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Wedding & Civil Partnership
Statistics for the UK

Lancashire and North West Wedding, Civil Partnership & Disco Services

 

  • The average wedding costs around £17,001, yet 45% of couples - some 117,000 nationwide - have no financial planning to pay for the big day.

  • Wedding Guest £300: What the average Brit spends just to be a guest at a wedding.
  • wedding gift Men are the most generous guests, spending over 30 per cent extra on the wedding gift.
  • wedding gifts on ebay Women are born bargain hunters, they are three times more likely than men to find their gift on eBay.
  • Hen and Stag Night The mounting costs of the obligatory hen and stag night accounts for an added £165.
  • Meeting a partner at a wedding Romantic potential at weddings helps to offset the costs, with 1.4 million meeting a partner at a wedding.
  • Crockery and Cutlery The wedding gift of choice is revealed as the traditional sets of crockery and cutlery.
  • re-wrapping old gifts 10 per cent of UK wedding guests admit to re-wrapping old gifts and giving them as a present.

The father of the bride expects to be stung in the wallet when his special little girl walks up the aisle, with the average UK wedding costing £17,000.1 He does not, however, spare a thought for the people who will be expected to attend the wedding. A new study released, by UK debit card, Maestro, reveals that guests at the average UK wedding collectively spend around £30,000,2 that’s almost twice as much as the cost of the wedding itself.

The statistics show that the average guest can expect to spend a total of £300 on all the expenses that a wedding entails. This figure rises to £465 for those included in the pre-wedding celebrations as well as the day itself.

Not only do Britons shell out an average of £55 on the compulsory wedding gift, costs quickly mount up with the average Brit spending £90 on travel and accommodation, and close to £100 on a new outfit to impress the other guests, topped off with an envy inducing hat. In addition, guests can each expect to spend £30 on alcohol, as they toast the success of the happy couple. 3

Those in the North-East are the most wedding-fashion conscious, spending £40 more than the national average on their wedding outfits. The most generous guests to invite are Londoners, who spend £10 more on wedding gifts than everyone else.

Yet the big day is not the only expense associated with matrimony, as many Brit's also attend the pre-wedding fun that is the traditional hen and stag do. With hen and stag nights becoming more inventive than just a trip to the local pub, Brit's spend around £50 just on getting to their venue and staying overnight. No final night of singledom would be complete without the bawdy entertainment, complemented by comedy outfits costing a total of £42 on average. Fun loving Londoners spend 50 per cent more than the rest on comedy outfits. UK stags and hens also spend £3 on hangover cures for the morning after, such as fry-ups and Virgin Mary’s. 4

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the average stag party attendee spends around £30 more than his female counterpart with the average man totting up a £185 bill compared to the £155 spent by women.


Not only are men prepared to fork out more on seeing their friend safely into the warm bosom of wedded bliss, they are also far more generous when it comes to buying the wedding gift. The average man will spend around £65 on gifts, compared to women who spend under £50. The fairer sex is also twice as likely to scour the wedding list for the cheapest item, and 50 per cent more likely to use internet auction sites such as eBay in the quest for a bargain when gift shopping.

The most sought after wedding gift of all, is the predictable set of cutlery or crockery, although 15 per cent of Brit's are bucking the trend by choosing more imaginative presents such as a gift experiences, which could entail jungle trekking or balloon riding.

Interestingly, while the Scots might at first glance appear to let the side down by being twice as likely to re-wrap an existing possession to give as a wedding gift than anyone else, they are in fact among the most generous people in the UK when it comes to paying for wedding gifts, spending around £65 each on that special something. That’s second only to London.

Nigel Turner, Marketing Director of Maestro UK, said: “The most popular wedding in Britain is still the traditional church ceremony and this comes with all the expenses you might expect. Weddings have always been a time to splash out, but we believe that it is important to budget sensibly while still joining in the celebration and merriment.

