How to save money for the wedding

DisneyFirefly

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Aug 25, 2009
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My boyfriend proposed last week (:cloud9:) and now we're engaged. We both very much want to do a Disney wedding and have since before we even met. I've been keeping an eye on this board since I was with an ex (long story), so I have a general idea of how much it's going to cost us, and I'm well aware that the prices will go up by 2016. I've also requested the initial information packet from DFTW and will be buying Carrie's e-book when I get my next paycheck.

We're looking at October 2016 because next year is just going to be absolutely ridiculous, given that I'm going on externship (I'm actually interviewing with Disney in about eight weeks), graduating school, and we're planning to move down to Florida once my externship is done. Disney's also my dream job and there's a school in the area that has a program DF wants to try to get into, since he'd like to get into animation. So, yeah, we have a lot of personal connection to Disney :lmao:

Putting the date two years from now also gives us more time to save money, given that we both work in low-paying jobs at the moment. He's full time, but I can't work more than about twenty hours a week, since I'm in school full time. We've decided that if we can't afford it, we'll pursue something a little less expensive, but this is what we really want, so we're going to give it a shot.

So... Any suggestions for how to save up some money so we can hopefully have our Disney wedding? :bride:
 
I'm in a similar situation to you. I'm planning a wedding for September 2017 and trying to figure out how much I need to save. What I've done so far is go through the process of figuring out how much minimum I will need for the wedding. Once I knew that I looked at my finances, I saw how much I made each month, then subtracted utilities, rent, and such. Then I looked at about how much I spend on food and transport and some entertainment. Once I knew how much money was left after that I saw how much I could save a month and if that would be enough.

I've had to cut back some on fun things, having a couple weekends in rather then going out. I try every month to meet my minimum saving goal, and if I have extra left over then that can go towards if I want extras at the wedding. Another thing I would suggest is seeing how much you can save on the wedding budget, the passporters book had some good tips in it.
 
I'll just let you know the experience my wife and I had planning our Disney wedding. This was a destination wedding for us as we are from Texas.

At the time we got engaged we had been together for 7 years, and we decided to plan the wedding date for 5 years later (mostly because that's when our post-grad education would be complete.) So we saved for five years. Our minimum was 15K for a Friday wedding in September (Saturdays were 20K I believe.) This was doable for us over five years of saving, but things happen in life unfortunately. In those five years my wife's mother passed away, my father went through serious health problems, and my wife's father went through two open heart surgeries. So money because secondary in a lot of ways, but we didn't change the wedding date.

The result was a lot of stress (in fact my wife made a post on here while at the height of the stress and she kind of had a mini freak-out, which resulted in her getting banned, I kind of hope the mod's would be willing to lift the ban?) and we really thought who weren't going to make it for a while, but things changed in a number of fortunate ways for us:

1. The guest went way down as more people were unable to make it. Our guest shrunk from 100 to 50+ (I can't remember the final guest count, as we had people we literally cancelled at the last second.) This saved us over 10K in food expenditures.

2. We cancelled a lot of the extra frills, went with a more basic package.

3. We took down the floral arrangements to a smaller arrangement (they weren't huge to begin with).

4. We changed some of the food options to a cheaper option.

5. We used a family friend who was a DJ to DJ our wedding, this brought down the entertainment budget from 1,500 to 965(?).

6. We didn't add a lot to the ceremony, used their organist, who did a great job!

That being said, they really took our pennies and stretched them big time (you can see some pictures on my "One Year Later" thread.) It was an incredibly magical day and it was way, way more than we expected. We had a blast and would totally do it again.

Most importantly, and although not all coordinators are as great as ours, Carol, was, your coordinator can help! If you are stressing over money let her give you tips to help you save on things. For example, Carol gave us the tip to close the bar one half hour into the reception and close one half hour before it ended, this saved us a full hour on our beer and wine package which was a big savings! You'd be surprised what you can find in the budget with your coordinator's help! :wizard:
 
Those are some really good tips! I especially like the one about the bar, that can save a big chunk. The first half hour people are usually slowly filing in and chatting and the last half hour everyone is winding down and finishing their drinks, so that would be a prime time to cut back. I'll be keeping that in mind for my wedding. I'm glad you had such a nice coordinator who worked to save you money, I hope I get someone like her when our time comes!

