I Spent RM5,247.09 for My Malay Wedding (Checklist Kahwin Included)

checklist kahwin

My checklist kahwin was perfect – I thought of everything.

Then the pandemic and MCO happened so my Malay wedding plans all went whack lol.

This post is a follow-up to the Wedding Planning During Covid-19: How Plans & Budgets Changed article, where I shared how our wedding plans changed over and over (and over) again during the course of the pandemic in 2020.

Now that everything is over, I can finally write this Malay wedding budget breakdown article. Yes yes I see your requests 😛

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Checklist Kahwin: What I Planned to Spend On

From my research, a ‘standard’ checklist kahwin for a Malay wedding comprises:

Source: I got one of those cute kahwin planner notebooks on Shopee. Get it! It’s pretty useful for DIY Malay wedding planning process!

To pay for all/most of these costs, I originally budgeted RM70,000-RM90,000 in our budget kahwin, broken down like so:

(what can I say. Both our parents have a lot of friends)

What I Ended Up Spending on My Malay Wedding

Actually, I spent a total of RM12,062.09 on my Malay wedding. This was an incredibly low amount, as far as Malay weddings go.

However, if you take out all the services that were cancelled due to MCO, then effectively I only spent RM5,247.09 for my Malay wedding. It became a total budget kahwin and nikah ceremony.

There were four reasons it costs so low, and none of them have anything to do with my money management skills, and everything to do with the pandemic:

#1 – We had to cancel engagement AND reception events

Reason #1 why my wedding cost was so low is simply because we had to cancel both the engagement AND the reception events due to the pandemic. The former was supposed to be in July 2020 before cancelled due to MCO 1.0, and the latter was planned on November 2020 before postponed to January 2021 before cancelled due to MCO 2.0.

Naturally, because the events didn’t happen, the things we need to tick off from our checklist kahwin significantly reduced.

But just because the events didn’t happen, doesn’t mean no costs were incurred. We managed to get our deposit back for the engagement event, but I still spent:

So that’s a total of RM6,815 for unused items and services.

#2 – We had the nikah ceremony at my parent’s home

Event rental is one of the items in checklist kahwin. Therefore by having the nikah ceremony at home, the event venue cost became RM0 (even if I did spend RM6,230 for bridal room renovation, but that’s under Donations category not Wedding).

The decision to hold the nikah ceremony at home wasn’t intentional – it was just the most flexible option, considering the ever-changing nikah SOP at the time. We made the decision after giving up our original 14 November 2020 (Saturday) date by mid-October.

Thankfully, by late October JAIS gave us a nikah slot and we got married on Wednesday, 3pm on 25 November 2020 at JAIS office, before celebrating with close family at home.

If you take out all the reception-that-didn’t-happen expenses in #1, effectively I only spent RM5,247.09 for my nikah ceremony (RM12,062.09 minus RM6,815).

Of this, I spent:

P/s – In case you’re not familiar with Malay wedding – nikah ceremony is like ROM; we usually do it on the same day/weekend as the wedding reception

#3 – Received gifts and help from family and friends

I’ve always found it hard to receive help, but throughout this whole process I reminded myself that many people get a lot of joy from helping (me too, tbh), so I let them cover part of the checklist kahwin.

Top of my head, I was gifted:

From the bottom of my heart, thank you. Their special touches made the day more special and eventful than I could ever imagine.

#4 – Bought ready-made and DIY-ed

Another thing that contributed to my low Malay wedding cost was the lack of custom-made items and personalised services.

Tbh, this was less of a cost-saving measure and primarily to limit close contact – I know I have cheap tendencies but I didn’t want to save money for the sake of saving money, especially not to the ailing and hard-hit wedding industry.

For my nikah event, I:

Ngl I would have done my own makeup too (considering the close proximity), except that I know my makeup skills is practically non-existent, so a professional it is. Thankfully nothing happened.

How much was your Malay wedding?

So that’s it. Those are the 4 reasons why my Malay wedding costs so little. If I had the reception, it would have added a mere ~RM4k or so to the total, but alas it was not meant to happen. I’m okay with the cancellation, but I know my parents are disappointed so that makes me a little bit sad.

Can you share how much was your Malay wedding, all-in-all? Were you happy with how things went?

If, when you read this, we are still in a pandemic and you are planning to get married, my tips in Wedding Planning During Covid-19: How Plans & Budgets Changed stands – (1) expect plans to change, and change often and (2) try not to make any large non-refundable deposits.

What would you add to that? If YOU are planning a Malay wedding, what’s your biggest challenge at the moment? Let me know in the comments section!