people looks very tight tbh.

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sailorsdelight · 18/03/2019 09:25

We had champagne, wine and beer at the afternoon meal bit, and a paid for bar at the evening do. No one seem fussed. They were all invited to both parts, and we feed them all twice just couldn't afford a massive bar tab! Pretty casual do too.

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WombatChocolate · 18/03/2019 09:33

I agree that if you can only contribute a small amount to drinks, the behind the bar isn't the right way to do it, especially if concerned that one or two people are rather greedy and it will be gone within 10 mins without everyone getting a drink.

If only 10-15 people are coming, it's effectively a large round, to buy one drink each. Doesn't seem a big push or extreme generosity to buy your guests one drink each. If you really begrudge them that, then I wonder if you should bother with an event at all. Hosting can be cheap, but it will always involve some cost. The meal is already under £200 for everyone, so another £100 (and for the person who queried that figure - it's simply a round figure as a possible guide) still means it's very cheap. Is it a question of not having £300 or not wanting to spend it on these people? It does make me wonder if it's the right time to be hosting an event for you or if you'd be better doing it alone if you really don't want to buy these people a meal and a drink in the pub.

You could do a voucher per seat for a soft drink or glass of House white or red, if you want to do one drink per person and prevent anyone ordering a really expensive drink. You could do pitchers of Buck's Fizz or Pimms and soft drinks. You could ask the pub staff to come round and serve a glass of wine per head with the meal. There are plenty of ways to stick to a budget and ensure everyone gets something. I thoug having to provide nothing or do a full free bar.

Those saying they have never paid for drinks at weddings - well that might be the case, but can't you see that OP's scenario is different and she specifically has a tight budget and just 10-15 people coming for a £13 meal - that's clearly a world away from a marquee in your big garden and full catering provided. I'm amazed that people can have so little empathy and awareness of the differences in people's situations to suggest that it's either a free bar all day and night or you shouldn't host at all. Do people have zero appreciation of people being in different circumstances??

Anyway, is Op coming back to say what she thinks of all the suggestions? Most don't think a free bar is needed. Most think she should stretch to providing some form of limited liquid refreshment. Op, what do you now think, having asked?

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MissDaisy18 · 18/03/2019 23:11

Never been to a wedding with a free bar. I think some wine with the meal and /or a glass of fizz. I always take a hip flask to weddings anyway to avoid exorbitant bar charges haha.

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Kisskiss · 19/03/2019 00:05

If you specify upfront, then it should be ok. If you can afford it though, it would be nice to offer at least one or two welcome drinks per guest... and I think if you expect people to pay for their drinks then you should definitely not accept gifts/money.. looks weird

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Designerenvy · 19/03/2019 00:17

I think you should offer one drink of choice to each guest, if you can stretch to that. Have it for a toast . It would be a nice gesture if you could.

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OneStepSideways · 19/03/2019 05:11

I think a pay bar is fine provided you pay for wine to go with the meal (I'd calculate it at 2 glasses per person, anything else looks tight!)

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OwlBeThere · 19/03/2019 05:19

It’s totally fine not to include drinks particularly if you aren’t drinkers yourselves. Maybe a glass of bubbly each for a toast if you want but I really wouldn’t be put out as guest if there was no drink inc.
I hope you have a lovely day!

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purplepears · 19/03/2019 05:20

Definitely put a few bottles of wine on the table. You're only paying £13 a head after all.
It seems pretty mean, to me, to not do that, at least. Not very celebratory.

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OwlBeThere · 19/03/2019 05:29

It’s not mean if you don’t have the money though!

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Dungeondragon15 · 19/03/2019 08:37

If you can't afford even a couple of drinks then arguably you shouldn't bother having an event after the wedding at all. Guests will have put themselves out and probably paid for a present, clothes, transport and possibly accommodation to attend so the least you could do is provide some drink as well as food. That doesn't mean an open bar but at least a couple of bottles of wine on each table or drink on arrival/toast.

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