Wedding Cost Planner

Wedding Cost Comparison

150 vs 250 Guest Wedding Cost

Side-by-side: $45,000 for 150 guests vs $75,000 for 250guests. That's a $30,000 difference (67% more) at the 2026 national average.

Category150 guests250 guestsDifference
Venue$18,000$30,000+$12,000
Catering$13,500$26,250+$12,750
Photography$4,500$7,500+$3,000
Decor$4,500$3,750+-$750
Miscellaneous$4,500$7,500+$3,000
Total$45,000$75,000+$30,000

Our verdict

Which is better — 150 or 250 guests?

For most couples, the 150-guest wedding is the better choice if budget is a real constraint. You save $30,000 (67%) and the experience for the people there is materially better — better food, more time per guest, more flexibility on venue, and room to upgrade photography or florals.

Choose 250 guests only if including those extra 100people genuinely matters — close family, critical professional relationships, or cultural expectations that aren't negotiable. The marginal cost of ~$300 per added guest is the price of inclusion, and it's a real one.

Pick 150 guests if…

  • You want a higher per-guest experience
  • Photography & florals matter most to you
  • You'd rather upgrade venue than add people
  • Budget is < $70,000

Pick 250 guests if…

  • You have a large extended family
  • Cultural traditions require it
  • Professional/community connections matter
  • Budget can absorb the +$30,000

Try your own numbers — toggle between 150 and 250 guests to see the breakdown shift in real time.

Estimate your budget

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$

Total budget

$45,000

Cost per guest

$300

Allocated100%
  • Venue$18,00040%
  • Catering$13,50030%
  • Photography$4,50010%
  • Decor$4,50010%
  • Miscellaneous$4,50010%

AI Budget Insight · Personalized

Your venue allocation looks healthy

You've allocated 40% to venue, right inside the 35–40% sweet spot we see in our 47-wedding dataset. Negotiate the catering bundle next.

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Should you cut from 250 to 150 guests?

Trimming from 250 to 150 guests saves roughly $30,000 — money you can redirect to a better venue, professional photography, an open bar, or a longer honeymoon. The biggest savings come from catering (~$12,750 less) and rentals/décor scale-down.

The opposite calculus: if including those extra 100 guests genuinely matters — close family, key friends, professional relationships — the marginal cost of ~$300 per added guest is the price of inclusion. Use the calculator above to model both scenarios side-by-side.

For dedicated breakdowns, see the 150-guest wedding budget or the 250-guest wedding budget.

Frequently asked questions

What's the cost difference between a 150-guest and 250-guest wedding?

On average, a 250-guest wedding costs about $30,000 more than a 150-guest one — roughly 67% higher. The bulk of the difference is catering and rentals, which scale almost linearly with headcount at ~$300/guest.

Which is the better value — 150 or 250 guests?

Per-guest cost is similar at both sizes (~$300), but the 150-guest wedding gives you more flexibility for an upgraded venue, premium photographer, or destination location at the same per-head spend. The 250-guest option is "better value" only if including more people genuinely matters to you.

Where does the extra spend go in a 250-guest wedding?

Catering grows by ~$12,750, venue by ~$12,000, and décor/florals by ~-$750 once you cross from 150 to 250 guests.

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