Budget

Wedding Budget Breakdown: What Everything Costs

Wedding budgets don't blow up in one purchase — they leak, a few percent at a time, across thirty small decisions. The defense is a map: know what share each category normally takes, write your numbers next to it, and check the two against each other every time a quote comes in. Here is that map.

The breakdown, category by category

Where budgets actually leak

Three patterns show up over and over. Guest list creep — every added couple costs a full per-head price plus a share of every scaled line. "While we're at it" upgrades — each one is 1%, eight of them are 8%. The forgotten lines — vendor meals, service charges, postage, marriage license, day-after cleanup; small, certain, rarely written down.

Track it where the rest of the wedding lives

A spreadsheet works until quotes, deposits and due dates pile up. The budget tracker in our free planner keeps categories, vendors and expenses on one screen: planned versus actual per category, paid versus due per vendor, and every payment deadline lands on your planning calendar so a deposit never sneaks up on you.

Wedding budget tracker with categories, vendors and payments

Frequently asked questions

What takes the biggest share of a wedding budget?

Venue and catering together — typically 40–50% of the total. They scale with the guest list, which is why trimming ten guests saves more than trimming any other line.

How much buffer should a wedding budget have?

Reserve 5–10% as a contingency line from day one. Late costs — alterations, extra hours, last-minute rentals, tips — are close to certain, and a planned buffer beats a panicked transfer.

What do couples most often forget to budget?

Vendor meals, tips and service charges, dress alterations, marriage license fees, postage, and day-after cleanup. Together they routinely add several percent of the total.

Percentages or fixed amounts — which should I plan with?

Start with percentages to set proportions, then convert to fixed amounts per category and track real quotes against them. The percentages are a starting map, not rules — move money toward what you'll remember.

Set up your numbers: see how the budget tracker works or create your event free — categories, vendors and payment deadlines in one place.