" Have the wedding party YOU require — not the company you feel like you have to have . "

Now that we’ve officially enteredwedding season, many couples may be gearing up to get hitched. And, while planning their nuptials, people will have to decide which traditions they’ll follow and which they’ll forgo.

I recentlyaskedmembers of theBuzzFeed Communityto share all of the wedding “rules” they think people should ditch in 2023. Additionally, redditoru/starskyandbutchasked the r/AskWomen subreddit which"wedding tradition irks you the most.“Here are some of the responses people left:

— lindseybarrett

2.“I would say do what you want; it’s your money. Normalize child-free weddings, normalize setting boundaries on guests, etc. If you are paying for it, you get to decide.”

— kandidlykristen

3.“Let’s make it more normal to have bridal parties with friends, regardless of gender.”

— yesbutalsonoway

4.“You don’t need a huge bridal party! Especially if you’re just adding them out of obligation. All of the couple’s siblings don’t need to be packed in at the altar. They’ll be just fine as guests. I cannot tell you how stressful it is for the two or three members of the bridal party who are actually helping with everything to have to make up the slack for the members that don’t really want to be there. Have the wedding party YOU want — not the party you feel like you have to have.”

— gabbriellegattis

5.“I’m getting married on Nov. 2, 2024. One thing we decided to do was, to hell with seating charts. We’re going to have a sign that pretty much says, ‘We’re all family now. Sit wherever.'”

— princesst86

6.“Having your parents pay for the wedding, either the bride or the groom or both. We paid for our wedding with a couple thousand bucks. It turned out great, and we did it ourselves. Also, one wedding tradition — registries — should go the way of the buffalo.”

— lofihifi

7.“The father, or any family member for that matter, ‘giving away’ the bride. It’s sexist and creepy, and it makes it seem like a woman is something men can own.”

— reeseflora

8.“Bouquet toss, especially when you are forcing and calling out who is single and making them participate. Maybe they don’t want to get married, or maybe the thought of actually catching the bouquet and being embarrassed in front of your friends and family doesn’t sound like fun to them.”

— jlemay042

9.“Having so many parties leading up to the wedding. I never had an engagement party, a rehearsal dinner, a bachelorette/bachelor party, or even a honeymoon at that. I had a small ceremony and a dinner afterwards and was very happy with it. It’s so expensive and will only get more expensive with inflation. To me there is nothing special about having huge parties and then having your wedding day. Seems exhausting, honestly.”

— emarshall12346

10.“Any of it, really. ‘Tradition’ should not dictate how you plan your special day, unless that’s what you want. Definitely don’t be pressured into a white or white-adjacent dress if that’s not what you’d feel best in. Don’t like cake? Serve a pie or cookies! Would rather not have alcohol there? Don’t. People can either deal with it or not be there. And anything that’s rooted in patriarchy? Go ahead and throw that right out the window if you want.”

— panda_13

11.“Let’s ditch the garter toss because it’s pretty strange IMO.”

— ltang

12.“Tux rentals. Don’t force your groomsmen to spend hundreds of dollars on a tuxedo that they will wear one time and have to return. For the cost of a tux rental, you can buy a pretty nice suit that the person will then get to keep. If you do black suits, someone might already have a black suit and be able to just wear that. Then, all you have to do is wear matching shirts and ties.”

— robert_dunder

13.“Do what you and your partner want. Don’t allow family to control what you decide to do just because they are helping financially. Weddings aren’t just for weekends. If a specific date is important to you, if people want to truly support your union, they will make it.”

— iismoogle

14.“Elaborate paper save-the-date invitations. It’s wasteful, people aren’t going to keep them anyway, and they’re stupid expensive for paper. We sent out save the dates on vintage postcards and then did all the follow-up/RSVP through the wedding website and email!”

— ahanron

15.“The rule that weddings have to be insanely expensive. Expensive weddings are good for people with unlimited budgets, but most people who are not TV or movie characters do not have an unlimited budget. Being a wedding guest also should not cost an arm and a leg.”

