
Most couples overspend on decor by buying more of everything instead of more of the right things.
The difference between a wedding that looks expensive and one that looks “budget” almost always comes down to one decision: where you concentrated your money.
After watching hundreds of weddings, I’ll tell you exactly what earns its budget and what quietly wastes it.
A sprig of eucalyptus laid flat on white linen, a tea light catching the edge of a rented glass, no one asked what it cost —they only said it felt like something.
The Short Answer
You can transform a wedding venue on under $500 in decor — but only if you stop buying a little of everything and start buying a lot of the right things. Candles, greenery, and one statement piece per zone will outperform a room full of scattered “cute” items every single time.
1. Candle Clusters Instead of Centerpieces

Stop thinking “centerpiece.” Start thinking “atmosphere zone.” A cluster of 5–7 candles at different heights — a mix of tall pillars, medium votives, and tea lights — creates more visual drama than most $80 floral arrangements.
Add two or three sprigs of fresh eucalyptus from a grocery store, and guests will assume you spent triple.
Cost: $15–$30 per table | Where to buy: Amazon pillar candles in bulk (~$25 for 12), Trader Joe’s or Whole Foods for eucalyptus bunches (~$4 each)
Skip this if your venue has open flames restrictions — always confirm before you plan candle-forward tables. Battery-operated flameless pillars from Amazon ($20–$30 for a set) are a solid backup.
2. Grocery Store Flowers, Styled Like a Florist

Here’s the insider truth most florists won’t say out loud: Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods, Costco, and even Kroger sell the same flower varieties florists use — just without the markup. White spray roses, ranunculus, lisianthus, eucalyptus.
Buy them 2–3 days before the wedding, cut the stems at an angle, and condition them in cool water.
Put 3 stems per bud vase, cluster 3–5 vases per table, and vary the heights slightly. That’s it. That’s the florist trick.
Cost: $3–$8 per bouquet | Where to buy: Trader Joe’s, Costco floral department, local farmers markets
3. Cheesecloth Table Runners

This is the single highest-return decor item right now.
A loosely draped cheesecloth runner in ivory or sage instantly makes a table look editorial — and it costs almost nothing.
Don’t iron it. Don’t lay it flat.
Let it drape and bunch slightly. The texture is the point.
Cost: $2–$4 per yard | Where to buy: Etsy (search “wedding cheesecloth runner”), Amazon, or fabric stores by the yard
💰 Budget Hack #1: Move your ceremony altar flowers to your reception entrance as guests transition. You paid for them once — use them twice. This single move can save $100–$200 in reception florals without anyone noticing the swap.
4. String Lights as Your Only Lighting Upgrade

If your venue is already beautiful, skip almost all other decor and just hang string lights.
Warm-white Edison bulb strands draped from above turn any space — a barn, a backyard, a plain reception hall — into something that looks intentional and dreamy.
The return on investment here is obscene. $50 in string lights beats $300 in random tabletop clutter every single time.
Cost: $20–$60 per strand | Where to buy: Amazon (search “G40 outdoor string lights”), Home Depot
Only do this if you have a venue that allows you to hang or drape them — confirm with your coordinator. If not, cluster them in large glass hurricane vases on tables for a similar glow effect.
5. Potted Herb and Greenery Centerpieces
📷 [IMAGE 6 HERE] Alt text: Small potted rosemary and thyme plants with kraft paper labels used as wedding table centerpieces — portrait orientation
This one almost nobody does, and it’s stunning.
Line up three small potted herbs — rosemary, thyme, sage — down the center of each table with a couple of tea lights.
Add a simple kraft label with the herb name. It looks intentional, smells beautiful, and doubles as a guest favor.
Guests take them home. You spend $4 per table instead of $60.
Cost: $3–$5 per pot | Where to buy: Home Depot garden center, local nurseries, or Trader Joe’s seasonal section
6. Spray-Painted Dollar Store Vases

Dollar Tree sells glass vases for $1.25 each. Gold or matte white spray paint costs $6 a can. You do the math.
Buy 30 mismatched vases, spray them all one color, and cluster them by height across your tables.
They look like a curated designer set. Nobody knows they came from Dollar Tree. This is peak budget optimization.
Cost: $1–$2 per vase after paint | Where to buy: Dollar Tree for vases, Rust-Oleum spray paint from Home Depot or Amazon
💰 Budget Hack #2: Skip individual table number frames — print your table numbers on cardstock, fold them into a tent shape, and slide them into a small bud vase or clip them to a sprig of greenery. Free if you own a printer. Looks cleaner than most $8 acrylic holders.
7. A Single Statement Backdrop (Not Multiple)

Here’s my strong opinion: one beautiful backdrop beats three mediocre ones.
Pick one zone — your ceremony altar or your sweetheart table — and put your effort there.
A length of sheer white fabric ($3/yard at fabric stores) draped over a $35 PVC pipe arch from Home Depot, with two low floral arrangements at the base, photographs like a $2,000 setup.
Stop trying to decorate the whole room. Anchor one moment.
Cost: $40–$80 total | Where to buy: Fabric stores or Amazon for sheer fabric, Home Depot for PVC pipe, Etsy for pre-made arches ($30–$60)
8. Bud Vase Clusters Instead of Traditional Centerpieces