“Low cost gifts can often mean as much to the happy couple as an expensive one. For example, filming the ceremony and turning it into an everlasting gift will not only save you money but will also ensure that the bride and groom do not forget your contribution as soon as the honeymoon is over. “


Romance, it would seem, is not reserved exclusively for the bride and groom when it comes to weddings, indeed the expense of attending a wedding is often offset by the benefit to the average Brit’s love life, with almost five per cent claiming to have met a new partner at a wedding. Competitive Londoners maximise their chances further, as they are twice as likely to beat other guests in the tradition of catching the bouquet, which is said to indicate a happy wedding of their own. Yet the fun does not stop there, as 20 per cent of Brit's admit to having hit the jackpot by pulling the wedding trophy of the best man or maid of honour.

However, for some guests, emotions become a bit too high with around two per cent admitting to getting into a fight at weddings. The most confrontational guests are the Scots, who are four times more likely to become involved in a brawl than the rest of the UK.


Research was conducted by Experian among a sample of 1,200 people across Great Britain


1 You and Your Wedding Magazine – February 2005


2 Calculated by multiplying the average wedding spend by the number of people at the average wedding - 103


3 Total breakdown of wedding costs are as follows:

Travel and accommodation – £90.45
Gift – £55.60
Alcohol – £32.75
New outfit – £84.70
Hat – £9.20
Lingerie/pants – £9.20
Other expenses – £17.45


4 Total breakdown of stag or hen night are as follows:

Transport / Accommodation – £49.45
Entertainment – £32.35
Alcohol – £42.30
Food – £29.95
Comedy outfits – £9
Getting over hangover – £ 2.80
Other – £4.55

 

There were 306,200 weddings in the UK in 2003. This is the second successive annual increase and 4.5 per cent more than in 2002. However, there has been a long-term decline in the number of marriages since 1972.

In England and Wales there were 267,700 marriages in 2003. This is also the second successive annual increase and 4.7 per cent more than in 2002. The lowest annual number of marriages since 1897 was seen in 2001. The number of marriages in England and Wales that were the first for both partners peaked in 1970 at almost 340,000, and have since fallen to less than half this number – 158,560 in 2003.

Over the past few decades people have tended to marry later in life. The average age for first marriages in England and Wales in 2003 was 31 for men and 29 for women. This compares with 26 and 23 for men and women respectively 40 years earlier.

A rise in the number of people living together helps to explain the recent trend towards later marriage. But other factors, such as increased and longer participation in further and higher education, particularly among women, may have also contributed to it.

Remarriages rose by about a third between 1971 and 1972 following the introduction in England and Wales of the Divorce Reform Act 1969 and then leveled off. In 2003, 109,090 marriages were remarriages for one or both partners, accounting for just over two-fifths of all marriages.

Since 1992, there have been more civil marriage ceremonies in England and Wales than religious ceremonies. In 2003, 68 per cent of marriages were solemnised by civil ceremonies. The Marriage Act 1994 provided for civil marriages to take place in approved premises from 1 April 1995. In 2003, 27 per cent of all marriages in England and Wales took place in approved premises, compared with 5 per cent in 1996.

The Marriage Act 1836 and the Registration Act 1836 came into force in 1837 in England and Wales, and provided the statutory basis for regulating and recording marriages. There were 118,000 marriages during the first full year of civil registration in 1838 in England and Wales. Annual numbers of marriages rose steadily from the 1840s to the 1940s, apart from peaks and troughs in and around the years of the two World Wars.

Civil partnership registrations

June 2006

Same sex couples formed 6,516 Civil Partnerships in England and Wales by 31 March 2006.
Male couples formed 4,311 Civil Partnerships and female couples formed 2,205.


The Civil Partnership Act allows same-sex couples to make a formal, legal commitment to each other by entering into a civil partnership through a statutory civil registration procedure.

A range of rights and responsibilities will flow from entering a civil partnership. Provisions in the Act include:

  • • Employment and pension benefits;
  • • Equitable treatment for the purposes of life assurance;
  • • A duty to provide reasonable maintenance for your civil partner and any children of the family;
  • • Civil partners to be assessed in the same way as spouses for child support;
  • • Recognition under intestacy rules;
  • • Access to fatal accidents compensation;
  • • Recognition for immigration and nationality purposes.

