The viral debate over whether wedding guests should cover venue costs through angpow has caused a heated clash between tradition and financial reality.
WEDDING invitations are meant to bring family and friends together, but some guests feel they are increasingly being treated as contributors towards the cost of the celebration rather than simply being invited to share the occasion.
That frustration became the focus of a widely discussed Threads post questioning expectations surrounding wedding angpow (money packets).
A user argued that guests should not feel pressured to adjust the amount of money they give based on where a couple chooses to hold their wedding reception.
The post responded to a long-running social expectation that guests should give enough in angpow to roughly match the cost of their seat, particularly at expensive hotel banquets.
The author wrote: “Respectfully, I don’t see why wedding guests should be expected to give angpow based on the venue.”
They went on to question the logic of expecting guests to help recover the cost of a five-star hotel reception, adding: “You chose to host your wedding at an expensive five-star hotel and expect your guests to cover your costs.”
The post attracted widespread discussion, with many agreeing that wedding budgets should be based on what couples can comfortably afford rather than what they hope to receive from guests.
One user shared: “I planned my wedding dinner assuming we would need to cover the costs ourselves. Therefore, I never anticipated how much angpow we would receive. I simply treated it as a blessing from our guests.”
Others echoed the same sentiment. A netizen said a wedding should be “a celebration, not a money-making machine”, while another explained that their own wedding was planned within a comfortable budget with no expectation of recovering expenses through angpow.
That said, not everyone agreed. One commenter argued that guests who felt uncomfortable with the expected contribution could simply decline the invitation.
Another maintained that attending an expensive hotel reception naturally involved higher costs and suggested those unwilling to contribute accordingly should politely stay home instead.
Several users pushed back against that view. One commenter argued that the issue was not whether guests could afford to attend, but whether newlyweds should adjust their expectations.
Another added: “It is a celebration and you want your nearest and dearest there to join you, not to finance your dinner.”









