I have been getting a great deal of flack on this, but I believe all of mine and my fiance's reasonings for our decision are sound. My fiance and I don't drink, my father was an alcoholic, but has been dry for 27 years now, so he nor any of his side of the family drinks, my fiance's family doesn't drink due to very personal issues, and over half of mine and my fiance's friends don't drink. The only people who do is my mother's side of the family. Originally we were thinking of having a cash bar because the location that we are holding the reception at does not all for any outside alcohol that was not purchased at their bar. It helps with accountability and dram shop laws are a pain should anything happen to anyone. I wanted to allow those who wanted to drink to be able to drink, but on their own dime as I am paying for the entire wedding myself and don't have enough to get drinks for everyone, even with the beer and wine, and frankly, I didn't see the point in paying for something so expensive that my fiance and I will not indulge in. Because of all the flack I had been getting of "it's just plain rude to expect us to pay for our drinks" and after seeing that some of my relatives were allowing some of the minors to drink at my grandfather's 80th birthday, I felt that the best option would be to switch our bar to a dry bar.
Now, my caterer threw in a coffee station with a bunch of different coffees and teas as well as a build your own sparkling lemonade, flavored iced tea, and flavored water station for booking with them at the time that I had. The bar that I am paying for allows for soda, so it's not like there won't be anything to drink. I'm not asking anyone to pay for any of their drinks now, I'm just not allowing for any alcohol as the more I think about it, the less comfortable I am with letting those who do drink drink. I have a nice cushion in my budget for emergencies but I've been told that I should rearrange my budget to allow for beer and wine open bar so that people can drink. I think I have done more than enough to keep their expenses for the wedding down, I am not asking them to pay for their own drinks and I am providing more than enough choices that should keep normal people happy. I have plenty of people who don't drink with good reason, it's just those few who are resistant to the idea of having no alcohol or to having to pay for their own. Is this really as wrong as my mother and her side of the family says it is?