Grocery runs feel more expensive. Restaurant tabs have crept up. And if you are planning a wedding bar, you have probably already noticed that your rough budget from six months ago does not match today’s prices. Here is what is driving that shift, what you can buy and store right now to lock in savings, and what you simply cannot control no matter how well you plan.
The US economy has been all the talk in 2026, especially among wedding vendors and wedding industry professionals trying to manage the delicate balance of meeting client expectations, delivering a high quality experience and preventing costs from soaring. From wedding planners and venues to caterers and wedding bartenders, everyone is feeling the pressure to find the happy medium. As a mobile bar owner who has planned over 150 wedding bars, I try really hard not to increase pricing, but it is increasingly difficult to do so as inflation hits 3 main components of our business.
How Inflation Affects Wedding Costs – From An Food and Beverage Wedding Vendor’s Perspective
- Energy costs – getting equipment, alcohol, ice, etc. to the wedding venue (delivery costs via truck rentals, diesel and gasoline)
- Food costs – from soda and syrups, to bitters and juice, the cost of food and drinks has increased dramatically
- Labor costs – our staff works incredibly hard, often putting in 12+ hour days on the day of the wedding, and we pay a wage that reflects their expertise and hard work.
Unfortunately, this cost gets passed to couple’s because wedding vendors have to still pay taxes, pay for insurance, order in bulk, etc. As much as we don’t want to do that, we would not be in business without protecting ever-shrinking profit margins. I share this to set the stage for the inside scoop I’m laying out below. I’ve started 2 businesses during a recession, so I feel like I have a good pulse on how to pivot while maintaining quality.
Wedding Inflation – Couples Are Getting Creative To Budget Wisely
- DIY Couples – these couples are playing a more intentional role in their weddings – they know their budget and they are getting creative with finances.
- Trade for Services – Wedding vendors are offering to trade for services – ie. day of coordinator in exchange for salon services, bookkeeping, etc.
- Dry Weddings – alcohol isn’t cheap, so many couples are opting to skip it altogether
- Cash Bars – couples are increasingly setting a budget for the wedding bar proactively, and then saying “once we hit X amount of dollars, it’s a cash bar.”
- Sizing Down – wedding guest lists are scaled down, with some couples opting for a luxe microwedding for under 50 guests rather than hosting a large wedding
I share this because I own a micro venue on Kent Island in addition to Chesapeake Bartenders, and have more than a few tricks up my sleeve in regards to staying ahead of potential inflation, unexpected cost increases and last minute surprises that can de-rail a wedding budget quickly. Below, I have shared what we are doing from an operational standpoint in order to lock in costs now, how to have a beautiful wedding bar experience without overspending and which factors are simply out of our control. I hope this is helpful as you plan your wedding bar, beverage and mocktail stations! – Courtney
Jump to a Section – skip to what section most interest you
- Where Your Bar Ingredients Come From (And Why It Matters)
- What to Buy Right Now and Store
- What You Cannot Lock In Early
- Use Local and Seasonal to Your Advantage
- Lock In Your Bar Setup Costs Now Too
- Your Next Step
Where Your Wedding Bar Ingredients Come From (And Why It Matters)
Most of the ingredients that go into a wedding bar travel a long way before they reach your glass. Understanding where they come from helps you understand why prices shift and which items are most vulnerable to tariff changes, shipping disruptions, and weather events.
