Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Parents Panel: Readers share their tips for planning birthday parties on a budget

Homemade Gruffalo cakes, pound shop supplies and pre-buying the sweets.

parents-panel-banner-final1.1 - Copy TheJournal.ie TheJournal.ie

AS PART OF TheJournal.ie’s weekly Family Magazine, we wanted to create a space for parents to share their views. A place where mums and dads could share their experiences, lessons learned, and even mistakes along the way. 

A birthday party should be simple right? A few party hats, a cake, maybe a balloon or two. Wrong. Much like Christmas, keeping birthdays on budget can be tricky, particularly if your child has already been to a slew of other parties this year and knows exactly what they want. Surely there’s a way to keep spending on track?

This week we’re asking our panel…

What are your tips for planning a birthday party on a budget?

Here’s what they had to say…

Parents Panel All 7 - Copy - Copy Top L-R: Olly Keegan, Alan Dooley, Denise, Ken Hyland. Middle L-R: Ríona Flood, Ross Boxshall, Marta Lisiecka, Denise Cumiskey. Bottom L-R: Kait Quinn, Susannah O’Brien, Derek McInerney, Suzie Kelly TheJournal.ie TheJournal.ie

Look out for sweets on offer earlier in the year: I have always held birthday parties for my kids until they hit secondary school. With Ellie, I’ll have the local hall booked with bouncy castle a good few weeks in advance, and I will buy up sweets that are on special offer months in advance (once the sell-by date on them is okay!) and hide them away. This year we had about 30 kids for her third birthday – she couldn’t decide on what cake she wanted so she had her four favourite characters on it…

- Denise Cumiskey

27657806_1758097397588593_1132725907451680677_n Ellie's can't-decide cake. Denise Cumiskey Denise Cumiskey

Set a gift limit with other parents: It’s not the party, it’s the other gifts you have to buy during the year that can cause issues. Staying on budget for birthdays is a subtle art of influencing parents way ahead of time, so you all get on the same page. The ideal set up is to agree on a €10 toy shop voucher as the gift  – or to keep an eye out for bargains or toys on offer during the year in preparation.

- Alan Dooley

20180401_190129 Bouncy castles and Irish weather, not a great combo. Denise Denise

Skip the bouncy castle if rain is forecast (or even if it’s not): Kids’ birthday parties are scary affairs and staying on budget is hard. Let’s be honest, nobody wants to host a boring party! Neither of us are great bakers, so we end up buying a cake. Pass The Parcel only went so far last year so we invested in a bouncy castle this year which ended up being a waste of money and a washout in torrential rain. I’m dreading next year already…

- Denise

Make DIY party food and let the kids loose in the garden: We are lucky that we have a big garden and our son’s birthday is in May, so the weather is usually okay(ish), handy for an outside party. Everything is kept on a tight budget and our one big expense is the bouncy castle. I make the cake, and most of the food: popcorn, some jellies, loads of fruit, mini sausage rolls, meatballs and tortilla pizza. Then it’s just a case of letting the kids play in the garden. To be honest, once the kids can run around, they all just amuse themselves.

- Olly Keegan

dav The Gruffalo, as made by Olly this year. Olly Keegan Olly Keegan

Pick a theme, and team up with another family: Over the last few years we have run parties at home for our eldest, with a theme. Last year’s theme was ‘magic’ (our biggest expense was a hired magician) and the previous years was a team-based scavenger hunt outdoors. Joint parties can save money too. We plan ahead within the theme and cater accordingly with pizza and chips. For party supplies, hit the pound shop.

- Ross Boxshall

image2 The scavenger hunters in their high vis vests. Ross Boxshall Ross Boxshall

More Parents Panel: What’s the after-school routine in your house?>

More Parents Panel: What’s the trickiest parenting dilemma you’ve ever faced?>

Close
Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

    Leave a commentcancel