Wedding Etiquette Forum
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Large families... etiquette, not inviting cousins?

Hi all. Newly engaged and working on developing a budget and guest list. We are probably honestly looking at $10K or less, and I know our guest list size affects that by a lot. FH and I fully know that we simply cannot have a 100+ person wedding, and we tend to prefer smaller crowds anyway.

I have a large extended family -- my aunt and uncle have 6 kids, and 5 of those kids have families with anywhere from 3-5 kids themselves. I grew up being around my cousins all the time, but in total honesty, I just don't think we can afford to invite all of them. My part of the guest list goes from 51 to 20 just by only inviting my aunt and uncle :neutral: I do feel like my cousins would understand, btw. We are not doing adults-only because our own 4 yo will be there, I want my nieces there, etc.

For those of you with large families and lower budgets, what did you do? Is it rude to only invite my aunt and uncle? If it matters, my cousins are all adults, and we are leaning towards a small wedding and then having a large lunch or party (that doesn't come with the wedding premium) for everyone later on. I know it's our day, but I also don't want to hurt anyone. Thank you!

Re: Large families... etiquette, not inviting cousins?

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    Hi all. Newly engaged and working on developing a budget and guest list. We are probably honestly looking at $10K or less, and I know our guest list size affects that by a lot. FH and I fully know that we simply cannot have a 100+ person wedding, and we tend to prefer smaller crowds anyway.

    I have a large extended family -- my aunt and uncle have 6 kids, and 5 of those kids have families with anywhere from 3-5 kids themselves. I grew up being around my cousins all the time, but in total honesty, I just don't think we can afford to invite all of them. My part of the guest list goes from 51 to 20 just by only inviting my aunt and uncle :neutral: I do feel like my cousins would understand, btw. We are not doing adults-only because our own 4 yo will be there, I want my nieces there, etc.

    For those of you with large families and lower budgets, what did you do? Is it rude to only invite my aunt and uncle? If it matters, my cousins are all adults, and we are leaning towards a small wedding and then having a large lunch or party (that doesn't come with the wedding premium) for everyone later on. I know it's our day, but I also don't want to hurt anyone. Thank you!
    You're fine to invite just your aunt and uncle. What you want to do is invite in circles; so your child is a part of your family, that child stands alone. Your and your partner's nieces and nephews comprise a circle, your and your partner's aunts and uncles comprise a circle, your adult cousins comprise a circle, the cousins' children comprise a circle. Think of these as concentric circles with you, your partner, and child in the center and the others falling farther and farther from you. The people most important to you will be in the closer circles and less close people will be farther away, and everyone in a circle will have some commonality that puts them there. You decide where to draw the line as to which circles fall within the invite list and those that fall outside of it.
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    There is no etiquette that says you have to invite family out to a certain level. It's totally fine to invite aunts/uncles but not first cousins. 

    The only thing to be careful about would be if you were inviting some but not all cousins. It's still not an etiquette blunder, but you risk hurting feelings when you invite some but not all. 
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    I have had first cousins get married who have not invited me; that's okay.

    I have had more first cousins who invited me, but not our kids. Also totally okay and understandable.

    It's the circles thing. It's okay to say that you and your siblings get to bring their children, but your cousins don't. Some of them may not want to find childcare and will decline, but it shouldn't be offensive, as long as all the cousins get the same treatment.
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    Hi all. Newly engaged and working on developing a budget and guest list. We are probably honestly looking at $10K or less, and I know our guest list size affects that by a lot. FH and I fully know that we simply cannot have a 100+ person wedding, and we tend to prefer smaller crowds anyway.

    I have a large extended family -- my aunt and uncle have 6 kids, and 5 of those kids have families with anywhere from 3-5 kids themselves. I grew up being around my cousins all the time, but in total honesty, I just don't think we can afford to invite all of them. My part of the guest list goes from 51 to 20 just by only inviting my aunt and uncle :neutral: I do feel like my cousins would understand, btw. We are not doing adults-only because our own 4 yo will be there, I want my nieces there, etc.

    For those of you with large families and lower budgets, what did you do? Is it rude to only invite my aunt and uncle? If it matters, my cousins are all adults, and we are leaning towards a small wedding and then having a large lunch or party (that doesn't come with the wedding premium) for everyone later on. I know it's our day, but I also don't want to hurt anyone. Thank you!

    It is absolutely appropriate to decide to have a small wedding and reception. 

    I'm not really clear on what you meant by the bolded statement.  What would not be appropriate is to have a second, "non premium" reception on another day for those not invited to the wedding.

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    You may arrange an indoor wedding while inviting your guests to save money on your wedding budget. My wedding was held indoors in a beautiful wedding venue found after extensive research, and everything stayed within our budget. The location was convenient and spacious for the guest, and the atmosphere was lovely. The event, decorations, and luncheon were all within our budget, and the guests had a good time as well. Look for places that provide banquet services and book ahead of time to get a discount.
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    Totally agree with MobKaz and Flantastic.  The wedding reception happens on the same day, after the wedding ceremony, and the wedding witnesses go to the reception.  It's not appropriate to have a "large lunch or party" held on a different day with different people - that looks like a "gift collection event."  

    I know someone two different people who planned out of town weddings so that they could send the invitation to all 300 people - but would only have to pay for a 50-person reception, and then those other non-attending people would be expected to go to one of the lower-cost, non-premium "gift collection"/"wedding adjacent" parties.  One of those people had THREE gift-collection parties because she had lived in three parts of the country.

    Here is an acceptable after-wedding recognition:  If your family or his family are ALREADY having a family event... like if the whole family is going to someone's house for Thanksgiving or July 4... someone could give a toast to you newlyweds.  Or you could host a party - NOT for you but for a regular holiday celebration - and someone could give a toast to you.  But you can't host a separate wedding reception after the REAL wedding reception.
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    We had to be pretty brutal with our guest list and had a lot of family dynamics to deal with. First, we did not invite any family members from my or my fiance's step-parents' families. It's a little sticky on my end since my step cousins have all invited me to their weddings but these were like blowout six figure weddings and we just don't have the budget. 2 of my aunts and my cousins on my dad's side are invited, knowing one wouldn't be able to come and the cousin's similarly are 50-50 at best. My fiance's aunts/uncles are invited but we know won't be coming (maybe one will). A handful of his cousins are invited but only those we actually speak with/interact with (we threw them into the "friend" category for ease). Most people have been understanding. I feel like it will eventually be an issue with my SM's family but whatever, there's lots of drama there already.

    TBH it helps that we're having a destination wedding with very limited venue space so it's an easy justification (immediate family and close friends only). We're still at close to 100 people invited but that's just how large our families are. We're also having a "sequel" reception back in our home town and so we're throwing the extended family invites to that. FWIW, at least where I live, it's cheaper to rent a castle in Scotland for 3 days (including airfare) than it is to have a single-day wedding here. DC's the worst.
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