| Ingredient | Where the US Gets It | Price Risk | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Limes | Mexico (85%+ of US supply), Colombia, Peru | High | Mexico is USMCA exempt from tariffs but lime prices are already elevated. Fresh limes cannot be stored long term. |
| Lemons | Mexico, Argentina, South Africa, California | High | Lemons remain subject to reciprocal tariffs from some origins. California domestic supply helps but does not cover national demand. |
| Coffee and Espresso | Brazil (#1), Colombia (#2), Vietnam, Ethiopia, Honduras | Medium | Coffee prices up 60% since 2020 globally. Shelf stable whole beans or espresso concentrate can be purchased well in advance. |
| Sugar | Mexico, Dominican Republic, Brazil | Medium | US is the world’s largest sugar importer. Stored dry in airtight containers, white sugar lasts indefinitely. Buy now. |
| Monin Syrups | Manufactured in Clearwater, Florida for the US market | Lower | Monin is a French brand but their US products are made domestically. Less tariff exposure than most imported syrups. Shelf stable for 36 months unopened. |
| Club Soda and Tonic | Primarily US manufactured | Lower | Aluminum tariffs affect can pricing. 2 liter bottles are the most cost effective option per ounce. Buy early and store cool and dark. |
| Juices (OJ, Cranberry, Pineapple) | Brazil (OJ), domestic and imported blend (cranberry and pineapple) | Medium | Brazilian OJ faces tariff exposure. Shelf stable juice cartons can be purchased in advance. Fresh squeezed cannot. |
| Fresh Garnishes and Herbs | Domestic and imported, highly variable | High | Cannot be purchased far in advance. Grow your own where possible. Mint in particular grows easily in a pot and costs almost nothing. |
Sources: USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, California Citrus Mutual, World’s Top Exports. Data current as of May 2026.
What to Buy Right Now and Store – Cost Savings By Beating Future Inflation
The smartest thing a budget-conscious couple can do right now is purchase non-perishable bar supplies as soon as possible and store them properly. Here is the list we would give to any couple planning a bar six to twelve months out.
Coffee and Espresso
If espresso martinis or coffee cocktails are on your menu, buy your espresso or cold brew concentrate now. Whole beans are shelf stable for 12 to 18 months when stored in an airtight container away from light and heat. Coffee prices have risen more than 60% since 2020 and the trend is not reversing.
Sugar and Simple Syrups
White granulated sugar stored in a sealed airtight container lasts essentially indefinitely. Buy it now. Make your own simple syrups at home for a fraction of what pre-made syrups cost. The formula is easy: one part sugar, one part water, heat until dissolved, cool, and refrigerate. Add lavender, coffee, jalapeño, or raspberry to build any flavor you want. A batch costs less than $2 and tastes better than most store options.
Monin Syrups
Great news here: Monin’s US products are manufactured in Clearwater, Florida, which means less tariff exposure than most imported specialty syrups. Buy the flavors you need now anyway since they are shelf stable for up to 36 months unopened. Raspberry, cucumber, coffee, and coconut are our most requested at weddings. Vodka, club soda, and a Monin syrup is one of the easiest and most crowd-pleasing signature drinks you can serve.
Our DIY Wedding Bar Planning Guide includes a full signature drink planning section with Monin combinations that work for both cocktails and mocktail stations.
*if you purchase a Monin syrup from any of the on-page links, we might receive a very small commission.
Sodas and Mixers
Club soda, tonic water, ginger beer, and ginger ale are all shelf stable. The cheapest option per ounce is always the 2 liter bottle. If you want cans for the bar display, shop Walmart, Sam’s Club, or Costco for the lowest unit price. Store all sodas in a cool dark location. A basement is ideal. A garage in a Maryland winter or a Florida summer is not.
Tajin and Coarse Salt
If margaritas are on your menu, buy your Tajin and coarse rim salt now. Both are shelf stable for years and a small but satisfying box to check off early.
What You Cannot Lock In Early
I want to be honest with you here because setting false expectations does not help anyone.
Fresh citrus is the biggest variable you cannot control. Lemons and limes are perishable. You cannot buy them months out. And with limes sourced over 85% from Mexico and lemons facing tariff exposure from Argentina and South Africa, fresh citrus prices at the time of your wedding may look very different from what you see today.
Our recommendation: if you want to lock in costs as tightly as possible, design your signature drink around ingredients you can purchase early. A Monin-based cocktail with club soda and a shelf stable juice? Completely controllable. A fresh lemon sour with hand-squeezed juice? Beautiful, but price-dependent on the market at wedding time.
If fresh juice matters deeply to you, plan for it but leave budget room for price variance of 20 to 30% above what you see today.