When you mentioned the outside DJ it made me remember another good tip that goes with that. When choosing your location, check if they let you bring in outside people (like floral, music, photography, etc). It might be a little more work bringing in outside people, but sometimes it can save you money. I've read of a lot of brides bringing in their own materials (like centerpieces, bouquets, party favors) and those that hired outside companies, and they saved a good bit.

Also for my plans we're having an early wedding on a Monday and then having a brunch reception. Weekdays are cheaper typically, brunch is also a cheaper option. Sure it means an early start to the day, but if it means I can afford my Dream Wedding I'm okay with it for one day.
 

Those are some really good tips! I especially like the one about the bar, that can save a big chunk. The first half hour people are usually slowly filing in and chatting and the last half hour everyone is winding down and finishing their drinks, so that would be a prime time to cut back. I'll be keeping that in mind for my wedding. I'm glad you had such a nice coordinator who worked to save you money, I hope I get someone like her when our time comes!

When you mentioned the outside DJ it made me remember another good tip that goes with that. When choosing your location, check if they let you bring in outside people (like floral, music, photography, etc). It might be a little more work bringing in outside people, but sometimes it can save you money. I've read of a lot of brides bringing in their own materials (like centerpieces, bouquets, party favors) and those that hired outside companies, and they saved a good bit.

Also for my plans we're having an early wedding on a Monday and then having a brunch reception. Weekdays are cheaper typically, brunch is also a cheaper option. Sure it means an early start to the day, but if it means I can afford my Dream Wedding I'm okay with it for one day.


Absolutely, no one noticed the bar being closed, because they were coming from the pre-reception room to the ballroom, they all already had drinks anyway, and had water on the tables so no one even got for a drink for a while, and nobody noticed or complained when we closed the bar a half hour early. It was a great tip.

I'll say this about outside vendors: When I got the floral budget I decided to check and see if I could do better with outside vendors. When I got price quotes I went back to our floral coordinator at Disney and we discussed it...and I'll just say it ended up not being an issue, and we stuck with the Disney floral. :rolleyes1

The DJ was free for us because it was a family friend, but Disney did a great job with working with him. He had never done a Disney wedding before and as far as I know everything went smoothly. However we did pay for his room in the end, as a showing of our appreciation.

The only other outside vendor we used was Randy Chapman who was AWESOME and gave us a great deal on photos. We didn't use any special photoshops our anything, but the pictures are beautiful and he was great!

We also did a Disney Cruise honeymoon that left the next day, which was a wonderful experience as well! We paid for that before anything, because we booked it well in advance and we told ourselves if nothing else, we're getting on this boat! :lmao:
 
Thanks for the tips! We were actually planning to do some of the things you guys have both mentioned (weekday wedding, breakfast or brunch reception, and at a non-park location), but we're also planning to have a dry wedding, which cuts out the bar entirely. There are some alcoholics in my family and I don't want to deal with it at our wedding. We agreed that we'd just do a champagne toast. And besides, if we have a breakfast or brunch wedding, who's really going to want more than a glass of champagne?

We're hoping to keep the guest list down. We think we've got it complete and it's at less than 150 people (we also haven't asked the parents for their lists yet), but it's also separated into "must have's" and "only if we have room to spare". The food might be an issue, since we're both foodies, but we'll figure it out.

I'm also not too big on floral, so I'll likely just give them a number and tell them to do with it what they will, just make it pretty.

I would like to see if we can find an outside photographer that we like. I LOVE the Roots, but they're just too expensive. Not really a fan of Randy Chapman's work (I think it's all the edited shots I've seen, they're just not my cup of tea).

Honestly, it's the saving FOR the wedding we're concerned about. I did some googling this morning on my way to class (waiting for it to start, need my computer today :lmao:) and if the minimum expenditure stays the same, we should be okay. It just depends on that. We're not going to be receiving any help from either set of parents, except for one thing, since my mom said she'd buy my dress, so we're doing this all on our own. I did the math and in order to meet the minimum, we'd need to save roughly $500 a month for the next two years. Tough, but do-able, especially once I'm out of school and working full time. I just have another six months of school and then I'm free.
 
