2026 Wedding Budget Calculator: Cost Breakdown & Expense Planner
The complete US wedding expense planner. Take control of your big day with 6 tools in one: Cost Breakdown Estimator · Debt-Free Savings Plan · Vendor Deposit & Payment Tracker · Who Pays for What (Split Contributions) · Credit Card Financing vs. Cash · Venue & Planner Profit Margins.
How to Estimate Vendor Costs, Split Contributions & Track Payments
This tool has six different modes designed to cover every angle of wedding financial planning. Here’s a step-by-step guide for each one so you get the most accurate results.
Click one of the six tabs at the top of the input panel: Cost Estimator for a total wedding cost estimate, Savings Planner to figure out monthly savings targets, Payment Schedule to map vendor deposits and final balances, Split Contributions to divide costs between family members, Business / Planner for event economics and profit margins, or Debt vs Save to see the true cost of financing a shortfall.
Fill in the input fields for your selected mode. All monetary fields use USD formatting. If you’re in Cost Estimator mode, enter your guest count first because food and drink costs are calculated per guest. Use real vendor quotes when possible rather than ballpark guesses.
The results panel on the right side instantly updates with your KPI dashboard (key numbers), a color-coded alert with a plain-English summary, a funding mix bar chart, a visual chart, a full breakdown table, and a scenario comparison.
Green alerts mean you’re on track or fully funded. Yellow means something needs attention. Red means there’s a gap or risk. The verdict box tells you instantly whether your plan is feasible.
After calculating, click “Download Report” to generate a professional PDF with all your inputs and results. This is perfect for sharing with your partner, parents, or wedding planner. You can also share directly via WhatsApp.
Switch between modes to see your wedding plan from every financial angle. Try reducing the guest count by 20 in Cost Estimator mode, or change your monthly savings amount in Savings Planner mode, to instantly see how different decisions affect your bottom line.
2026 Average Costs: Venue, Catering, Photography & Decor
According to industry data, the average cost of a wedding in the United States continues to climb. Understanding where the money actually goes helps you make smarter decisions about where to spend, where to save, and where to splurge.
Geography is one of the biggest factors in wedding costs. A venue in Manhattan might cost $15,000–$25,000, while a comparable barn venue in rural Tennessee could be $3,000–$5,000. Here’s a general breakdown by area:
| Region | Average Total Cost | Avg. Cost per Guest | Top Cost Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northeast (NYC, Boston, DC) | $45,000 – $65,000 | $280 – $420 | Venue & catering |
| West Coast (LA, SF, Seattle) | $38,000 – $55,000 | $250 – $380 | Venue & photography |
| Midwest (Chicago, Minneapolis) | $28,000 – $38,000 | $200 – $280 | Food & beverage |
| South (Atlanta, Dallas, Nashville) | $25,000 – $36,000 | $180 – $260 | Decor & entertainment |
| Rural / Small Town | $15,000 – $25,000 | $120 – $180 | Venue availability |
Your guest list is the single biggest lever on your total budget. Every additional guest adds $85–$350 depending on your region and catering choices. Cutting 30 guests from a 150-person wedding in the Northeast could save you $8,000–$12,000.
The Traditional Expense Guide: Who Pays for What?
Each mode in this calculator uses straightforward financial math. Here are the exact formulas so you can verify the results yourself or adjust them to your situation.
The calculator uses Big.js for all monetary arithmetic, which prevents the tiny floating-point rounding errors that regular JavaScript math can introduce when working with dollar amounts.
The Standard Cost Breakdown: Typical Percentages by Vendor
Industry guidelines suggest allocating your total wedding budget roughly along these percentages. Use this as a starting framework, then adjust based on your priorities.
| Category | % of Budget | $30K Wedding | $50K Wedding | Where to Save |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venue & Rentals | 25% – 30% | $7,500 – $9,000 | $12,500 – $15,000 | Off-peak dates, Fri/Sun |
| Food & Beverage | 25% – 30% | $7,500 – $9,000 | $12,500 – $15,000 | Buffet over plated, limit open bar hours |
| Photography & Video | 8% – 12% | $2,400 – $3,600 | $4,000 – $6,000 | Skip the videographer, photo-only package |
| Decor & Flowers | 8% – 10% | $2,400 – $3,000 | $4,000 – $5,000 | In-season blooms, candles over florals |
| Music & Entertainment | 5% – 8% | $1,500 – $2,400 | $2,500 – $4,000 | DJ instead of live band |
| Attire & Beauty | 5% – 8% | $1,500 – $2,400 | $2,500 – $4,000 | Sample sales, rent suits |
| Stationery & Invites | 2% – 3% | $600 – $900 | $1,000 – $1,500 | Digital invitations |
| Transport & Lodging | 2% – 3% | $600 – $900 | $1,000 – $1,500 | Group hotel blocks |
| Favors, Gifts, Misc | 3% – 5% | $900 – $1,500 | $1,500 – $2,500 | DIY favors or skip |
| Taxes, Tips & Fees | 8% – 15% | $2,400 – $4,500 | $4,000 – $7,500 | Negotiate inclusive pricing |
| TOTAL | 100% | $30,000 | $50,000 | — |
5 Realistic Budget Scenarios: Micro-Weddings to Luxury Events
Here are five realistic wedding scenarios that show how different choices lead to dramatically different total costs. Each one was run through our calculator so you can replicate the exact numbers.
