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Wedding Favor Guide: What They Cost, What Works, and When to Skip Them

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Wedding favors for 100 guests run $200-$500 DIY and $500-$1,500 purchased. Most guests don't take them. Edible favors have the highest take rate; trinket-type favors frequently get left behind. If you're on a tight budget, favors are the most cuttable line item in the wedding budget — skip them and reallocate to something guests will actually experience.

DEFINITION

Wedding Favor
A small gift given to wedding guests, placed at their seat or on a favor table. Favors range from edible (mini jam jars, honey, cookies) to symbolic (candles, ornaments, succulents) to functional (customized items). Optional — many guests don't notice their absence, especially if the wedding itself is well-executed.

DEFINITION

Edible Favor
A food or drink item given as a wedding favor — mini jam jars, honey sticks, chocolate boxes, cookies, macarons, or mini bottles of olive oil or wine. Edible favors have significantly higher take rates than trinket favors because guests can consume them rather than find a place for a keepsake.

DEFINITION

Experience Favor
A favor tied to an activity or memory rather than a physical item — a lottery ticket, a seed packet for planting, a book recommendation card paired with the book, or a donation to a charity in the guest's name. Experience favors are low-cost and have higher emotional resonance than many physical options.

Favor Types and Their Real Costs

TypePer FavorFor 100 GuestsTake Rate
DIY edible (homemade jam)$1.50–$3.00$150–$300High
Purchased edible (honey, cookies)$3–$7$300–$700High
Small plants (succulents)$3–$6$300–$600High
Personalized trinkets (ornaments, candles)$5–$15$500–$1,500Medium
Charitable donation card$0.25–$0.50$25–$50All (it’s a card)
Lottery tickets$1–$3$100–$300High

The take rate matters. A $1,500 favor spend where 35% are left behind means $525 of favors got thrown away by the venue. A $300 edible favor spend where 95% get taken is a more efficient use of the budget.

When to Skip Favors Entirely

Favors are the most cuttable line item in a wedding budget for a simple reason: they’re experienced for approximately 10 seconds (guest sees them, picks up or ignores) compared to 8 hours of photography, 5 hours of music, and 3 hours of food and drink.

If your budget is constrained, cut favors before cutting:

  • Photography hours (permanent record of the day)
  • Music (drives the reception energy for all guests)
  • Catering quality (guests eat and drink for 3-5 hours)
  • Florals that appear in ceremony photos

None of these are as cuttable as $500-$1,500 in favors that 30-40% of guests won’t take.

The exception: if favors are genuinely important to you or your family for cultural reasons, budget for them intentionally. But make that choice consciously, not by default.

Charitable Donation as an Alternative

A charitable favor: a small card at each place setting that says “In honor of your attendance, we’ve made a donation to [organization] on behalf of all our guests.” The total donation ($200-$500 for a meaningful contribution) costs the same as or less than physical favors, requires no assembly or display logistics, results in no leftovers, and reads as intentional and generous.

This works best when the charity is meaningful to the couple — a cause they’re connected to, not a generic charity chosen because it sounds good. Guests respond to authenticity.

Wedding favors for 100 guests average $200-$500 DIY and $500-$1,500 purchased retail, representing roughly 1-3% of total wedding spend.

Source: The Knot 2026 Real Weddings Study

Approximately 30-40% of wedding favors are left at the venue at the end of the reception, with edible favors having the highest take rate.

Source: WeddingWire Vendor Satisfaction Survey

Q&A

How much do wedding favors cost?

DIY favors (homemade jam, decorated cookies, hand-packaged items): $2-$5 per favor, or $200-$500 for 100 guests. Purchased retail favors (mini succulents, candles, custom ornaments): $5-$15 per favor, or $500-$1,500 for 100 guests. Premium personalized favors: $10-$25+ per favor. The range is wide because favors vary from a single honey stick ($0.75) to a custom keepsake box ($20).

Q&A

Are wedding favors necessary?

No. Favors are a tradition, not a requirement. Guests who attend a wedding without favors don't leave disappointed — they don't come expecting them. If your budget is tight, skip favors. If you have budget for them, choose something guests will actually use or eat. A donation to a charity in guests' honor (announced with a small card at each seat) is a zero-cost alternative that reads as intentional and generous.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What wedding favors do guests actually take home?
Edible favors have the highest take rate. Mini honey jars, artisan jam, local candy, chocolate bars, cookies, and small bottles of olive oil or wine are consistently well-received and rarely left behind. Succulents and small plants are also taken at high rates because they're useful and don't feel like promotional items.
Should I do DIY wedding favors?
DIY favors save money but cost time — often significant time in the final 1-2 weeks before the wedding when you have less to spare. If you have a specific DIY skill (canning, baking, calligraphy) and a team to help, DIY works. Ambitious DIY projects that depend on learning a new skill close to the wedding frequently create stress without proportional savings over purchased alternatives.
What are the most popular wedding favor ideas?
Edible: mini honey jars, artisan jam, custom cookies, chocolate bars, local candy. Plant-based: succulents, seed packets. Personalized: customized candles, bottle openers, ornaments. Charitable: donation cards. Experience: lottery tickets (popular at casual weddings), book recommendations. The trend is toward edible, consumable, or charitable options over trinkets.
How do I display wedding favors?
Options: placed at each seat before guests arrive (ensures every guest has one), arranged on a favor table at the exit (take-what-you-want style, which reduces pressure and cleanup), or handed out by a family member or attendant as guests leave. Exit-style favor tables result in more left behind but create less clutter during the reception.
What do I do with leftover favors?
For edible favors: donate remaining food to a shelter or take home. For physical favors: keep any personalized ones as mementos; donate non-personalized items to a local charity thrift store. Plan for 15-25% leftovers from unclaimed favor tables.

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