I'm the logistics person between me and my husband, and this is what I would do:

1) Get a prediction of your wedding expenses based on head count and other peoples' expenditures. Cast your head count early and try to keep it low. Plan on a weekday morning wedding (cheaper venue and food) along with a low season and perhaps cut the bar. I ended up with a dry wedding simply because I think it's tacky to drink before 5PM, and my wedding ended before 2. Having things on a weekday will also mean some people can't make it because of work, which again trims down your head count (but don't rely on that).

2) Get an outside florist for as much as you can. I did one for all bouquets and boutonnieres, which saved me at least a couple hundred dollars.

3) Hunt now for a wedding dress you like (or a few) to get an idea of the price range you're looking at. Grab an estimate for tailoring as well, so this is all in your budget.

4) With your predicted cost in hand, estimate for inflation and add that in.

5) Now figure out your everyday budget. How much do you need for groceries, gas, and bills? Medical expenses? Look at your past expenses and see if there is any way to cut back on smaller things like going to the movies or eating out. If you don't have them, get the free point systems to grocery stores to save yourself some cash. Some grocery stores also have gas pumps that will use saved points to give you discounts.

6) With the everyday budget in hand, try to figure out how much money you can comfortably save each paycheck. Stash that money away in your account somewhere and track it separately so you can watch it grow. MAKE SURE YOU REALLY DON'T NEED THAT MONEY ELSEWHERE!

7) Cast a future prediction at the rate you have. If you're saving $100/month from now til a September 2016 wedding (just using an arbitrary month), will you have saved enough? Will you be close? How much more would you need to save?

8) Even if your prediction cast is a little short, don't worry too much. You might find one of the dresses you wanted on sale in the intervening time. You might get a windfall, or one of you might get a better-paying job. If that happens, recalculate how much you can afford to save and see if you can reach that number!

I hope this helps you with your predictions. This is how my husband and I were able to afford to visit Japan (and the Disney there!) last year, and we had a great time. We even ended up with some money left over, so our next big trip might be sooner than we thought. :)
 
I use mint.com for every day budgeting. It has helped me sooo much. It will tell you how much you are spending on food, clothing, transportation, bills, etc. You can set up goals to see how long it will take you to save up a certain amount of money. It also helps you clearly see where your money is going and where you have wiggle room to really cut back.
 
Think carefully how you want to handle floral. If you have your reception at one of the convention center ballrooms, then you can use outside floral, but then you also will have to decorate more. If you use a themed area such as Atlantic dance hall or Ariel's, then you can't use outside floral but you won't have to decorate much. We're at about $700 for disney floral, including personal floral.
 
The DJ was free for us because it was a family friend, but Disney did a great job with working with him. He had never done a Disney wedding before and as far as I know everything went smoothly. However we did pay for his room in the end, as a showing of our appreciation.

This is important- because it still cost $950 to bring in an outside DJ. A family friend working for free would save money, however if you hire an outside (non-Disney) DJ in Orlando, you still must pay the $950 outside vendor fee, plus your DJ's fee. This would put you over the amount you would pay Disney in the end.

Also, should you hire an outside DJ, remember what you pay the outside DJ will not count toward your Disney minimums. Just a few things to keep in mind!

Hope this helps :)
 
Hi,

Were currently saving too. If possible, have you thought about living on one of your wages and saving the other? It would help to ensure you have a specific amount you save. Maybe getting a tin to save in that can't be opened without a can opener?

Or giving set amounts of cash to the parents to put in a safe (if available) and make a note of how much you have saved?

Cut down on Christmas and Birthdays, only the essential people and explain why to everyone. Save any money you get from Christmas's and birthdays too.

