Bridesmaid Doesn't Find Out About $5K Cost of Bachelorette Trip Until She's Already There

Mar. 15, 2025

A bride celebrating her bachelorette party (stock image).Photo:Getty

woman wearing bride to be bachelorette party outfit with veil and sash drinking wine with friends

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A bridesmaid was shocked to learn that her share of a friend’s bachelorette getaway would cost her $5,000 —aftershe was already on the trip.

A friend of the bridesmaid detailed the dilemma in a recent post onReddit, writing that the bridesmaid recently attended a bride-to-be’s bachelorette celebration — a four-day weekend in New Orleans — along with nine other bridesmaids. With each bridesmaid contributing $5,000, the total cost of the trip was $50,000.

“She (understandably) was panicking about money because the entire weekend ended up costing each bridesmaid $5,000,” the friend said, before revealing, “She didn’t learn how much it would cost until she was already there.”

The friend went on to clarify that the $5,000 only covered the bachelorette trip itself, not the additional costs of serving as a bridesmaid, such as travel and a hotel for the wedding weekend, a dress and a gift for the newlyweds.

“Where do people get off asking their friends to spend such an insane amount of money?! I can’t even begin to understand!” the friend concluded the Reddit post.

Women celebrating at a bachelorette party (stock image).Getty

bride and her girl friends, having

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“I’ll never understand brides who refuse to be cognizant of their bridal party’s financial limits. Or, if they are and want an expensive bachelorette weekend, they should pay for most, if not all of it!” one person wrote.

Another commented: “If I found out just the bachelorette party was going to cost me $5K, I’d nope out of being a bridesmaid in that wedding SO HARD.”

A third person chimed in, “I barely spent $5,000 on my wedding — I cannot imagine asking someone, let alone multiple people, to spend $5k. It’s beyond.”

Still, other people argued that it was down to the bridesmaid to do her due diligence and find out the cost of the trip before agreeing to go.

“I am sorry, but when there is a trip plan, you need to be fully aware of the cost of accommodation. And how you arrive whether that be flight or driving,” someone wrote. “You need to ask the questions. Those are the two biggest expenses.”

Women clinking glasses at a bachelorette party (stock image).Getty

girls celebrate a cheers at a bachelorette party with glasses of wine

A number of commenters suggested that people need to feel comfortable declining a bachelorette trip invitation if the cost is too much for them.

“People say yes to these things and grumble about it afterwards. I don’t understand. An invitation is not a summons,” one Redditor wrote. “If you can afford it and want to go then go. You will probably have a lot of fun. If you can’t afford it, then don’t go.”

Another person commented: “An invitation is not a demand, it’s a request — one you can turn down.”

source: people.com