Wedding costs create financial strain but few regrets, new report reveals

Wedding costs create financial strain but few regrets, new report reveals
Younger generations are making tough choices about their life milestones.
SEP 15, 2025

Getting married has long been a major financial milestone, whether the cost of the wedding falls on the father of the bride, as is traditional, or in modern times it is financed by the couple themselves.

But a new report reveals that while weddings remain a joyful milestone, the financial and emotional toll of planning them continues to weigh heavily on couples, particularly younger generations, and highlighting the importance of robust financial planning well ahead of the big day.

According to The Real Cost of ‘I Do’ survey from Ally Bank, nearly half of respondents (45%) cited managing expenses as the most stressful part of wedding planning, a greater source of conflict than guest lists or family involvement. Women reported slightly higher stress levels than men (47% versus 42%).

The study found that while excitement (51%) and happiness (48%) were the most common emotions tied to wedding planning, significant numbers reported anxiety (31%), overwhelm (30%), and stress (26%). Budgeting was ranked the single most important factor in planning by 55% of respondents, followed closely by the guest list and venue.

The report also highlighted evolving attitudes toward prenuptial agreements. Among Gen Z, 26% said they had signed a prenup and 30% considered one before marriage. However, more than half (55%) of Gen Z and millennials overall said they were unlikely to discuss or pursue a prenup, reflecting lingering discomfort with the topic.

When it comes to broader financial discussions, gaps persist, with 58% of respondents comfortable talking about long-term goals, but only 38% of unmarried Gen Z and millennials feeling comfortable disclosing debt.

Conversations about starting a family, purchasing a home, or career ambitions also ranked low among unmarried couples. Married participants, however, reported far greater ease in discussing finances, suggesting communication improves over time.

Wedding expenses are also shaping financial futures as more than half of respondents said costs would delay major goals such as building savings, paying down debt, or creating an emergency fund.

Even so, most married couples did not regret their spending with only saying they wished they had spent less, indicating that the emotional value of the day often outweighs its financial consequences.

Latest News

Supreme Court bars activist investors from suing funds under investor law
Supreme Court bars activist investors from suing funds under investor law

Saba pushed; the justices pushed back - and the SEC keeps the gavel.

North Carolina court strikes down wealth firm's non-compete and non-solicit as overbroad
North Carolina court strikes down wealth firm's non-compete and non-solicit as overbroad

Two restrictive covenants gone in one ruling - and the drafting flaw is everywhere.

The wealth trap: Why feeling rich matters more than being rich
The wealth trap: Why feeling rich matters more than being rich

Clients' everyday realities, anxieties, and aspirations naturally change as they go up the wealth scale – and that has profound implications for advisors helping them find what "enough" really means.

Orion's new King of Prussia hub reflects 'AI-native workforce' strategy
Orion's new King of Prussia hub reflects 'AI-native workforce' strategy

The RIA technology giant's new office features a fitness center, café and outdoor community spaces, including a beehive, picnic area and herb garden for over 100 employees.

Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades
Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades

Liquidity risk overtakes access as the top concern for E&Fs as private markets dominate portfolios.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.