How to Set Up a Honeymoon Fund in 2026 (Step-by-Step Guide)
More couples are choosing honeymoon funds over traditional registries — and for good reason. Most modern couples already have everything they need for their home. What they don't have is the budget for the extraordinary experiences they've been dreaming of: a week in Bali, a safari in Kenya, a cooking school in Lyon. A honeymoon fund lets guests invest directly in those memories.
This guide walks you through everything: how to set one up, how to talk about it without awkwardness, specific wording you can use, and a comparison of the best platforms available in 2026.
What Is a Honeymoon Fund?
A honeymoon fund is a digital fundraising page specifically for wedding couples. Guests visit the page, choose an amount to contribute, add a personal message, and pay by card or bank transfer. The money is collected by the platform and transferred to the couple's bank account, minus a small processing fee.
Unlike a traditional registry where guests buy specific items, a honeymoon fund is open-ended. Guests can contribute any amount — from €20 to €500 — and the couple uses the total however they choose. Some couples itemise specific experiences ("€75 toward our helicopter tour," "€150 toward our tasting menu dinner") to give guests a sense of what their contribution funds. Others keep it simple with a single total goal.
The best honeymoon funds integrate directly with your wedding RSVP system, so guests can confirm attendance and contribute in one visit — no separate links, no separate accounts to create. GuestlistOnline's gift fund works exactly this way.
How to Set Up a Honeymoon Fund: Step by Step
Step 1: Choose your platform
Your platform choice affects how much you pay in fees, how easy it is for guests to contribute, and whether the fund integrates with your RSVP system. See the platform comparison section below for a full breakdown. For most couples, starting with a platform that connects to your wedding website and RSVP system saves the most admin.
Step 2: Set your goal
Decide on a total amount you'd like to raise and, optionally, a deadline. Your goal doesn't need to cover the entire cost of the honeymoon — frame it as "a contribution toward our honeymoon" rather than full funding. A realistic goal based on typical guest contributions (€75–100 per contributing guest, with 50–70% of guests contributing) is more motivating than an aspirational number that looks unreachable.
Step 3: Write your fund description
Your fund page needs a brief, warm description of what you're saving for. You don't need to be exhaustive — two or three sentences about the destination and what you're most excited about is enough. Include one or two specific experiences if you've itemised your fund. See the wording examples section below for inspiration.
Step 4: Add a photo
A photo of the two of you — or an image of your destination — makes the fund feel personal. Most platforms let you upload a header image. Use something that reflects your excitement about the trip rather than a generic stock photo.
Step 5: Link from your invitation and wedding website
Your fund is only effective if guests can find it easily. Link from your digital invitation, your RSVP confirmation page, and your wedding website's gift or registry section. If you're using GuestlistOnline, the gift fund appears naturally alongside your RSVP — guests encounter it at the moment they're already engaging with your wedding.
Step 6: Send personalised thank-yous for every contribution
This step is easy to overlook but important. Send a brief, personal thank-you message to each contributor — not a generic automated receipt, but a genuine note. Mention something specific about what their contribution will fund. "Your gift is going toward our first night in the ryokan we've been dreaming about for years — thank you so much" is the kind of message people remember.
How to Ask for Money Tastefully
The anxiety most couples feel about honeymoon funds usually comes down to one thing: they're worried it seems presumptuous or greedy to ask for money directly. The solution is framing and language.
Make It Optional, Not Expected
Always present the fund as an option, not a demand. Language like "for those who would like to give a gift" or "if you'd like to contribute" signals that you genuinely don't expect anything from anyone. Guests who want to give will love the fund; guests who prefer a physical gift (or no gift at all) won't feel pressured.
Acknowledge That Presence Matters More
Including a line like "Your presence at our wedding is the greatest gift we could ask for" before mentioning the fund is not just good manners — it's honest. Most couples mean it, and saying it creates the right emotional context for the fund mention that follows.
Be Specific About What You're Saving For
Vague asks ("please contribute to our honeymoon") feel less warm than specific ones ("we're saving for a two-week trip through Japan — your contribution helps make it possible"). Specificity creates a story guests can connect with.
Don't Repeat the Ask
Mention the fund once — on your wedding website, in your invitation, or in a brief note at the wedding — and then let it go. Following up with individual guests to ask whether they've contributed is poor etiquette. The fund is there for those who want to use it; your job is to make it easy to find, not to chase people toward it.
