Taylorswift wedding plans carry $10 million pre-party budget
taylorswift and Travis Kelce are reportedly planning a summer wedding in New York City, with $10 million set aside for the hen and stag dos. The couple, both 36, have pushed the pre-wedding spend into a bracket usually reserved for full event production, not just the parties around it.
New York City in July
The pair are said to be tying the knot in the first week of July, after meeting in the summer of 2023 and becoming an item in September 2023. Travis Kelce proposed the following August, putting a long runway between the start of the relationship and the wedding plan now circulating around New York.
One insider put the spending ceiling plainly: "Taylor didn’t want money to be a factor in planning these parties, so she and Travis have set a $10 million limit." That figure sits alongside plans for several private jets, villa rentals, a large team of private staff, and other luxury extras for the celebrations.
Selena Gomez and Gigi Hadid
Selena Gomez and Gigi Hadid are planning Taylor Swift’s bachelorette party, and the party is being framed as a complete surprise. They are also said to be producing a special tribute video for the reception, which turns the event from a private gathering into a tightly managed entertainment package.
Another insider said, "They’re both vowing to let their hair down in spectacular fashion, as he jets off to The Bahamas with the boys and she plans her own lavish celebrations." For Kelce, the bachelor setup reportedly includes a round of golf with his brother before the stag party kicks off, while the boys head to The Bahamas.
Kelce’s boys head south
Travis has promised Taylor he’s going to keep it chill, but that’s not really up to him – his boys are in charge of the planning, and it’s hard to imagine they’ll hold back. Gigi and Selena both want her bachelorette party to be everything she’s ever dreamed of, to the point they’re losing sleep over making sure it’s all flawless.
That is the friction in this story: a $10 million ceiling sounds controlled, but the guest list, the travel, and the production details point to a wedding week built like a major live event. For readers, the next thing to watch is how much of that private planning becomes visible once New York City hosts the first-week-of-July ceremony.