You're celebrating your new home. Should your guests foot the bar tab?
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You're celebrating your new home. Should your guests foot the bar tab?

Housewarming parties sit in an awkward zone between hosting and celebrating. Should the new homeowner cover everything, or is it acceptable to ask guests to chip in? The etiquette answer depends on the format.

Table of Contents

  • The Traditional Rule
  • The Modern Reality
  • The Gift vs. Contribution Dilemma
  • Setting Expectations in the Invite
  • The Real Numbers: What a Housewarming Actually Costs

(For everyone who's hosted a housewarming and spent more on the party than on their first month's furniture budget.)

You just moved into your first apartment. Friends want to celebrate. You want to show off the place. The obvious move: throw a housewarming party. The less obvious question: who pays for the food, drinks, and everything else?

The Traditional Rule

Classic etiquette says: the host pays for everything, and guests bring housewarming gifts. This model works when the party is small (8-10 people) and the costs are manageable (snacks, a few bottles of wine). The gifts  Eusually kitchen items, candles, or wine  Eoffset the hosting cost symbolically.

The Modern Reality

When your "small housewarming" becomes 25 people and you're ordering catering, the traditional model breaks down. A new homeowner who just paid first and last month's rent plus a security deposit doesn't need a $500 party bill on top of it.

Modern alternatives that are increasingly accepted:

  • BYOB: "Bring your own drinks  EI'll handle the food." Guests bring what they want to drink, host provides food. Fair and customizable.
  • Potluck style: "Come see the new place! Everyone bring a dish to share." Distributes cost and effort.
  • Cash bar contribution: For larger parties, a clearly communicated "chip in $10-15 for food and drinks" is increasingly normal, especially among younger demographics.

The Gift vs. Contribution Dilemma

If you're asking guests to bring food or contribute to party costs, don't also expect a housewarming gift. It's one or the other. The invitation should make this clear: "No gifts necessary  Ejust bring yourselves (and a bottle if you'd like)" removes the ambiguity.

Setting Expectations in the Invite

The invitation is your tool for eliminating all awkwardness. Include one line about the food and drink situation:

  • "Food and drinks provided  Ejust bring yourselves!"
  • "BYOB  Efood is on me!"
  • "Potluck style  Eclaim a dish in the group chat!"

One sentence. Zero confusion. Maximum enjoyment of the party you actually wanted to throw.

The Real Numbers: What a Housewarming Actually Costs

For context, here's what a typical housewarming party for 20 people runs:

  • Fully hosted (food + drinks): $300-500. The host absorbs everything, guests bring gifts.
  • BYOB + host food: $150-250 for the host. Guests spend $10-20 on their own drinks.
  • Potluck + BYOB: $50-80 for the host (basics like plates, ice, napkins). Each guest brings a dish and their own drinks.
  • Cash contribution ($15/person): $0 net cost for the host, $300 total budget for catering-quality food and drinks.

The cash contribution model is actually the most equitable: the new homeowner doesn't go broke, the guests pay less than they would at a restaurant, and the food is coordinated rather than a random potluck lottery. The only requirement is clear communication  Eand a simple way to collect contributions so one person isn't chasing 19 friends for $15 each.

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