For tax purposes, civil partners will be treated the same as married couples. From the start of the civil partnership tax charges and relief's and anti-avoidance rules will apply equally to married couples and civil partners, and those treated as such.

In general it is the intention that any benefits available to married spouses should now be made available to civil partners.

Cost of registering a civil partnership


Giving notice in advance of registering a civil partnership
£30.00 per person

Registering a civil partnership at a register office
£40.00

Registering a civil partnership on approved premises
The cost for attendance by a civil partnership registrar is set by the registration authority in question.

A further charge is likely to be made by the owners of the building for the use of the premises.


   

A NATIONAL STATISTICS PUBLICATION

Marriages registered in 2004

Number of marriages
Wedding Statistics Northern Ireland 2004 There were 8,328 marriages registered in Northern Ireland in 2004, an increase of 571
marriages or 7% on the 2003 figure of 7,757 marriages. The increase in the number
of marriages in 2004 was largely confined to civil ceremonies, the number of which
rose by 490 (23%), while the number of religious ceremonies rose by 81 (1%);
Wedding Statistics 2001 to 2004 The number of marriages has increased over the last few years, with an overall
increase of more than 1,000 marriages between 2001 and 2004. This increase
contrasts with the decline in the number of marriages between 1970 and 2000; the
number of marriages in 2004 has now risen to a similar level to that in 1996;

Bride and Groom
Wedding Statistics first marriage More than three-quarters (78%) of marriages were the first marriage for both bride
and groom, 14% of marriages was a first marriage for one partner only and the
remaining 8% of marriages was a remarriage for both bride and groom;
Wedding Statistics Average Age The average age at marriage has increased markedly in last two decades. Both single
brides and single grooms are now on average five years older than their counterparts
twenty years ago;
Wedding Statistics For the first time ever the average age at marriage for all brides was over 30 years of
age (30.1 years). This compares to 27.2 years in 1994 and 24.4 years in 1984. The
average age for the groom was over 32 years of age (32.4 years), an increase of
three years from 1994 (29.3 years) and just under six years from 1984 (26.6 years);


Type of ceremony
Ceremony More than 30% of all marriages (2,624) in 2004 were civil ceremonies compared to
14% in 1984 and 6% in 1926;
Type of Ceremony Of the 5,704 religious marriages in 2004, 52% were Roman Catholic ceremonies; 21%
Presbyterian, 16% Church of Ireland, 4% Methodist and 7% 'Other denominations';

Place of ceremony
Place of Ceremony The Marriage (Northern Ireland) Order 2003 now allows civil marriage ceremonies to
be conducted outside registrar's offices in a number of approved venues. In 2004,
323 civil marriage ceremonies (12% of all civil marriage ceremonies) were held in
approved venues. The most popular location was Belfast Castle (52 civil weddings);
Ceremony Place The ability to conduct religious marriage ceremonies other than in religious buildings
varies by religion and denomination. In 2004, 206 religious marriage ceremonies (4%
of all religious marriage ceremonies) were held outside of religious buildings. The
most popular location (other than religious buildings) for religious ceremonies was the
Crawfordsburn Inn (36 marriages);

Marriage day
Marriage day The most common day of the week for all marriages is a Saturday (38%). Friday is
the most common day for civil marriages (34%); and
Wedding day The most common month to get married was August (1,288 couples) closely followed
by July (1,111 couples). Saturday 21st August 2004 was the most popular day in the
year 2004 to get married, 119 couples got married on that date. Only 22 marriages
took place on a Sunday in 2004, three of which were civil marriages – the latter only
became possible under the new legislation.


Wedding Statistics collated by HeadlineDJ for your information. Sources include The National Statistics, Switch, Maestro, You and Your Wedding Magazine and Weber Shandwick.

Further Links and information Below;

Church Weddings are dying out.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1894660.stm


Civil Weddings and "The God Ban".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4086690.stm


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HeadlineDJ exclusively caters for Wedding Receptions throughout the North and North West UK.
Same Sex weddings catered for, Gay weddings are now recognised in law and HeadlineDJ is happy to provide our services for your big day.
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