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19 answers

Regardless of who is paying for the wedding, regardless of customs, it would be considerate of you to ask your parents who they would like to invite to your wedding. Of course, who they would like to invite should be people that you know too as well, since if they are close friends of your parents they would know you too.

Just imagine if you and your significant other went to someone else's wedding without knowing anyone, it would not be as enjoyable than if you knew people there.

A wedding is a celebration of your union but it's also a party where you would want your guests to enjoy themselves. Your parents certainly would have a lot more fun and joy if they have friends there to share your parents' happiness of their daughter getting married.

2006-08-19 11:51:27 · answer #1 · answered by justagal 2 · 0 0

It is custom to ask your parents input on the guest list. They are paying for it after all.
If you're only having a small wedding, allowing only so many guests, they'll know what family to invite and what family they can leave off the list.
It might make it a little easier on you.

2006-08-19 10:25:21 · answer #2 · answered by Val 2 · 0 0

I think having a parents input on the guest list ins invaluable. They know more about who should come (IE family wise) versus you. The problem would come if they invite Friends of theirs that you dont know. I say, get the suggestions from them and send out your own invites. If you dont know someone by no mean should they be expected to attend. They have no connection to you with the exception of the parent, so its not that important.

I have to work with my fiances mom because I do not know his whole family and she does obviously. They are all invited, but not her personal Friends (that i havent met)

Good luck and congrats!

2006-08-19 09:54:18 · answer #3 · answered by glorymomof3 6 · 0 0

Definitely, but it is also customary to give them limits if you already know how many people you want to show up. Hint: About half to two-thirds of them actually will show up, depending on the closeness of the people you include and the date.

Parents are a great resource for determining which family members to invite and which to leave out. In most families, this is a difficult decision and takes days, if not weeks!

2006-08-19 10:01:31 · answer #4 · answered by Jenny Alice 4 · 0 0

It depends on if they are paying. What we are doing is inviting 150 people, after you take out essential mutual friends, the wedding party, and immediate family, we have 122 people left to invite (61 for each of us). We are each siting down with our family to make sure that we aren't forgetting anyone essential. Because they are paying for some of the wedding, their best friends and some collegues will be invited.

2006-08-19 10:17:43 · answer #5 · answered by emp04 5 · 0 0

Deciding on WHAT guest list? If it's your party wedding or whatever, you don't have to have your parents permission and you don't have to ask them if there is anyone they want you to invite either.

2006-08-19 09:52:41 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If they are paying for the wedding, or those plates of food, then yes, you should ask them. But, it also depends on the size of your wedding. If you are only having 25 people, do you really want strangers there?

A better bet is to give them your list and then ask them if you've forgotten anyone and let them voice their input that way.

2006-08-19 10:25:39 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i have by no ability been married, yet it really is how i might want to opt for if i became ever invited to a wedding ceremony....A) lengthy time period romantic better half so both of you could journey one mutually, so in case you adult men opt for to get wed faster or later, you do not have as a lot stagefright.Witnessing a wedding ceremony which includes your extreme romantic better 1/2 can be a staggering journey so that you'll recognize the way it feels even as it is your turn to be the major attraction; B) purely a properly prevalent staggering pal/friend, & on condition that they are good of yet another persons' second.I genuinely have some rowdy acquaintances/acquaintances, & yet another persons' wedding ceremony isn't the social gathering for a concentrated visitor to flow & remodel a suitable experience into an casual "outdoor BBQ" one.Your concentrated visitor isn't going there to get inebriated or get loose nutrition, & if it truly is the purely reason they are going, they ought to not be.As a spectator of your own acquaintances/relations wedding ceremony, you shouldn't deliver any concentrated visitor that could want to reason chaos on the shape; might want to you opt for your friends/relations to deliver unfavorable, non-compliant visitors for your wedding ceremony?

2016-11-05 04:35:48 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Of course it is, it's a family wedding. Besides family, they will have friends and colleagues they will want to invite. For years, they have probably gone to many other weddings, and will want to invite others in kind.

2006-08-19 12:15:54 · answer #9 · answered by Lydia 7 · 0 0

they have the rights to invite guests if they ask you before hand.

2006-08-19 09:52:08 · answer #10 · answered by superboredom 6 · 0 0

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