The Mercury News

Survey: Registries morphing into a broader range of gifts

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK >> Wedding registries remain popular and the nature of gifting has morphed into a broader range of options, including cash registries, that are being embraced by friends and family, a new survey shows.

The average wedding registry was valued at $4,853 last year, featuring 125 items, according to the survey by the wedding site TheKnot.com of nearly 7,000 engaged or recently married couples. Nearly 9 in 10 couples, or 88 percent of the American couples who responded, set up registries in 2017, about the same number as the year before, the findings showed.

But what couples asked for and how they asked changed last year over 2016 in some key ways, said Kristen Maxwell Cooper, The Knot’s editor in chief.

“Couples no longer want to be put in a box when it comes to wedding registries,” she said in a recent interview. “They want to be able to register for whatever they want, whether that is stuff that comes from a traditiona­l retailer, stuff that comes from a specialty store. They want to register for cash, they want to donate to charity, they want to do all of these things, or they just want to choose one of these things that fit their

lifestyle.”

The industry has responded with digital options allowing couples to make registry requests from a variety of sources, Maxwell Cooper said.

The number of couples using their registries to give back was up significan­tly, the survey showed, but that ask has not been widely embraced by couples. One in 10 couples, or 10 percent of those surveyed, made a request on behalf of charity in their registries last year, up from 3 percent in 2016.

“Couples are a little bit older now when they’re getting married,” Maxwell Cooper said — the average age is 29 for brides and 31 for grooms. “They’re a little more establishe­d and probably lived together before getting married. They may feel like they have all the material things that they need. It’s great to

have a retail registry as well, if your grandmothe­r and great-grandmothe­r feels like they really want to give you something tangible.”

Perhaps a little more challengin­g for traditiona­lists buying gifts are cash requests to finance such things as honeymoons. They were used by 6 percent of those surveyed, compared with 4 percent the year before. Of those last year, nearly half used their cash gifts to help pay for honeymoons.

On average, couples received $1,437 for their honeymoons.

More than 1 in 5 couples, or 22 percent, registered for electronic­s last year. For the third consecutiv­e year, wireless speakers were the most popular item at 28 percent, the survey said. Smart home devices were second at 26 percent.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Wireless speakers were the most popular electronic­s item on wedding registries last year, a survey said.
COURTESY PHOTO Wireless speakers were the most popular electronic­s item on wedding registries last year, a survey said.

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