Has anyone registered for their Honeymoon? My FI and I own a house and have a lot of the necessities already. We would like to give our guests the option of helping us out with our honeymoon. I am jsut SO stuck on where to begin! What website did you use? Do you have to pick your resort? (where do you put it on the website?) Also, how does the funds get dispersed at the end? I am just SO confused.
I would love to go through a travel agent so they can answer these questions, but my FI wants to just do it ourselves.
Please HELP!
Re: Honeymoon Registry HELP!
http://forums.theknot.com/Sites/theknot/Pages/Main.aspx/wedding-boards_registering-gifts_dont-need-hm-registry
http://forums.theknot.com/Sites/theknot/Pages/Main.aspx/wedding-boards_registering-gifts_honeymoon-registry-10
Honeymoon registries seem a little rude to me, and there's no reason you have to have one. If you don't need a lot of house stuff, go light on a traditional registry... find holes in what you have and upgrade things that might need upgrading. If your guests can't find anything they like on your traditional registry (or if you don't have one at all), they will likely give you money. And you know what you can do with that money? Plop it in the bank before you leave for your honeymoon.
I just don't understand why you'd pay a company a percentage of everything your guests pay so that they can play middle-man. Maybe there's some company that's less shady, but that seems to be the overwhelming trend. If you simply MUST do it, though, make sure you do your homework. Just be forewarned that one of your guests might be old-fashioned and get peeved by your HMR. I'm just saying!
check out article from CNN http://articles.cnn.com/2007-02-27/travel/honeymoon.registry_1_registries-honeyluna-couples?_s=PM:TRAVEL
P.S. I'm pretty sure we were both trying to be helpful.
I literally just defended someone a couple of hours ago because I felt they were being ganged up on by too many people on a matter of etiquette... so I'm usually very sensitive about giving critiques... I just got concerned because it seemed like you didn't know much about HMRs... and therefore I thought maybe you weren't aware of some of the downfalls.
Eat.Drink.BeMarried. Blog.
I have heard to be careful with what site you use.. because some charge a fee-- so Aunt A donates $50 to your fund but the site takes $5-$10 dollars which leaves you with $40 for you honeymoon then when you go to reserve your honeymoon they charge another fee giving you even less.
My Advice is skip the honeymoon registry- keep your BBB and Macy's registries small and have your parents, family members spread through word of mouth you would prefer cash, checks for your honeymoon and then use that cash/money to purchase the honeymoon you want directly.
ETA - gray said everything I had to say LoL didn't read
My FI's co-worker did this for her wedding last July. She used Honeyfund.com because they don't take money from your guests at all. They did some research before deciding on which one to use. Check out the website and I am sure it will answer all your questions. They do have a 'More info' section answer common questions.
HTH
And I agree that if you have already discussed this with some people and they sound excited about it, go for it! I personally would like to give a couple a gift like this. And you have the traditional registry as well for the people who would rather go that route. I have also heard of honeyfund as being one of the better ones.
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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/homegarden/2014403804_askcarley04.html
By CARLEY RONEY
Q: We're thinking about registering for honeymoon activities that guests can buy for us. Is this the way to go? Or should I just let people know where we're going and hope they give us some cash to put toward our trip?
A: You shouldn't leave it so open-ended. As with any other kind of registry, it's better to tell people exactly what you want. Plus, it's weird (and not the best etiquette) to ask for cash.
A lot of honeymoon destinations allow you to set up registries. Just make sure that guests know you're registered at one by adding it to your wedding website. Guests will love gifting a special excursion or even a surprise bottle of wine for your honeymoon.
Carley Roney, co-founder and editor in chief of The Knot, advises brides on modern wedding etiquette at www.theknot.com.
Hi there... I think it's funny that people think it's OK to have a regular registry but so appalling if you do a honeymoon registry! Once upon a time, people registered for gifts because they had never lived together and needed help getting started. Now, people generally live together or sometimes have already been married before. Traditions change- and that's OK!
We used Honeymoon Wishes and had GREAT responses! People were happy to give us a gift we will remember for a lifetime- snorkeling, massage, sunset cruise, etc. Think about it, will you remember who gave you a blender or toaster or a piece to your china set 10 years from now? Or will you even still own it? You will always have the memories of your honeymoon!
Most services charge a fee, think of it like taxes. Honeymoon Wishes charges 7% or if you go directly through some resorts like Sandals, it's free. Honeymoon Wishes gives you a very professional website where you can share pictures, your story, details of upcoming events, etc. They don't put any ads on your page like Honeyfund does (the price for being free- plus they're always trying to get you to upgrade to the premium membership which costs).
You can hide the fee in the gift so you're paying it or add it on. You can withdraw your money as often as you want in order to pay for the honeymoon, etc. Try Honeymoon Wishes and I'm sure you won't be disappointed.
And maybe, you'll turn guests into believers of honeymoon registries like we have!
http://www.honeymoonwishes.com