— troper

16.“Bride’s family pays for the wedding. There are two people in the relationship, so why? If you have parents paying for it, it should be a shared cost. Realistically, I think the bride and groom should pay for their own wedding. Either way, the cost shouldn’t fall on a single party.”

— uracil / SnowyLittleDeer

17.“Honestly, the idea of having bridesmaids really rubs me the wrong way. I can’t help but feel like it’s super cliquey. A wedding shouldn’t involve a popularity contest.”

— u/24Meows

18.“In my family, you get married in a church. If you don’t, then you aren’t ‘really married.’ Why does being married in a church matter? PS — guess that means I’m not really married, because I didn’t get married in a church. And yes, I am the only one in my family that didn’t get married in a church.”

— u/_Pebcak _

19.“When people find it so offensive when guests wear white. I don’t remember what anyone was wearing on my wedding day besides myself, my husband, and my kids. I wouldn’t have cared a bit if someone had worn white.”

— u / mvmvfozx

20.“The clinking of the glasses/kiss thing. Let the couple have their evening without having to stop every 10 seconds to perform for you.”

— u / im_not_bovvered

21.“The obligation of inviting people who you don’t normally spend time with, or who have never even met your significant other!”

— atomic number 92 / cold_bananas _

22.“Not sure if it counts since it’s not specifically a wedding thing, but the groom asking any sort of permission or approval from the bride’s father (or other family if the father isn’t alive/in the picture — but asking the father definitely annoys me the most). The bride is her own independent person and should be able to make decisions for herself, and also, her response is more important than any other. I would personally be immeasurably offended if my hypothetical fiancé asked my father for permission, to the point that it would mean an immediate no from me to the proposal and maybe even lead to abreakupcompletely.”

— u / anthyllisaurea

23.“Not really a tradition, but the idea that how you dress up can’t upstage the bride. I’m not gonna wear white or show a bunch of skin, but I’m gonna look GOOD. Don’t you want your guests and bridesmaids to look fabulous? If I ever have a wedding, my girlfriends better serve me runway looks. Give me high fashion! I want drama! And if the bride has a problem with my great sense of style, then maybe she should have tried harder.”

— u / mahalerin

24.“Not including the moms. For my wedding, I had both my parents walk me down the aisle.”

— u / chelseahardass

25.“Stopping the ceremony andasking if anyone objects. Why?”

— u / tekease247

26.“Taking alllllll the pictures after the ceremony. It is really rude to make people wait hours because of not letting your spouse see you — ‘bad luck’ and all that. I love the new ‘first look’ tradition being done in private and, also, getting to knock out a few pictures.”

— u / PicnicLife

27.“The smashing of the cake in each other’s faces. This is rude and uncivilized behavior. Not to mention that it ruins the bride’s makeup and has the potential to ruin their beautiful bride and groom outfits. So childish!”

— u / OrionJupiter

28.“The idea that you are entitled to a ‘perfect’ day. Perfection is unrealistic. Try to aim for fun and memorable instead. Something is probably not going to go exactly as you wanted it to, and unless it’s something major, letting it slide with grace and humor will serve you better than tantrums and crying.”

— angels4d4906ef4

Note : Some response have been edited for distance and/or clarity .

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A woman in a pink dress picks out food at an outdoor buffet

Two brides laugh with friends at their wedding

Tables and chairs are set up inside a wedding reception venue

A bride locks arms with her father as she prepares to walk down the aisle

A bride throws a bouquet toward guests at her wedding reception

A garter sits on a wooden table

A couple uses their laptop together at their living room table

A bride and her bridesmaids celebrate with champagne

Wedding guests clap for the bride and groom at their reception

Two men kiss during a toast at their wedding reception

A woman wearing a backless pink and orange gown smiles

An officiant marries a couple at a beach wedding

A groom and bride put wedding cake on each other's faces at their wedding reception