Look at the memories collection and the escape collection? They are packages and can help you save a fortune, especially if you can get rid of select people in your wedding party by stating you have a limited number of guests and you had to pull names out of a hat :D

Mon/Tue/Wed morning and a small brunch somewhere small :)

We are also cutting down on things we don't need or use ie. downgrading sky, getting rid of un-needed direct debits ie. Gym and insurance for a laptop we barely use :)
 
Hi,

Were currently saving too. If possible, have you thought about living on one of your wages and saving the other? It would help to ensure you have a specific amount you save. Maybe getting a tin to save in that can't be opened without a can opener?

Or giving set amounts of cash to the parents to put in a safe (if available) and make a note of how much you have saved?

Cut down on Christmas and Birthdays, only the essential people and explain why to everyone. Save any money you get from Christmas's and birthdays too.

Look at the memories collection and the escape collection? They are packages and can help you save a fortune, especially if you can get rid of select people in your wedding party by stating you have a limited number of guests and you had to pull names out of a hat :D

Mon/Tue/Wed morning and a small brunch somewhere small :)

We are also cutting down on things we don't need or use ie. downgrading sky, getting rid of un-needed direct debits ie. Gym and insurance for a laptop we barely use :)

We did some of this, especially the Christmas gift/Birthday gift thing. Cancelled Cable (except for football season) and just really getting rid of non-essentials. Totally worth it. :thumbsup2
 
I'm the logistics person between me and my husband, and this is what I would do:

1) Get a prediction of your wedding expenses based on head count and other peoples' expenditures. Cast your head count early and try to keep it low. Plan on a weekday morning wedding (cheaper venue and food) along with a low season and perhaps cut the bar. I ended up with a dry wedding simply because I think it's tacky to drink before 5PM, and my wedding ended before 2. Having things on a weekday will also mean some people can't make it because of work, which again trims down your head count (but don't rely on that).

2) Get an outside florist for as much as you can. I did one for all bouquets and boutonnieres, which saved me at least a couple hundred dollars.

3) Hunt now for a wedding dress you like (or a few) to get an idea of the price range you're looking at. Grab an estimate for tailoring as well, so this is all in your budget.

4) With your predicted cost in hand, estimate for inflation and add that in.

5) Now figure out your everyday budget. How much do you need for groceries, gas, and bills? Medical expenses? Look at your past expenses and see if there is any way to cut back on smaller things like going to the movies or eating out. If you don't have them, get the free point systems to grocery stores to save yourself some cash. Some grocery stores also have gas pumps that will use saved points to give you discounts.

6) With the everyday budget in hand, try to figure out how much money you can comfortably save each paycheck. Stash that money away in your account somewhere and track it separately so you can watch it grow. MAKE SURE YOU REALLY DON'T NEED THAT MONEY ELSEWHERE!

7) Cast a future prediction at the rate you have. If you're saving $100/month from now til a September 2016 wedding (just using an arbitrary month), will you have saved enough? Will you be close? How much more would you need to save?

8) Even if your prediction cast is a little short, don't worry too much. You might find one of the dresses you wanted on sale in the intervening time. You might get a windfall, or one of you might get a better-paying job. If that happens, recalculate how much you can afford to save and see if you can reach that number!

I hope this helps you with your predictions. This is how my husband and I were able to afford to visit Japan (and the Disney there!) last year, and we had a great time. We even ended up with some money left over, so our next big trip might be sooner than we thought. :)

We've been working on the guest list. We have a rough draft, but need to talk to both sets of parents to see if there's any must have relatives that we're missing. I'd ideally like to keep the head count low, since I'm well aware that f&b is the highest chunk of the budget. Yay for working in food? We also discussed the timing of the wedding while we were on our way to my parents' house today (having dinner with them... whenever they get home) and have pretty much determined that we want either a 10am or 12pm ceremony on a weekday. I'd prefer early in the week, since those are cheaper, but he's undecided. So that at least has kept the cost low so far.

Honestly, I'm thinking about just giving them a budget for the floral and telling them to just make it pretty. Like, $800 or whatever. We'll figure it out. With the reception location we like, I'm not sure we could use outside floral anyway (we're leaning toward ADH for the reception and YCG for the ceremony).

