Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Couple sell wedding tickets to cover event cost

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There is a new wedding trend sweeping Europe where couples are selling wedding tickets to perfect strangers to help cover the rising costs of these momentous events.

Katia Lekarski, who founded Invitin earlier this year, came up with the idea of selling tickets to weddings while renting her home in south-eastern France to some people who were attending a wedding.

Her five-year-old daughter asked, ‘Why aren’t we also invited to weddings?’ and that’s when it hit her – there are other people who simply don’t get invited to weddings as much as they’d like, so what if she could sell that as a service? She would be helping newlyweds cover some of the costs of organising a wedding and make some money for herself as a commission.

Now Invitin has several couples willing to sell tickets to their wedding on the platform, and plenty of people willing to pay hundreds of euros to attend. “I thought selling tickets to your wedding to strangers sounded interesting,”

Laurène, who paid to attend some strangers’ wedding, noted: “I don’t have a big family, so I don’t get to go to lots of weddings. It’s great to be able to experience a wedding and different traditions, even if it’s strangers. I’m keen to check out the decoration and music, and we’ll be partying on the dance floor.”

As for the couples selling the tickets, some do it for the money – weddings are anything but cheap, after all – but some claim it’s more for the experience.

Jennifer, 48, and her husband, Paulo, 50, plan to invite close to 100 of their family and friends – 80 adults and 15 children – to their wedding at a country manor an hour’s drive from Paris, but thought having a few strangers take part would be intriguing.

“I thought: ‘whoa, that’s quite something’, having people you don’t know at your wedding,” Jennifer said. “It’s not only about the money, which is a drop on a hot stone in terms of the overall wedding cost, although it will help a bit in terms of the cost of things like decoration and the dress. It’s also because we thought it could be fun and we’re extroverted and open to sharing things.”

Couples get to screen the strangers on the Invitin app and choose who to accept. They also don’t have to interact with them during the event if they don’t want to, as Katia Lekarski believes “a wedding has its own ecosystem where guests get chatting to each other of their own accord.”

Guests, on the other hand, have to sign up to strict rules, including dressing appropriately, arriving on time, drinking with moderation, and only sharing photos from the event with authorisation.

France isn’t the only country where the pay-to-attend-weddings model is gaining traction.

In Italy, a company is charging people up to €5,000 ($5,800) to attend traditional weddings as a sort of luxury experience. Wedding Privè, a startup founded by David Genovesi and Luca Manelli, targets big-spending tourists interested in exclusive experiences.

Culled from www.odditycentral.com