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Indian weddings in the United States are beautiful, layered, and generous — but let’s talk about the conversation no one wants to have during planning: who is actually paying for the wedding?
If you are a South Asian Indian-American bride, a fusion bride, a groom, or a couple planning an Indian or multicultural wedding in America, this is one of the most important discussions you need to have early.
Historically, in many Indian traditions, the bride’s family hosted and covered much of the wedding. But modern Indian-American weddings do not exist in one culture — they exist at the intersection of tradition, migration, modern partnership, and evolving family expectations.
When you add:
Money becomes more than numbers.
It becomes:
Influence.Expectation.Pride.Tradition.Responsibility.
In this episode of South Asian Wedded Life (SAWL), we talk honestly about:
Whether you are planning a wedding in the United States, India, Mexico, Florida, or anywhere in the world, clarity about finances helps you maintain your peace of mind.
Having photographed South Asian and multicultural weddings from Hyderabad to the backwaters of Kerala, from luxury ballrooms in America to oceanfront destination weddings in Mexico, I have seen what works beautifully — and what blindsides couples mid-planning.
Indian weddings do not create tension.Unspoken expectations do.
The earlier you define:
If you are engaged or about to be engaged, this conversation is not awkward — it is necessary.
By Amy R. RegetiIndian weddings in the United States are beautiful, layered, and generous — but let’s talk about the conversation no one wants to have during planning: who is actually paying for the wedding?
If you are a South Asian Indian-American bride, a fusion bride, a groom, or a couple planning an Indian or multicultural wedding in America, this is one of the most important discussions you need to have early.
Historically, in many Indian traditions, the bride’s family hosted and covered much of the wedding. But modern Indian-American weddings do not exist in one culture — they exist at the intersection of tradition, migration, modern partnership, and evolving family expectations.
When you add:
Money becomes more than numbers.
It becomes:
Influence.Expectation.Pride.Tradition.Responsibility.
In this episode of South Asian Wedded Life (SAWL), we talk honestly about:
Whether you are planning a wedding in the United States, India, Mexico, Florida, or anywhere in the world, clarity about finances helps you maintain your peace of mind.
Having photographed South Asian and multicultural weddings from Hyderabad to the backwaters of Kerala, from luxury ballrooms in America to oceanfront destination weddings in Mexico, I have seen what works beautifully — and what blindsides couples mid-planning.
Indian weddings do not create tension.Unspoken expectations do.
The earlier you define:
If you are engaged or about to be engaged, this conversation is not awkward — it is necessary.