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Cash isn’t king when it comes to wedding registries – yet. But cash registries are certainly on the rise – up 50 percent since 2016, according to , released this June. In 2017, 6 percent had a cash registry – compared with just 1 percent in 2011. Cash registries are expected to keep climbing in the next few years, says Sophie Ross, assistant editor at The Knot. “I would be confident in saying that it would be in the teens, I think, or maybe even 1 in 4 couples,” Ross says. How newlyweds are using the cash
Once Frazier, 33, and Price, 30, finish the Ph.D. program at the University of Florida, they have no idea where they’ll land. They don’t need traditional household registry items since they already own a home, which they bought around a year ago. Additional household items may mean a more expensive move. So for Frazier, who is earning a Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience and aging, and Price, who is earning her Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience and addiction, a cash registry was a no-brainer. “I think it would also be more heartbreaking to have something tied to a memory of us getting married and then having to jettison it for necessity,” Frazier says. “No one wants to have to look at a wedding gift from your parents and then say, ‘Well, this can’t make it because I can’t transport it.’” Most couples who have a cash registry either use the funds to pay for their honeymoon (49 percent) or to make a down payment on a home (27 percent), according to The Knot’s study. Frazier and Price are using cash registries for both. “It’s beautiful to get pots and pans and china and utensils,” Price says. “But with us … the thought of having a fund that might help us pick up and move across the country, that might help us with a down payment, with just the cost of travel and moving, it seemed like a better fit for where our life is right now.” If you’re accumulating money in a cash registry, the best place to put the money is in a . This way the funds are earning a high annual percentage yield (APY) and are liquid whenever you need to withdraw them. Cash registry opinions differ by generation
Traditional wedding gifts are bought from a registry or given in person at the wedding. “Maybe your grandma will want to get you that stand mixer, while your bridesmaid, who’s a millennial, knows how much you cherish experiences, will prefer to get you cash,” Ross says. “So I think that that’s probably the main reason why it’s seen such a rise in popularity.” There’s a very clear generational difference, Frazier says. “But I also think that on some level, every generation develops its own rituals and its own traditions,” Frazier says. “And I think, for no other reason than that, millennials are going to start using a cash registry because it’s something that millennials do. And then our children will roll their eyes at us — insisting on them using cash registries and they’ll just want a nice set of china.” The traditional registry is alive and well, since cash registries usually complement a traditional registry with a store or multiple stores. Frazier and Price set up two traditional registries, in addition to their two cash registries. Some wedding guests still may find it taboo
Even as opinions shift, some wedding guests may still be put off by a cash registry. “You can’t argue with the utility of cash, but there are guests or others that might be a little put off by a cash registry as opposed to giving a more traditional gift,” says Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate’s chief financial analyst. Specifying exactly what the cash is going toward is a best practice, Ross says. So is dedicating it toward something for the couple’s future, instead of on individual, everyday expenses. Frazier and Price did this with a simple message on their Newlywed Fund page. Though growing, cash registries are still not mainstream in the U.S. Ross says gifting cash is a normal tradition in other cultures. “It’s almost strange that it was so taboo here in the U.S. for so long,” Ross says. “Like, for instance, in Italian, in Indian and Chinese weddings, it’s been a very common practice for centuries to gift newlyweds cash.” Cash registry may be a more secure route but watch out for fees
If you’re making a cash gift or setting up a cash registry, be mindful about security and fees. A cash gift given at a wedding could get lost or stolen. If a cash envelope is misplaced, that gift may be difficult to track down. Cash registries may have fees associated with them, so do your research. Some may charge fees to guests, and others may charge fees for certain types of distributions. And others may have an option for the engaged couple to pick up the cost of processing and transaction fees. Here are some cash registry services and an example of their fees: Honeyfund: Guests never pay a fee using Honeyfund, even if they use a credit card. If the couple chooses to receive their entire Honeyfund balance in the form of gift cards, the transaction won’t incur a fee – for the guest or couple. But if the couple chose to transfer the funds to their own bank account via WePay or PayPal, there is a 2.8 percent fee plus $0.30 fee per transaction. Newlywed Fund: The Knot’s cash registry charges a 2.5 percent transaction fee and there isn’t a way for the couple to pay the fee for the guest. Tendr: There is a $3 fee and a 2.7 percent credit charged per transaction. But there is an option for the couple to pay the fees for the guests. Zola’s Cash Fund: The fee to process credit cards is 2.5 percent fee. Either you can have the guest pay the fee, or the couple can. SHARE: Matthew Goldberg is a consumer banking reporter at Bankrate. Matthew has been in financial services for more than a decade, in banking and insurance. Related Articles