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Wedding Favour and Door Gift Ideas Singapore 2026: 25 Practical, Trendy and Budget-Friendly Gifts Guests Will Actually Want

Planning wedding favours in Singapore? Here are 25 practical door gift ideas, realistic 2026 prices, local vendor picks, and smart budgeting tips.

Vows.sg Editorial9 Apr 202610 min read
Wedding favours and door gifts beautifully arranged on a reception table at a Singapore wedding

Wedding favours are one of those tiny wedding details that can become weirdly stressful. You just want a simple thank-you gift for your guests, then suddenly you're comparing honey jars, candles, cookies, tea tins, and customised tote bags at 1am.

The good news: in Singapore, you really don't need to overcomplicate it.

The best wedding favours in 2026 are practical, easy to bring home, and actually enjoyable. Think edible treats, useful lifestyle items, or something with a local twist. Not random trinkets that end up forgotten in a hotel ballroom chair pouch.

If you're choosing wedding door gifts for a hotel banquet, restaurant wedding, ROM lunch, garden solemnisation, or even a void deck celebration, this guide will help you narrow it down fast.

First things first: do you even need wedding favours?

Short answer, no.

They're nice, not mandatory. SingaporeBrides recently made the same point clearly: if you're only giving favours to tick a box, it's perfectly fine to skip them. Guests care far more about the overall experience, the food, and whether they felt welcomed.

But if you do want to give one, make it intentional.

A good favour should usually do at least one of these:

  • Be edible
  • Be useful at home, work, or while travelling
  • Reflect your story as a couple
  • Fit your wedding vibe without creating clutter

That's the bar.

How much do wedding favours cost in Singapore in 2026?

For most weddings here, a realistic budget is $2 to $15 per guest.

Here's a simple way to think about it:

Budget tierTypical spend per guestWhat it gets you
Budget$2 to $4Candy, small local snacks, basic honey jars, simple practical gifts
Mid-range$4 to $8Tea tins, cookies, room sprays, cupcakes, small candles, better packaging
Premium$8 to $15+Branded keepsakes, artisanal treats, mini self-care sets, elevated packaging

For a 150-guest wedding, that works out to roughly:

  • $300 to $600 for budget favours
  • $600 to $1,200 for mid-range favours
  • $1,200 to $2,250+ for premium favours

Don't forget the hidden bits:

  • Custom labels or stickers
  • Individual boxes or paper bags
  • Delivery charges
  • Rush fees
  • Minimum order quantities
  • Extra pieces for vendors, family, and last-minute guests

A safe rule is to order 5 to 10 percent extra. In Singapore, there's always that one table adjustment, plus-card guest, or auntie who asks, "Eh, got one more or not?"

What guests in Singapore actually like now

The trend is pretty clear. Couples are moving away from heavily personalised keepsakes and towards things guests can consume or genuinely use.

That means these categories are winning in 2026:

  • Edible favours like cookies, tea, honey, macarons, chocolates, and candy
  • Practical gifts like room sprays, reusable bags, travel kits, or cutlery sets
  • Local-flavoured ideas like kaya, pineapple tart-style treats, kopi-inspired snacks, or nostalgic Singapore sweets
  • Eco-conscious options like seed packets, reusable items, and low-waste packaging

If you're having an outdoor solemnisation at HortPark, a rooftop dinner, or a warm afternoon ROM, also think about heat. Chocolate melts, butter-based items soften, and anything delicate can get messy fast.

25 wedding favour and door gift ideas Singapore couples can actually use

Best edible wedding favours

1. Mini honey jars

Still one of the easiest wins. HoneySpree's mini honey jars have been popular because they're affordable, symbolic, and easy to customise. Recent pricing has been around $3.90 for a mini jar, with optional upgrades.

Best for:

  • ROMs and intimate weddings
  • Rustic or garden themes
  • Couples who want something sweet but not too atas

2. Petite jar cookies

MINDS Bakers' petite jar cookies have been a strong local option at about $5 each. They're especially nice if you want a favour that also supports a social enterprise.

Best for:

  • Couples who want a gift with heart
  • Corporate-looking banquet setups that need something neat and fuss-free
  • Guests who will definitely snack on the ride home

3. Tea tins or floral tea favours

Favor Atelier's Floratine tea tins are one of the prettier mid-range options. Current listed pricing is about $5 to $5.50 each, with a minimum order of 30 and a six-week lead time.

Best for:

  • Elegant hotel weddings
  • Garden or botanical themes
  • Couples who want something feminine, polished, and easy to display

4. Cupcakes or tartlets

Taira Pastry has wedding favour cupcakes from around $5.80 and tartlets from about $8. Very cute, very photogenic, but best if your logistics are tight and same-day freshness matters.

Best for:

  • Intimate solemnisations
  • Daytime weddings
  • Dessert-loving crowds

5. Macarons

Annabella Patisserie's wedding-themed macaron sets have been listed from $8.80. These feel a bit more luxe, so they're a good fit if your wedding leans premium.

6. Handmade candy or rock candy

Sticky is pushing customisable candy wedding gifts with colour and flavour matching, which works well if your couple palette is a big part of the styling.

7. Artisanal chocolate

Always safe. Easy to customise, broadly liked, easy to pack, and doesn't feel too gimmicky.

8. Drip coffee bags or kopi-inspired treats

A very Singapore kind of favour. Great if you bonded over coffee dates or want something guests will actually use at work on Monday.

9. Local snack sets

Think pineapple tarts, kaya-themed treats, nostalgic biscuits, or heritage-inspired snacks. Vendors like A Love Knot have leaned into this local style well.