My mom actually offered to buy my dress for me, since they're not going to be helping cover any other costs. We're going to Alfred Angelo in early November, since they have a few dresses that I really like, but I know David's Bridal has one that I like for pretty cheap. I'd rather not go there, given the way they tend to treat plus size brides, but if I have to, I have to.

We're working on the budget. We just moved in together about six weeks ago and I had a job change with a pretty big pay cut (the new job is better for my mental and physical health), so we're still figuring that out to begin with. Once I'm done with school, I'll be able to get a job paying a minimum of 30% more per hour, so it's really just a matter of finishing. Not to mention being able to work full time as opposed to part time.

Thank you for the advice! I'll discuss it with him later and we'll go from there :)

I use mint.com for every day budgeting. It has helped me sooo much. It will tell you how much you are spending on food, clothing, transportation, bills, etc. You can set up goals to see how long it will take you to save up a certain amount of money. It also helps you clearly see where your money is going and where you have wiggle room to really cut back.

I have an account on Mint, which has been pretty useful. I'll play with the functionality tomorrow, since I've got the time then. DF is hesitant to use it because he worries about identity theft.

Think carefully how you want to handle floral. If you have your reception at one of the convention center ballrooms, then you can use outside floral, but then you also will have to decorate more. If you use a themed area such as Atlantic dance hall or Ariel's, then you can't use outside floral but you won't have to decorate much. We're at about $700 for disney floral, including personal floral.

Yeah, that's what I thought. We'd like to use ADH for the reception, but we can probably go with a ballroom if our guest count drops too low to use it. So we'll likely just stick with Disney for their floral. Thank you!

This is important- because it still cost $950 to bring in an outside DJ. A family friend working for free would save money, however if you hire an outside (non-Disney) DJ in Orlando, you still must pay the $950 outside vendor fee, plus your DJ's fee. This would put you over the amount you would pay Disney in the end.

Also, should you hire an outside DJ, remember what you pay the outside DJ will not count toward your Disney minimums. Just a few things to keep in mind!

Hope this helps :)

Honestly, we'll probably just stick with one of Disney's DJ vendors. It's cheaper in the long run and one less person we have to seek out on our own. Thank you! :)

Hi,

Were currently saving too. If possible, have you thought about living on one of your wages and saving the other? It would help to ensure you have a specific amount you save. Maybe getting a tin to save in that can't be opened without a can opener?

Or giving set amounts of cash to the parents to put in a safe (if available) and make a note of how much you have saved?

Cut down on Christmas and Birthdays, only the essential people and explain why to everyone. Save any money you get from Christmas's and birthdays too.

Look at the memories collection and the escape collection? They are packages and can help you save a fortune, especially if you can get rid of select people in your wedding party by stating you have a limited number of guests and you had to pull names out of a hat :D

Mon/Tue/Wed morning and a small brunch somewhere small :)

We are also cutting down on things we don't need or use ie. downgrading sky, getting rid of un-needed direct debits ie. Gym and insurance for a laptop we barely use :)

We're currently basically living on his wage with mine supplementing. He makes at least double what I do a month, so he insisted on taking care of most of the rent. Unfortunately, I've also got my own personal bills, which are my own responsibility to take care of at this time, so that's where a lot of my income goes right now. He's talked about picking up a second job and saving that for the wedding, but we're not sure.

If I were to give my parents money for safekeeping, I'd never see it again. My dad and I do not have the best relationship, especially where money's concerned.

We've pretty much already decided to cut down on holidays as much as we can. We're working on it :)

Unfortunately, neither of us are particularly thrilled with the idea of having that small of a wedding. We both have a lot of people we'd like to have there, so the Wishes option is really what works best for us.

Neither of us have a gym membership and I don't have insurance. We have cable internet because he's an online gamer and I need to have access for school. The only revolving payments we really have, aside from rent and the one utility we pay for, are my cell phone bill and the Netflix (downgraded to just streaming, and we use it ALL the time). We've pretty much cut back on everything we're willing to do without.