Honeymoon Fund Wording Examples
Here are several ready-to-use options for different contexts and communication styles:
For a wedding website registry section
"We have everything we need for our home, but we are saving up for the trip of a lifetime — two weeks in Japan exploring temples, street food markets, and mountain onsen. If you would like to give a gift, a contribution to our honeymoon fund would mean the world to us. Any amount is more than we could ask for."
For a digital invitation
"Your presence is our greatest gift. For those who would like to contribute something, we have set up a honeymoon fund — we would love to visit Iceland for our first adventure as a married couple."
For a printed invitation insert (brief)
"In lieu of a traditional registry, we have set up a small honeymoon fund at [website]. Contributions are warmly appreciated but never expected — your presence on the day is more than enough."
For a table card at the wedding
"Thank you for being here today. If you would like to give us a wedding gift, we would love a contribution toward our honeymoon in Portugal. Scan the QR code to visit our gift page."
Sharing Your Honeymoon Fund Link
Getting your fund link in front of guests at the right moment is half the battle. Here's where to put it:
- Wedding website: Dedicate a page or section to your registry and honeymoon fund. This is where most guests look first.
- Digital invitation: Include a button or link directly in the invitation email.
- RSVP confirmation page: The moment after confirming attendance is when guests are most emotionally engaged with your wedding — a natural moment to mention the fund.
- Table cards: A QR code on the table card gives guests a chance to contribute on the day itself, often while waiting for courses to be served.
- Thank-you cards: If guests haven't contributed by the time you send thank-you notes, a brief mention with the link is appropriate.
Honeymoon Fund Platforms Compared
There are several platforms you can use to host your honeymoon fund. Here's how the main options compare in 2026:
| Platform | Fee per Contribution | Integrates with RSVP | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| GuestlistOnline | €0.25 + 5% (processing incl.) | Yes — built in | Couples who want RSVP + gift fund in one place |
| Honeyfund | 0% (bank transfer) / 2.8% + $0.30 (card) | No | Couples who want to itemise experiences |
| Zola | 2.4% + $0.30 per transaction | No (separate platform) | Couples who also want a traditional registry |
| PayPal.me / bank transfer | Varies / 0% for bank transfer | No | Couples who want no platform at all |
The key advantage of GuestlistOnline over standalone honeymoon fund platforms is integration. When your gift fund is part of your RSVP system, guests encounter it naturally at the right moment — without needing a separate login, account, or link. This increases contribution rates significantly compared to funds hosted on external sites that guests have to find independently.
Honeyfund is a strong standalone option if you want to itemise specific experiences in detail. Zola works well if you want a hybrid registry with both physical gifts and a fund. PayPal or bank transfer is the cheapest option but the least elegant and hardest to track.
Set up your honeymoon fund with GuestlistOnline
Create a gift fund page that sits alongside your RSVP — so guests can confirm attendance and contribute in one visit. Money goes directly to your bank account. No separate accounts or platforms needed.
Set up your gift fund →Frequently Asked Questions
No — when done with the right wording, a honeymoon fund is considered thoughtful and practical by most guests. The key is to frame it as an option rather than an expectation, use gracious language, and never make guests feel obligated. Most guests — particularly younger ones — prefer contributing to an experience over guessing what's on a physical registry.
Contributions typically range from €30 to €150, with an average around €75–100 per contributing guest. Couples who use GuestlistOnline's gift fund report that about 60–70% of guests contribute when the fund is linked directly from the RSVP confirmation page. The convenience of contributing at the same time as RSVPing significantly increases participation.
You don't have to, but it helps. Guests feel more connected to specific experiences ('€50 toward our first night in Santorini') than to a generic fund. Even if you never stick to the original itemisation, naming experiences makes contributing feel more personal and meaningful.
Fees vary significantly by platform. GuestlistOnline charges €0.25 + 5% per contribution (payment processing included). Honeyfund charges 0% on bank transfer contributions but 2.8% + $0.30 on card payments. Zola charges 2.4% + $0.30 per transaction. Amazon charges 0% but takes a cut through product pricing. Always check the current fee structure before setting up, as rates change.
Absolutely. Many couples do both — a small traditional registry for guests who prefer buying a physical gift, and a honeymoon fund for those who'd rather contribute money. The most important thing is to make your preferences clear on your wedding website so guests aren't left guessing.
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