Weddings are expensive but knowing âhow much does a wedding dress cost and whyâ helps you understand that every penny in the price of a wedding dress is going to a person or to a service needed to bring that dress to you. As with any area of life a discounted price will bring you a discounted level of quality and service.
This article is about pff the peg wedding dresses as a useful comparison to my bespoke service. To learn more about bespoke pricing head over to my FAQ page.
Though I now work in bespoke bridal-wear I started out with a small shop in Reigate as their alteration seamstress. After a few years the opportunity came up for me to buy the business so I got to see their accounts in detail. As circumstances panned out I opted to buy a house instead of the business, and never looked back with the bespoke work I now love, but it did give me an insight into how small retail profits work in this industry. It helped me learn the answer to âhow much a wedding dress cost?â (for off the peg dresses), which has been exceptionally useful to me in creating my bespoke dresses as a competitive service.

Me and my boss, Liz, on my last day as her alteration seamstress at her Reigate bridal shop in 2008. She was like an Auntie to me, so kind and encouraging and truly helped launch the career I have today.
How much does a wedding dress cost (to the shop)?
Here is an example of where the money paid for a mid range designer dress might end up along the chain of supply.
Example dress:
ÂŁ1500 price to bride
ÂŁ625 cost of dress from designer (see breakdown below)
ÂŁ300 VAT paid to government
=ÂŁ575 net profit to shop.
The shop uses this to pay for many things before the owner has anything to keep! The shop I worked for sold about 150 dresses a year, with costs per dress dividing out a bit like thisâŚ
rent & rates ÂŁ170
staff wages to sell you the dress (and to be in the shop answering calls and emails, preparing and steaming the dresses etc) ÂŁ150
electric and water ÂŁ10
Insurance ÂŁ15
Stationary, sewing supplies, other small equipment ÂŁ10
Advertising and website ÂŁ20
Accountantâs fees ÂŁ15
Making the shop pretty for you to visit (cleaning, decorating) ÂŁ40
Corporate tax on profit after all the above ÂŁ30
=take home profit approx ÂŁ115 per dress
The sample dress cost
Plus there was the cost of the ÂŁ625 sample dress from the designer so you could choose your dress. Sample dresses are usually sold later, for about half the full price, so ÂŁ750 in this case. Less ÂŁ50 VAT, =ÂŁ125 loss. And as many sample dresses get sold off this way without ever selling âa repeatâ, (that is never selling a new one to a bride) the shop makes almost nothing on these -though selling them off is better than having them clog up the rails!
How much does a wedding dress cost to manufacture?
Further along the chainâŚ
ÂŁ625 paid by the shop to the designer for the new dress covers:
Cost of advertising the designer in magazines and online
Cost of materials in dress
Cost of manufacture (labour, factory upkeep, profit for factory)
Shipment from overseas factory to the UK and then delivery to shop
Profit for designerâs business (their own income, cost of their premises and staff etc
The âcostâ of your dress is not just the making
All in the all the actual cost of labour and materials in a ÂŁ1500 dress is probably about ÂŁ150 or less. The rest going towards the genuine costs of all the people and services involved in bringing the dress to the high-street for you to find and buy. The person who sewed your dress probably worked for around ÂŁ1.50-ÂŁ3 an hour. This is an unpleasant reality but a normal skilled workers rate in many garment mass-manufacturing areas.
Asking for a discount â someone has to pay!
When I used to work for a wedding dress shop in Reigate, Surrey I used to feel very sad whenever anyone asked my boss for a discount, or tried to play off the price of a particular dress from one shop to another. After all the costs above the owner used to take home a salary for herself of about ÂŁ300 a month. Bridal wear is not the money spinner many people think it will be!
Yes, weddings are expensive, of course no one wants to pay âover the oddsâ but every penny in the price of a wedding dress ticket price is going to a person or to a service needed to bring the dress to you. And when asked for 10% off the price of a ÂŁ1500 dress effectively my boss was being asked to give half her monthly salary away to pay for the brides dress. As my mother used to say to me when I started out in this industry, âItâs not your job to pay for other peopleâs weddings, if they canât afford that dress, they need to choose a different one.â
Other costs â alterations
Beyond the ticket price you should also factor in the alteration costs when working out your budget. These are usually paid by the bride direct to the professional seamstress. The seamstress might be one working for the shop you bought your dress from, or found elsewhere. Typical alterations might take anything from a couple of hours, to two days work with fittings and sewing so a charge ÂŁ60-ÂŁ400 is a realistic budget.
If my bespoke service isnât right for you local wedding dress shops I have a good relationship with and can highly recommend include Bride by Aster, and Wed2Be.
Wedding dresses cost more because they come with more service and value
As with any area of life a discounted price will bring you a discounted level of quality and service. My old boss and most wedding dress shop owners go into the business with a passion and a love for the dresses and the happy clients they meet. They are willing to bend over backwards to help; to argue for the rush order dress; work long evenings so brides can have after work dress fittings; and fastidiously steam each dress (it takes hours) for your perfect crease free day. Asking them to further fund your wedding by discounting their take home pay is not the best way to encourage good service. Appreciate their passion and work by paying the right price so and they will be passionate about your wedding day too!






HannahWhat a useful post â very clear explanation and hopefully dispels some myths.