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How to Plan a Bridal Shower: A Step-by-Step Guide

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

A bridal shower is typically hosted by the maid of honor or bridesmaids, 4-8 weeks before the wedding. It's a guest-list-subset event (close family and friends) focused on celebrating the bride and giving gifts. Planning takes 4-6 weeks minimum: set the date, confirm the host, finalize the guest list, choose a theme, book a venue, plan food and activities.

DEFINITION

Bridal Shower
A pre-wedding celebration for the bride, traditionally hosted by the maid of honor or bridesmaids. Guests bring gifts (typically from the wedding registry). The event is usually women-only, though co-ed couples showers are increasingly common. Not the same as the bachelorette party, which is a separate event.

DEFINITION

Couples Shower
A bridal shower variation where both partners are celebrated and the guest list includes friends of both the bride and groom. Sometimes called a Jack and Jill shower. Becoming more common as couples have more mutual friends than gender-segregated social circles.

DEFINITION

Host Responsibilities
The host (typically the maid of honor or a bridesmaid) is responsible for planning, organizing, and usually paying for the shower. This includes venue booking, invitations, food, activities, and gifts. The bride should not host her own shower — it's considered asking for gifts directly.

Planning Timeline

Weeks Before ShowerTask
8-10 weeksConfirm host team, get bride’s guest list, set date
6-8 weeksBook venue, plan theme and menu
4-6 weeksSend invitations with registry link
2-4 weeksCollect RSVPs, finalize headcount with venue
1-2 weeksFinalize decor, plan activities, confirm catering
Day beforeSet up if home or rented space, prepare bride’s gift
Day ofArrive early, greet guests, manage timeline

Budget Breakdown

Typical shower budget split for 25 guests:

ItemCost Range
Venue/catering$500–$1,200
Decorations$100–$300
Invitations$50–$150
Activities/games$50–$150
Bride’s gift from group$100–$300
Total$800–$2,100

Divided among 4 bridesmaids: $200-$525 per person.

Host Checklist

Venue and catering are confirmed first. Everything else builds from there:

  • Venue booked, deposit paid
  • Menu confirmed with dietary restrictions from RSVPs
  • Invitations sent with RSVP deadline
  • Guest list finalized with venue headcount
  • Decorations procured or rented
  • Activities or games planned and materials ready
  • Bride’s gift coordinated (group gift or individual)
  • Day-of timeline written out (arrival, activities order, cake, gifts, departure)

The day-of timeline matters even for a casual shower. When you’re managing 25+ guests, knowing when to transition from brunch to gifts to dessert prevents the event from going shapeless.

The average bridal shower costs $500-$2,000 depending on guest count and venue type, with bridesmaids splitting costs.

Source: The Knot Bridal Shower Cost Guide

Bridal showers average 15-40 guests, significantly smaller than the wedding guest list.

Source: WeddingWire Shower Planning Guide

Q&A

Who pays for the bridal shower?

The hosts (maid of honor and bridesmaids) traditionally pay for the shower. Costs are split among co-hosts. For an expensive venue or large shower, the bride's mother sometimes contributes. The bride does not pay for her own shower. Budget per person for a restaurant shower: $40-$80 including food, drinks, and decor. Total shower cost for 25 guests: $1,000-$2,000.

Q&A

Do you have to have games at a bridal shower?

Games are optional. Traditional shower games (how well do you know the bride, wedding trivia, ring hunt) work well with guests who enjoy structured icebreakers. A restaurant-based shower with a mixed guest list of family and friends may skip games in favor of conversation and toasts. Read the bride's preferences and the likely guest mix before planning elaborate game activities.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance should a bridal shower be planned?
Start planning 8-10 weeks before the shower date. This allows time to book a venue, send invitations (4-6 weeks before the shower), gather RSVPs, and plan activities. If the shower is at a restaurant or requires catering, book the venue first before sending invitations.
What is the difference between a bridal shower and a bachelorette party?
A bridal shower is a daytime or early-evening celebration focused on gifts and the transition to marriage, typically with a mixed age group including family. A bachelorette party is typically an evening or weekend event focused on the bride's close friends, often involving going out. Both are optional, and some brides choose to combine them or skip one.
Can the bride's mother host the bridal shower?
Yes. The tradition that the bride's family couldn't host (because it appeared to be asking for gifts) has largely faded. The bride's mother, mother-in-law, or other family members hosting is now fully accepted. The host simply takes responsibility for planning and covering costs.
What gifts are typically given at a bridal shower?
Registry items, particularly kitchen and home goods. For a couples shower, items from the registry that both partners would use. Kitchen-themed showers often focus on kitchen registry items. Some hosts coordinate so guests bring items with a theme (all linens, all kitchen, all wine and entertainment). Cash contributions to the registry's cash fund are also acceptable.
What activities besides games work at a bridal shower?
DIY craft activity (floral arrangement, terrarium building, custom tote bags), cooking or cocktail-making class, painting session, flower crown making, or a wine tasting. Activity-based showers work particularly well for brides who find traditional games awkward and groups where not everyone knows each other.

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