Sarah & Mike — Austin, TX • 65 guests
Venue: $1,200 (family backyard, rented tent + chairs) • Food/guest: $65 (BBQ catering) • Photo: $1,800 (half-day) • Decor: $900 (DIY + wildflowers) • Music: $600 (Spotify + rented speakers) • Attire: $1,100 (online dress + rented suit) • Misc: $800 • Fees: 8%
Base = $1,200 + (65 × $65) + $1,800 + $900 + $600 + $1,100 + $800 = $10,625
Fees = $10,625 × 8% = $850
Total = $11,475 → Cost per guest: $176
Sarah and Mike threw a memorable wedding for under $15,000 by leveraging a free venue, choosing BBQ over plated service, and handling music themselves. Their biggest savings came from the venue — a family property that cost them only the rental fee for tents and seating.
Jessica & David — Charlotte, NC • 120 guests
Venue: $6,500 (event barn) • Food/guest: $82 (plated dinner) • Photo: $3,200 (full day + second shooter) • Decor: $2,800 (florist package) • Music: $1,800 (DJ) • Attire: $2,200 • Misc: $1,500 • Fees: 11%
Base = $6,500 + (120 × $82) + $3,200 + $2,800 + $1,800 + $2,200 + $1,500 = $28,840
Fees = $28,840 × 11% = $3,172
Total = $32,012 → Cost per guest: $267
A solid mid-range wedding that hit all the traditional marks. Jessica and David used our Savings Planner mode and found they needed $2,250/month over 12 months to fully fund this from savings alone.
Amanda & Chris — Brooklyn, NY • 180 guests
Venue: $14,000 (loft space) • Food/guest: $145 (premium cocktail + seated) • Photo: $5,500 (photo + video) • Decor: $4,800 (high-end florist) • Music: $3,500 (live band) • Attire: $4,200 • Misc: $3,600 • Fees: 13%
Base = $14,000 + (180 × $145) + $5,500 + $4,800 + $3,500 + $4,200 + $3,600 = $61,700
Fees = $61,700 × 13% = $8,021
Total = $69,721 → Cost per guest: $387
Using our Split Contributions mode, Amanda and Chris found that $25,000 from the couple, $20,000 from parents, and $12,000 from other family covered $57,000 — leaving a $12,721 gap they planned to close with a targeted savings plan.
Taylor & Jordan — Denver, CO • 100 guests
Wedding budget: $26,000 • Amount saved: $18,000 • Credit card APR: 22% • Monthly payment: $450
Funding gap = $26,000 − $18,000 = $8,000
At 22% APR with $450/month payments:
Total interest = ~$1,580 • Time to repay = ~21 months
Taylor and Jordan’s $26,000 wedding actually cost them $27,580 after interest. That extra $1,580 was entirely preventable. Our calculator showed them that saving an additional 4 months would have eliminated the need for any debt.
Emily Rodriguez — Wedding Planner, Miami, FL
Client package price: $35,000 • Expected guests: 150 • Variable cost/guest: $95 • Fixed event cost: $12,000 • Target margin: 20% • Alt scenario guests: 100
Total cost = $12,000 + (150 × $95) = $26,250
Profit = $35,000 − $26,250 = $8,750
Margin = $8,750 ÷ $35,000 = 25% (exceeds 20% target ✅)
Alt scenario (100 guests): Cost = $21,500, Profit = $13,500
Emily verified her pricing was profitable and discovered that smaller weddings actually yield higher margins because fixed costs are spread across fewer variable expenses. She now uses Business mode to validate every proposal before sending it to clients.
Expert Strategies to Avoid Hidden Fees & Plan Debt-Free
These are battle-tested strategies from real couples and wedding professionals that can shave thousands off your total without sacrificing the experience.
Friday and Sunday weddings cost 20%–40% less than Saturday events. January through March (excluding Valentine’s Day) and November are the cheapest months for venues across most US markets.
Every guest you cut saves $150–$350 in food, drink, seating, and favors. Removing 25 guests from a 150-person wedding could save you $3,750–$8,750 instantly. Be ruthless with the “obligation” invites.
Plated service requires more staff and is priced 25%–40% higher. A quality buffet or family-style dinner delivers the same food experience at a fraction of the cost. Brunch or lunch weddings can cut catering by 30%–50%.
Peonies in December cost 3x more than in June. Ask your florist which blooms are in season for your wedding month. Supplement with greenery, dried flowers, or candles to create volume without the premium price tag.
Not every wedding needs 10 hours of coverage. A 6-hour package covering getting ready through the first dance costs significantly less. Supplement with guests’ phone photos for candids at the reception.
A great DJ typically costs $800–$1,500. A live band ranges from $3,000–$10,000. Unless live music is absolutely central to your vision, a skilled DJ with a great playlist delivers the same dance floor energy.
Paper invitations with engraving, RSVP cards, and postage can run $500–$1,200+. Services like Paperless Post or Zola offer elegant digital alternatives for a fraction of the price — and they track RSVPs automatically.
Most vendors have wiggle room, especially if you’re booking well in advance, paying in full upfront, or choosing an off-peak date. Always ask: “Is there any flexibility on price?” or “Do you offer a package discount?”