10. Halal-friendly baked treats

If you have a mixed guest list, inclusive matters. Halal-certified bakeries like The Butter Studio are worth a look if you're leaning into cupcakes or baked favours.

Best practical wedding favours

11. Essential oil room sprays

Anri's room sprays have been featured locally from about $3.50 each and are one of the better practical options. Small, useful, and easy to personalise.

12. Scented candles

Candles are still everywhere for a reason. They look premium without necessarily costing premium money, and they suit both modern and romantic wedding styling.

13. Handmade soaps

A safer practical choice than decorative keepsakes. Guests will eventually use it, and minimalist packaging makes it feel more expensive than it is.

14. Foldable reusable bags

Very Singapore, very practical. Guests can use them for groceries, office days, or weekend runs to FairPrice.

15. Reusable cutlery sets

Good for eco-conscious couples, especially if sustainability matters to you more than aesthetics alone.

16. Travel-sized personal care kits

Cheap, unisex, and surprisingly useful. Not the most glamorous option, but honestly quite smart for big guest lists.

17. Bottle openers

Classic, but only if the design is clean. Skip anything too cheesy or over-engraved.

18. Coasters

A decent middle ground between practical and decorative, especially for minimalist banquet favours.

19. Mini portable fans

Especially relevant for outdoor weddings in Singapore. If your solemnisation is in the late afternoon heat, this one actually makes sense.

20. Luggage tags

Still workable for destination weddings or travel-themed couples, but keep them subtle. Nobody wants a giant "Jason & Melissa 2026" hanging off their Rimowa.

Best meaningful or trendy options

21. Seed packets or mini plants

Still popular with eco-conscious couples. Cute in theory, but think about practicality if guests are travelling back by MRT or crossing borders after the wedding.

22. Donation cards in guests' names

If you're not into physical favours, this is one of the cleanest alternatives. Meaningful, low-clutter, and easy to explain with a table card.

23. Leftover takeaway kits for buffet weddings

This came up in recent favour discussions and it's honestly quite clever. If you're hosting a buffet or family-style meal, a tidy takeaway container can be unexpectedly practical.

24. Hangover kits or electrolyte drinks

More niche, but funny in the right crowd, especially if you have an afterparty and the vibe is more playful than formal.

25. Personal story-based gifts

If you met through medicine, maybe a mini first-aid kit. If you bonded over tea, do tea. If your first dates were kopi and kaya toast, run with that. These tend to feel more memorable than generic gifts because they actually say something about the two of you.

Local vendor ideas worth checking out

If you want a shortlist instead of doom-scrolling for three days, start here:

VendorGood forIndicative pricing / note
HoneySpreeMini honey jars, sweet edible favoursMini jars around $3.90
MINDS BakersSocial-enterprise cookiesPetite jar cookies around $5
Favor AtelierTea tins and elegant packaging$5 to $5.50, minimum 30
Anri GiftsPractical modern favoursRoom sprays from around $3.50
A Love KnotSingapore-inspired local snack favoursBest if you want heritage flavour
SG Wedding FavorsBroad customisation optionsGood for couples who want many choices
DreamweaversKeepsakes, coasters, candlesBetter for more classic gift-style favours
StickyCustomisable candy giftsStrong for colour-themed weddings
The Butter StudioHalal-certified baked treatsGreat for inclusive dessert favours

How to choose the right wedding favour without losing your mind

Ask these five questions:

1. Will guests actually bring it home?

If the answer is "maybe not," skip it.

2. Does it survive Singapore weather?

Outdoor solemnisation? Avoid melt-prone items unless you're distributing them at the end.

3. Does it fit your guest list?

Older relatives may love tea, cookies, or local snacks. Younger friends may be happier with candy, candles, or room sprays.

4. Is it easy to distribute?

Individually packed items are much easier for banquet tables, reception tables, and post-lunch collection.

5. Are dietary needs covered?

If you're doing edible favours, think about halal needs, nut allergies, vegetarian preferences, and whether alcohol is involved.

Smart wedding favour tips for Singapore couples

Match the gift to the wedding format

  • Hotel banquet: go neat, compact, table-friendly
  • Garden solemnisation: choose sturdy packaging, low-melt items
  • ROM lunch: smaller, sweeter, more personal works well
  • Void deck wedding: practical or edible usually wins
  • Destination wedding: lightweight and easy to travel with

Don't over-personalise

A tiny tag with your names is enough. Full wedding-date branding on the actual item can make it feel more souvenir shop than thoughtful gift.

Order earlier than you think

For customised favours, 4 to 8 weeks lead time is sensible. If the vendor is doing labels, flavour selection, or hand-packing, don't leave it to the last minute.

Put the budget where guests notice it

One good edible favour beats one dusty keepsake every time.

If your venue already includes favours, check before double-buying

Some Singapore wedding packages already include a standard favour. If it's mediocre, ask whether you can top up, swap, or simply use yours instead.

So, what's the best wedding favour in Singapore for 2026?

If you want the honest answer, it's usually one of these three:

  1. An edible favour like honey, cookies, tea, or chocolate
  2. A useful lifestyle item like a room spray or reusable bag
  3. A locally inspired gift that feels personal without being impractical

If you're stuck, go with tea tins, honey jars, petite cookies, or room sprays. Hard to go very wrong with those.

They're easy to personalise, affordable for most budgets, and they don't make your guests think, "Wah, now I need to find space for this at home."

That's really the whole game.

Pick something thoughtful, keep it simple, and move on to the 200 other wedding decisions waiting for you.

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