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    shared life projects

    Wedding budget without friction: a clear method for two

    A simple way to set priorities, cap the budget, and keep wedding money talks calm.

    The short answer

    A calm wedding budget starts with shared priorities, a realistic cap, and a clear split rule. It’s a joint project, not a competition.

    Rule of thumb

    If it’s not a shared priority, it shouldn’t be a major line item.

    Minimal numeric example

    Total budget: 12,000 €

    • Priorities (venue + food): 7,000 €
    • Wishes (photographer + music): 3,000 €
    • Extras (decor + gifts): 2,000 € Split 50/50 or proportional based on income.

    Steps to keep it calm

    1. Pick 3 shared priorities.
    2. Set a firm cap (maximum, not “ideal”).
    3. Split the budget into priorities / wishes / extras.
    4. Choose the split rule.
    5. Keep a 10% buffer for surprises.

    If / Then

    • If one person wants “more”, list acceptable trade‑offs.
    • If the budget feels too high, cut one big line instead of five small ones.
    • If family helps, write the amount and purpose clearly.

    The lines that often grow quietly

    • Outfits, rings, beauty.
    • “Invisible” items: stationery, delivery, rentals.
    • Final‑week extras: tips, last‑minute fixes.

    Those are not bad, just easy to underestimate.

    10‑minute budget check

    • Is the cap still realistic?
    • Did one line grow without agreement?
    • Are extras still within limits?
    • Is the 10% buffer intact?

    What makes it easier

    • One shared budget view.
    • A short monthly check‑in.
    • A clear rule for extras.

    A simple trade‑off example

    If one person wants a top‑tier photographer and the other wants to stay lower, trade it for a simpler decor.
    One named compromise prevents ten small fights.

    A calm script to align

    “Let’s pick our 3 priorities, set a hard cap, and keep a buffer.
    If we exceed it, we cut one big line item, not ten tiny ones.”

    Signs the budget is healthy

    • You can explain it in two minutes.
    • The top priorities haven’t changed in a month.
    • Decisions feel calm, not tense.

    Common mistakes

    • Letting “extras” accumulate without noticing.
    • Changing the cap every time a new idea appears.
    • Treating the budget as fixed rather than a living agreement.

    If the budget feels too big

    Shrink one major line item first (venue, guest count, or catering).
    Cutting a big cost is calmer than squeezing ten small details.

    Mini FAQ

    Do we need a joint account? No. A shared budget works even with separate accounts.

    What if one person pays more? Proportional splits reduce friction without guilt.

    Related guides

    Next practical step (no pressure)

    Write your 3 shared priorities and a hard cap. Everything else depends on that.

    budget
    couple
    communication
    organization
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