Planning a wedding under $60,000 in 2026
With $60,000to spend, the single most important decision you make is your guest count. Headcount drives catering, rentals, bar, stationery, and venue size — combined, that's roughly 70% of total spend. The wedding budget calculator above uses our planner-grade allocation framework to show exactly where your $60,000 should land.
At the default 100-guest scenario, you can expect roughly $24,000 for venue, $18,000 for catering, and $6,000 for photography. Adjusting the location tier and guest count will reshape those numbers in real time.
Why this matters: small changes in guest count cascade into outsized cost shifts. A single seat at a $60,000 wedding represents roughly $300 once you tally the per-head categories — which is why most couples who land under-budget did one thing well: they capped the list early.
What actually drives the cost of a $60,000 wedding
Three factors do most of the work: guest count, market tier, and day of the week. Catering scales linearly with guests — a 50-guest difference is roughly $7,500–$15,000 on a single line item. Market tier moves venue costs by 30–50% from a budget market to a luxury one. And switching from Saturday to Friday or Sunday in a major metro can knock 10–25% off the venue alone.
Seasonality compounds this. Peak wedding months (May, June, September, October) carry premium rates for both venues and photographers — the same vendors often discount 15–20% in November or January. Couples on a $60,000 budget who book off-peak are effectively buying a higher-tier wedding for the same money.
Why this matters: most "wedding cost" articles quote averages, but averages hide the levers. On a $60,000 budget, the difference between a Saturday in June and a Friday in March is the difference between barely covering it and having $9,000 left for the honeymoon.
Three highest-leverage moves on a $60,000 budget
- Cap your guest list early. Decide the number before family lists arrive. Working backward from a fixed cap is far easier than negotiating exceptions later — and every guest you trim saves roughly $300 in all-categories spend.
- Pick a Friday or Sunday. Off-peak dates can save 10–25% on venue alone — money you can redirect to photography or florals. Some venues throw in linens or a tasting on top.
- Build a 10% contingency. Vendor tips, weather backup, last-minute additions — keep $6,000 aside for surprises. Couples who skip this step almost always end up over-budget by a similar amount.
Why this matters: couples who overspend rarely do so on one big-ticket item — it's usually a stack of unplanned upgrades (better linens, an extra cocktail hour, day-of transportation). A 10% buffer absorbs those without forcing you to cut something you actually wanted.
How the $60,000 breaks down, category by category
- Venue ($24,000). Site fee + tables, chairs, basic lighting. Venues with in-house catering bundle some of category 2 here.
- Catering ($18,000). Food + service staff + bar. Per-head pricing scales linearly, which is why headcount is the master lever.
- Photography ($6,000). Coverage hours + edited gallery + (sometimes) album. The line most planners say to spend up on — the artifact lasts.
- Decor ($6,000). Florals, linens, signage, lighting upgrades. Highest "look per dollar" returns come from in-season flowers and warm fairy-light coverage.
- Misc ($6,000). Stationery, attire, hair/makeup, transportation, gratuities, marriage license, honeymoon transit. Easy to under-budget here — guard with the 10% contingency above.
Why this matters: the percentages above shift with location and guest count — a 150-guest wedding pushes catering past 40% of total spend, while a 60-guest wedding can let venue and photography take a larger share. Run your own numbers in the calculator above to see the exact shift.
For more on category-level spending, read our honest wedding budget breakdown, the 18 real ways couples cut costs, or hidden costs most couples miss. If you'd like to talk through a custom plan, explore our planning services.