Wedding Cost Planner
Free · No signup · Updated for 2026

Wedding Budget Calculator — Full Cost Breakdown (2026)

Used by 10,000+ couples · Instant results · No signup required

Enter your total budget, guest count, and location. Get a clear category-level breakdown — venue, catering, photography, decor, and cost-per-guest — built from real 2026 planner data.

Step-by-step planning, perfect for first-timers.
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Set your budget & guests

$35,000
120 guests

How wedding budgets actually work in 2026

Planning a wedding budget is one of the most consequential financial decisions a couple will make together. The average American wedding now costs between $30,000 and $42,000, but those numbers hide enormous regional variation: the same headcount and aesthetic can run 60% more in Manhattan than in rural Tennessee, and luxury destination markets can push that figure higher still.

The traditional rule of thumb is that venue and catering combined consume roughly 70% of total spend. The calculator above starts from this premise and adjusts based on guest count and location tier — because past 150 guests, catering compounds faster than any other line item, and luxury venues swallow a disproportionate share of the budget.

Where the money actually goes

Most planning guides cite the same approximate splits: venue and catering combined dominate; photography accounts for around 10%; florals, décor, and stationery share another 10–15%; everything else (music, attire, transportation, gratuities, contingency) makes up the remainder. The numbers shift depending on what you prioritize. Couples who care most about photographs invest more there. Couples who care most about flowers invest there. There is no single right split — only the one that reflects what matters to you.

Five tips for saving money without compromising the day

  1. Lean into the season. In-season florals are 30–50% cheaper than imported ones, and they look better. The same logic applies to produce on the menu.
  2. Cut the guest list before cutting categories. Every guest you remove saves on catering, rentals, stationery, and bar — usually $200–$500 per head once you tally everything.
  3. Negotiate weekday or off-season dates. Friday and Sunday weddings can knock 10–25% off venue costs in major markets.
  4. Hire a planner early. Counterintuitive, but our couples who hire us in the first month consistently come in under budget compared to those who DIY for six months and then call us in panic mode.
  5. Build a 10% contingency line.It's not optional. Vendor tips, weather backup, last-minute family additions — something always comes up.

For deeper guidance on any of these line items, our planning journal covers seasonal florals, venue selection, and the honest budget breakdown nobody shows you. If you'd like a personalized estimate based on your specific vision, our planning services page outlines how we can help.

Frequently asked questions

How much should I budget for a wedding in 2026?

The national average is roughly $30,000–$42,000, but real-world numbers vary dramatically by region, guest count, and style. The calculator above gives you a category-level breakdown for any budget you enter, which is far more useful than chasing a single 'average' figure.

What is a reasonable cost per guest at a wedding?

Most weddings land between $200 and $500 per guest in catering and rentals alone. Add bar service, and the per-head cost can climb to $700+ at premium venues. Use the cost-per-guest figure above to sanity-check whether your headcount fits your total budget.

What percentage of my wedding budget should go to the venue?

Venue typically takes 30–50% of total spend. The lower end applies to budget-friendly or all-inclusive venues; the upper end applies to luxury hotels and exclusive estates that bundle few services. Our calculator adjusts the venue share automatically based on the location tier you select.

How can I lower my wedding budget without it feeling cheap?

Three highest-leverage moves: shorten the guest list (every guest you cut saves $200–$500 in catering, rentals, and bar), choose an off-season or weekday date (often 10–25% less on venue), and invest in one or two 'wow' details rather than spreading the budget thin across everything.