Traditional centerpieces are a money trap. A cluster of 5–7 bud vases — each holding just 1–2 stems — creates more visual interest, looks more modern, and costs 80% less. Use mismatched heights. Use different vase shapes.
Put one stem of something interesting (a ranunculus, a dried pampas sprig, a single rose) in each. The variety reads as intentional, not budget.
Cost: $15–$25 per table total | Where to buy: Amazon (bulk bud vases, ~$20 for 24), Etsy, or TJ Maxx/HomeGoods in-store
9. Dried Pampas Grass and Dried Florals

Dried florals last forever, need no water, can be prepped weeks in advance, and look incredibly chic right now. Pampas grass, dried lunaria, dried lavender, preserved eucalyptus.
Cost: $20–$40 for bulk dried bundles | Where to buy: Amazon (search “dried pampas grass bulk”), Etsy dried floral shops, Afloral.com
💰 Budget Hack #3: Use your bridesmaids’ bouquets as your head table centerpieces. They walk down the aisle carrying them, then lay them in a loose row down the sweetheart table. Costs you nothing extra. Looks organic and beautiful. Every planner knows this trick — now you do too.
10. Photo String Displays as Ceremony Filler

Empty walls and awkward corners in a venue can make cheap decor look even cheaper. Fix it with something personal: a string display of printed couple photos.
String twine between two wooden dowels (or rent two shepherd’s hooks), hang 20–30 printed photos with small clothespins.
It fills space, feels deeply personal, and costs under $30. Guests spend time on it. You can’t buy that attention with rented décor.
Cost: $15–$30 total | Where to buy: Print 4×6 photos at Walgreens or CVS (~$0.30 each), buy clothespins from Amazon ($7 for 100)
Which Ideas Actually Deserve Your Money?
- If your venue is already visually interesting (exposed brick, garden setting, historic building) → skip the backdrop entirely and invest in candles and table texture instead.
- If your budget is under $300 → prioritize string lights and candles first. These two items change the entire feel of a room. Everything else is secondary.
- If you have 10+ tables → don’t DIY everything. Choose 2 elements to DIY (runners + bud vases) and keep the rest simple. Overextending leads to rushed, uneven execution on the day.
The Real Reason Budget Decor Fails
Most couples don’t fail because they spent too little.
They fail because they spread money across too many categories and ended up with a lot of forgettable details instead of a few memorable moments.
Here’s the contrarian truth: a table with three candles, a linen runner, and nothing else can look more expensive than a table buried in balloon arches, confetti, and $15 centerpieces from Amazon.
Restraint is a design choice — and it’s free.
My strong opinion: stop buying props and start buying atmosphere. Lighting, texture, and height are the only three variables that determine whether a room looks elevated or budget.
Work those three levers, and your decor budget will go twice as far.
The insider-level observation? The weddings guests remember as “gorgeous” almost never had more stuff. They had better light.
Every experienced coordinator will tell you the same thing — warm lighting at the right level will forgive almost every other budget decision you made.
Mistakes to Avoid
Buying too many small things at the same height. This is the most common and most damaging cheap-decor mistake.
When everything on a table is the same size and level — small votive, small vase, small favor box all lined up — it looks cluttered and flat.
Spend $5 on one tall element per table to break the plane.
A single tall dried branch in a vase.
A taper candle in a brass holder. Height creates the illusion of intention.
Renting items you could buy for the same price. Check rental prices vs. Amazon prices before you assume renting is cheaper.
Cheesecloth runners rent for $8–$12 each; you can buy them outright for $3/yard and keep or resell them after.
DIY-ing the wrong things. Florals, arches, large installations — these require skill and more time than almost every couple estimates.
DIY your table numbers, your photo displays, your runners.
Do NOT try to DIY your ceremony arch florals the morning of your wedding.
That is how you end up crying in a parking lot with a hot glue gun.
What’s the Cheapest Wedding Decor That Still Looks Good?
The cheapest decor that actually photographs well and impresses guests comes down to three things: candles (pillar and votive), greenery (fresh or dried), and one fabric element (a runner or backdrop).
You can execute all three for under $200 total for a 10-table reception. That’s it. That’s the honest answer no one puts in a headline.
Cheap Wedding Decor Budget Table
| Decor Item | Estimated Cost | Best Source |
|---|---|---|
| Candle cluster (per table) | $15–$30 | Amazon |
| Cheesecloth runner (per table) | $6–$12 | Etsy / fabric store |
| Bud vase cluster (per table) | $15–$25 | Amazon / HomeGoods |
| String lights (per strand) | $20–$60 | Amazon / Home Depot |
| Grocery store flowers (per table) | $10–$20 | Trader Joe’s / Costco |
| Spray-painted Dollar Tree vases | $2–$4 each | Dollar Tree + Home Depot |
| Dried pampas/floral bundle | $20–$40 | Amazon / Etsy |
| Sheer fabric backdrop (full) | $40–$80 | Fabric store / Amazon |
| Potted herb centerpieces | $3–$5 per pot | Home Depot nursery |
| Photo string display (full) | $15–$30 | Walgreens prints + Amazon |
Total estimated decor budget (10 tables + ceremony): $250–$500 depending on sourcing
The couples who pull off beautiful cheap weddings aren’t the ones who found cheaper stuff.
They’re the ones who figured out which three things they were willing to do really well, and let everything else go. Start there.
