Which Credit Cards to Use for Wedding Expenses

 Singaporean couples can expect to spend at least $40,000+ if they’re getting married in Singapore and holding a wedding banquet.

Many couples spend up to $60,000 as a bare minimum, especially if they opt for an overseas pre-wedding shoot in Korea which is all the rage these days (no thanks to the K-drama wave). Here’s a list of wedding items most couples typically need to spend on (based on what I was quoted):

Bridal Package
$3,000
Pre-wedding Photoshoot
$2,000 (local)
$5,000 (overseas, inclusive of airfare)
Wedding Rings
$4,000
Betrothal Package (Guo Da Li)
$1,888
(excludes dowry cash)
Wedding Banquet
$20,000 (restaurant / café)
$40,000 (hotel)
Wedding Decorations
$3,000 (fresh florals)
Miscellaneous
$4,000 (wedding favours, bridal accessories, bridesmaids and groomsmen outfits, actual day ang paos etc)
Honeymoon
$6,000

Grand total: $40k – $70k

For couples who are spending so much, many have asked me which is the best credit card for them to charge their wedding expenses to. There is no easy answer.

Due to various terms and conditions tied to each card – especially on capped amount of cashback, minimum monthly spending, etc – I’ve worked out a way to tap on various cards in order to get the maximum cashback from one’s wedding expenses.

Item
Card To Use
Cashback
Bridal Package
$3,000
American Express True Cashback Card

$150
Pre-wedding Photoshoot
$2,000
$100
Wedding Rings
$4,000
Standard Chartered MANHATTAN World MasterCard
$90
Pay $3k deposit in the first month, and the remaining $1k to be combined with your betrothal package and more to hit $3k total in the following month.
Betrothal Package (Guo Da Li)
$2,000
$90
Combine in a new month with your remaining $1k payment for wedding ring to hit the min. spending.
Wedding Decorations
$3,000
$10 + $138 signup bonus
Spend a min. of $3k in one calendar month to get the max. 3% cashback, capped at $200 per quarter.
Wedding Banquet
$40,000
UOB One Card

$2000
Split into $2k monthly instalments to be paid over 20 months.
Miscellaneous
$2,000
SingPost Platinum Visa Credit Card

OR

OCBC Frank Credit Card


$140 + $138 signup bonus
Buy and pay for the following online: wedding favours, outfits for your bridesmaids and groomsmen.

SingPost: 7% cashback for online, min. $600 monthly spending, cashback capped at $60/month.

OR

$120
OCBC: Note that you must also spend min. $400 offline before you can get the 6% online rebates.

Honeymoon
$5,000
CIMB Platinum MasterCard

$500 + $150 signup bonus
10% cashback on airlines and hotels
TOTAL CASHBACK: $3,516
Notes:
– AMEX cashback capped at $5k spend for first three months
– Standard Chartered MANHATTAN World MasterCard: 3% cashback with min. spend of $3,000 per statement month, capped at $200 cashback per quarter

– Please read the respective T&Cs on each card website before signing up and plan out your expenses to qualify for the maximum cashback rebates.

Alternatively, if you just want ONE card for convenience’s sake, then the American Express True Cashback Card would be the best option, as it doesn’t have any cap on total cashback. However, as the 3% cashback offer is capped at a total of $5,000 in the first 6 months, you’ll have to plan out your payments carefully to make sure you do not end up only getting the subsequent lower 1.5% cashback instead. After the first 6 months are over, you’ll only get 1.5% cashback on your remaining purchases.

Furthermore, the cashback will only be awarded if your account is in good standing and not overdue. A good way to check this would be to obtain your credit report to assess whether you’re in sound financial health for the banks and credit card lenders to reward you.

The UOB One card is best paired with a UOB One savings account (which I think might just be UOB’s comeback to compete with the attractive OCBC 365 account), and I’ve previously reviewed it here. 

Why all that homework to maximize cashback?

Given how much the wedding industry is over-charging for their services (you can read my thoughts about it here), you’ll need to be extra diligent if you really want to make sure you end up spending a sum you can well afford.

Many couples opt for the easy way out – get a bridal studio package + hotel banquet package. The remaining items (photography, videography, hair, makeup, flowers, decor, etc) will usually come with top-up fees. It saves you time from sourcing individually yourself, but the costs are not necessarily the cheapest. Of course, quality might then be another issue if you’re only working from their affiliated vendors.

With only a few months left to our wedding, I’ve been quite busy sourcing around for different quotes and confirming on the vendors for our wedding. Unsurprisingly, all the wedding gimmicks and estimated costs I had predicted in last year’s post were spot on, but I hadn’t accounted for one more nasty surprise: inflation-adjusted rates!

I won’t mention which, but one hotel banquet we enquired with had their 2016 table rates at $1,200+ but quoted $1,700+ for weddings in 2017! A makeup artist my friend used earlier this year charged $350, but revised her rates to $650 when I enquired for my 2017 wedding! 

I swear, all these rip-offs need to stop. 

Now that I’m going through the same experience, it has certainly opened my eyes up to see how much money this industry is earning from couples – and on the contrary, how we can try to limit that cash outflows.

Of course, please read up on each card’s T&Cs before you apply, as I’ve not covered every clause here. 
Many of these rebates and credit card rewards are also often given to customers with good credit standing – to check if you’re among them, you can purchase your credit report from the Credit Bureau for $6 + GST. From now until the end of December 2016, you can get your credit report for free instead here.
P.S. NOT a sponsored post. I used SingSaver + the respective card / bank websites to compare the benefits and work out the spending hack in the above table. All numbers are accurate as of November 2016.
With love,
Budget Babe
2 comments
  1. Hello SGbudgetbabe,

    For the UOB one card,
    How can you Split into $2k monthly instalments to be paid over 20 months.

Comments are closed.

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