We did some of this, especially the Christmas gift/Birthday gift thing. Cancelled Cable (except for football season) and just really getting rid of non-essentials. Totally worth it. :thumbsup2

Yeah, we've pretty much already done that. We didn't have cable TV to start with, but we got a pretty cheap internet plan when we moved in last month. It's hard to figure out what else to cut when you don't have much else you CAN cut without making yourself miserable.
 
Have you looked at seeing if you can make financially better choices with your grocery budget? I know we've been focusing on making meals that are less expensive and last us a while to get some more money into our wedding budget. We're both vegetarian, so it's hard to find fruits and vegetables that have coupons, but we do try and eat what is in season. I also make almost everything from scratch (we eat a lot of beans, lentils, chickpeas, etc). Making these changes has reduced our grocery budget (including non food items) by about 20 to 30 dollars a week, and that adds up after a while. It is a bit more effort, but if you're really looking for ways to pull money from your budget, it's worth going over some of your grocery receipts and seeing what you can do different.
 
We have been, actually. We've been shopping based on the ad as much as we can and keeping things simple. We don't go for more expensive products and tend to buy based on the per ounce/per item price. The store by our apartment had chicken on sale really cheap a few weeks ago, so we stocked up on that and have been finding different ways to prepare it. It's just been a pain lately because, as I mentioned previously in the thread, we just moved in six weeks ago and have been finishing up setting up our kitchen. Basically, everything just hit all at once for us :lmao:
 
One thing I would suggest is finding an account with a decent amount of interest to keep your money in. I have an Ally account, and it has good interest. That way you already have that money set aside somewhere else. Even though it wouldn't be a lot of interest it would still be a little more money you would be getting.

Also, maybe decide you're going to set aside say $10 from each pay check right now. Even this small amount would help in the long run.
 
One thing I would suggest is finding an account with a decent amount of interest to keep your money in. I have an Ally account, and it has good interest. That way you already have that money set aside somewhere else. Even though it wouldn't be a lot of interest it would still be a little more money you would be getting.

Also, maybe decide you're going to set aside say $10 from each pay check right now. Even this small amount would help in the long run.

I'll suggest that to him when he gets home from work tonight :) Thanks!
 
I'll say this about outside vendors: When I got the floral budget I decided to check and see if I could do better with outside vendors. When I got price quotes I went back to our floral coordinator at Disney and we discussed it...and I'll just say it ended up not being an issue, and we stuck with the Disney floral.

Wait wait wait....you can ask Disney to be competitive on floral? How did you approach that situation? I feel so scared to ask Disney to work with me on anything...since it's sort of their way or the highway as far as prices go. :/ I have decided that even if I could do floral cheaper outside of Disney, I'm trying to stick with them for the floral because I don't want to worry about ANYTHING on my wedding day (including the florist getting lost or something on the way to deliver my flowers). I told Disney that I wanted to spend no more than $500 on my bouquet, my two bridesmaids' bouquets, and a boutonniere for my groom and his best man. They told me up front they'd be pretty small...but I'm okay with that. I'm fairly petite, so a smaller bouquet is not bad.

Still...if I can play interested in an outside floral provider and Disney is willing to compete...that could save some moolah....LOL!


As for saving money....we've been saving for almost two years for our wedding too (seems to be a common thread here). We got engaged in December 2012, and will be saving (and giving Disney money as fast as it comes in) all the way to our wedding date of December 8, 2014. :) It's kinda sad...but oh well.

Tips for saving...you've about got it. Watch every penny. What I would probably suggest (and it sounds like you're already kind of doing it)--figure out how much you have to set aside each month to set your goal. Next step? Set up a dedicated automatic transfer from you bank account into a separate "wedding account." Don't mess with that account for any reason (except, in dire emergencies, of course).

For me, I set up an Excel spreadsheet where I have all my necessary bills each month and how much they are (since stuff like my student loan payments don't change), the savings amount to the Disney account, etc., so that I knew just how much I had left at the end of each month. Then, I just do what I can to live within that amount. That may be hard if your monthly income is variable...but if you're full-time, it should be fairly predictable to be able to do some kind of arrangement.