Use Local and Seasonal to Your Advantage
One of the best ways to keep bar costs manageable is to build your garnish and herb plan around what is actually growing near you at the time of your wedding. Imported and out-of-season ingredients always cost more. Local and in-season options are often available at a fraction of the price (plus you help support local farmers and nurseries). Here are a few examples to get you thinking > We have a complete regional guide by month covering every part of the country if you want to look up your specific area.
STATE BY STATE SEASONAL INGREDIENTS LIST BY SEASON
Mid-Atlantic Couples (Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey)
- Strawberries: Beautiful from late May through July. Perfect in signature cocktails, as garnishes, or muddled into mocktails.
- Mint: Thrives May through August. Grow one pot at home from a nursery plant and you will have more mint than you can use all summer.
- Lavender: Best from May through early July. Stunning as a garnish and pairs beautifully with lemon, honey, and gin.
- Peaches: July and August. A fresh peach muddled into a bourbon drink or blended into a mocktail lemonade is unforgettable.
Florida Couples
- Citrus: Florida grows gorgeous oranges, grapefruits, and limes from November through April. If your wedding falls in that window, source locally and skip the import markup entirely.
- Strawberries: Florida strawberry season peaks January through April. Plant City strawberries are among the best in the country and available at every farmers market.
Arizona Couples
- Citrus: Arizona grows lemons, oranges, and grapefruits locally from November through March. Buy from a local farm stand in that window and avoid the imported price entirely.
- Herbs: Rosemary, thyme, and sage thrive in the desert climate and make beautiful savory garnishes for signature cocktails year round.
Not on this list? Check our complete month-by-month seasonal guide for every US region to find what is growing near you at the time of your wedding.
Plant a Wedding Cocktail Garden
I did this for years and it is one of my favorite tips to share with DIY couples. Growing your own cocktail bar ingredients does two things at once: it keeps your costs low and gives you something grounding and joyful to tend during what can be a stressful planning season. Gardening is genuinely one of the best stress relievers there is, and watching herbs and berries grow for your own wedding bar is something special. And since granny hobbies are all the rage these days, why not take a cue from the victory gardens of the 1900’s that were so popular?
Mint, culinary lavender, rosemary, thyme, sage, marigolds, pansies, violas, strawberries, roses, and jalapeños are all completely achievable for a summer or fall wedding. Most can be started from small nursery plants. Some grow beautifully in raised beds (we love Vego Garden beds for this). Others thrive in containers on a deck or porch, which also has the bonus of keeping bunnies and other animals out of your harvest.
If you are short on outdoor space, an AeroGarden on a kitchen counter can grow herbs year round with zero garden experience required.
We have a full guide on building your own cocktail garden. In the meantime, check out our post on edible flowers for wedding bar cocktails and mocktails for ideas on what to plant first and what flowers make beautiful garnishes!
Lock In Your Bar Setup Costs Now Too
Bar aesthetics are not just a food and beverage budget line. The supplies that make your bar look beautiful including linens, risers, glassware, lighting, and signage are also subject to supply chain variability and shipping cost increases.
We have used the same core setup for years and it still photographs beautifully at every wedding. Two six foot tables, spandex linens in the color of your choice, eucalyptus garland, bar risers, and warm lighting. The whole thing is sourced from Amazon and costs a fraction of what rental companies charge for far less flexible setups.
You can steal our entire setup right here, Amazon links and all. Order the components now while pricing is predictable.
Your Next Step
If you are planning your own wedding bar and want a complete system for quantities, setup, staffing, and signature drinks without hiring a full bartending team, the DIY Wedding Bar Planning Guide gives you exactly that for $99.
Sixteen audio sections you can listen to on a commute. Five interactive calculators. Fifty-plus signature drink recipes. A real wedding case study with actual quantities and costs. Everything you need to walk into your wedding day knowing your bar is handled.
If you want to work through your specific situation one on one, the Full Custom Wedding Bar Planning Package gives you three calls with me personally to build your complete bar plan from scratch.
Either way, start planning now. The couples who build their bar plan early and buy what they can early are the ones who arrive at their wedding week without the stress of watching prices move on them.
Cheers,
Courtney
Founder, Chesapeake Bartenders and Events
*if you shop our Amazon affiliate links, we might earn a small commission – thanks for supporting our small business!