It's amazing how excited I get over the 17th of the month (the day I have my transfer set up into my wedding account). Not only do I see that account get higher each month (exciting!), but the higher that account gets, the more interest in accrues (that .25% or whatever that most credit unions offer...joke).

Other savings tips (may not be an option until you're out of school)--second job. I'm working full-time and doing grad school, so a part-time job isn't an option for me at the moment...otherwise, I'd be doing it (even something little like a fast food gig).

Good luck with savings! I would count on the minimum expenditure going up...but I hope it doesn't for your sake!!!! Dream Disney wedding is worth it! :)

Tiffiny
 
As for saving money....we've been saving for almost two years for our wedding too (seems to be a common thread here). We got engaged in December 2012, and will be saving (and giving Disney money as fast as it comes in) all the way to our wedding date of December 8, 2014. :) It's kinda sad...but oh well.

Yeah, that definitely seems to be a common thread around here. He and I were actually talking about this the other night and it turns out that both of us, years ago, had started saving for an eventual Disney wedding and then stopped because "no one would want to marry me". YEARS before we ever even knew the other existed. I found that kind of funny.

Tips for saving...you've about got it. Watch every penny. What I would probably suggest (and it sounds like you're already kind of doing it)--figure out how much you have to set aside each month to set your goal. Next step? Set up a dedicated automatic transfer from you bank account into a separate "wedding account." Don't mess with that account for any reason (except, in dire emergencies, of course).

The only issue with automatic transfer, at least for me, is that my payday is never the same. I get paid on the 7th and 22nd of every month, unless that date falls on a weekend or holiday, in which case I get paid the weekday before. I work for a very small bakery (there's literally only four people that work there, including the two owners), so I also don't have direct deposit and have to make side trips to the bank. Then there's the fact that every six weeks, I have a recurring payment of $90 because I'm having a tattoo removed (also thanks to Disney :lmao:). We're figuring this out as we go, we just haven't had much time to talk about budgeting at length over the last few days. We're basically on opposite schedules right now, since he works in the evening and I have class in the mornings and mainly work on the weekends because of the hours my bakery is open.

For me, I set up an Excel spreadsheet where I have all my necessary bills each month and how much they are (since stuff like my student loan payments don't change), the savings amount to the Disney account, etc., so that I knew just how much I had left at the end of each month. Then, I just do what I can to live within that amount. That may be hard if your monthly income is variable...but if you're full-time, it should be fairly predictable to be able to do some kind of arrangement.

I am seriously so glad I don't have to make student loan payments yet. I'm financing most of this degree (culinary school is expensive :sad:), but I'm also eligible for a lot of financial aid through the state, which has been helpful. But yeah, his income is pretty steady, since his hours only vary by maybe 2-5 per week. He's looking into getting a second job, but it depends on if his full time one will work with him on it. Once I'm done with school, I'll be working full time (and, if everything goes according to plan, for Disney). It's just getting through these next six and a half months.

It's amazing how excited I get over the 17th of the month (the day I have my transfer set up into my wedding account). Not only do I see that account get higher each month (exciting!), but the higher that account gets, the more interest in accrues (that .25% or whatever that most credit unions offer...joke).

That's a good thing, though :)

Other savings tips (may not be an option until you're out of school)--second job. I'm working full-time and doing grad school, so a part-time job isn't an option for me at the moment...otherwise, I'd be doing it (even something little like a fast food gig).

Yeah, a second job really isn't an option right now unless I was able to find a legit work from home thing. I'm in class Monday through Friday from 10-2 (except this next six week block, because my school messed with our schedules because they lost two instructors, so I'll be 6am-10am), then getting to work from school, or having to stop at home to drop off my tool bag depending on the place... It's kind of a nightmare right now. What are you studying in grad school, if you don't mind my asking?

Good luck with savings! I would count on the minimum expenditure going up...but I hope it doesn't for your sake!!!! Dream Disney wedding is worth it! :)

Oh, believe me, I know. I've been lurking on the wedding boards since I was with this one ex of mine, which was about five years ago. I've seen them go up quite a bit, so I already warned DF that the minimum will likely go up. I hope it doesn't, but... Yeah. We'll see :)
 












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