30 Wedding Favour Ideas Guests Will Actually Take Home (And Keep)

I’ve been to weddings where the favours were so beautiful I still have them on my shelf three years later. I’ve also been to weddings where I watched thirty people quietly leave their favours on the table on the way out.

The difference was never the budget. It was whether the favour felt chosen — whether it said something about the couple, or gave the guest something genuinely useful or genuinely delicious.

A $1 seed packet that connects to the couple’s love of gardening will be kept longer than a $10 personalised keyring that feels generic.

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Here are 30 wedding favour ideas across every budget, style, and category — with the honest truth about which ones guests actually take home.


Cost Per Favour at a Glance

CategoryCost per favourBest for
Edible favours$1.50–$6All weddings
DIY & handmade$1–$5Rustic, intimate, personal
Budget under $5$0.50–$4.50Large guest lists
Personalised & keepsake$4–$15Smaller guest lists
Luxury & premium$10–$35Intimate or high-budget weddings
Eco-friendly & sustainable$1–$8Garden, boho, outdoor weddings

Edible Wedding Favours

Edible wedding favours are the single most reliable category when it comes to guests actually taking them home. Food removes all the “will I use this?” uncertainty. If it tastes good, it disappears.

1. Honey jars with a personalised label

A small jar of local honey — 50g or 100g — with a kraft paper label printed with the couple’s names, wedding date, and a short note (“From our hive to yours,” or something that’s genuinely theirs).

Buy from a local beekeeper in bulk for the best price. Guests keep the jars even after the honey is gone. One of the most consistently loved edible wedding favours available.

Cost estimate: $2.50–$4 per favour Packaging tip: Kraft label, twine bow, small gift tag

2. Homemade jam jars

Make jam in the weeks before the wedding — strawberry, fig, lemon curd, apricot — and fill small glass jars. Add a hand-stamped label and a circle of fabric under the lid secured with twine. There’s something genuinely moving about a favour someone made themselves. Guests sense the effort and they keep it.

Cost estimate: $1.50–$3 per favour (materials only) Packaging tip: Fabric lid cover, twine, hand-stamped label

3. Custom cookies

Iced shortbread biscuits in shapes that mean something to the couple — their initials, a ring, a location outline, a shared symbol — individually wrapped in cellophane with a ribbon and tag. Buy from a local baker or make them yourself. These are picked up first at the favour table, every time.

Cost estimate: $3–$6 per biscuit (bought); $1–$2 (homemade) Packaging tip: Cellophane bag, satin ribbon, small printed tag

4. Hot sauce bottles

If the couple loves spicy food, small bottles of hot sauce — homemade or a high-quality store brand rebottled — with a personalised label (“Thanks for adding spice to our day”) are playful, personal, and genuinely useful. People who love hot sauce keep these indefinitely.

Cost estimate: $2–$4 per bottle Packaging tip: Custom label, small swing tag

5. Artisan chocolates or truffles

Two or three premium chocolates or truffles in a small box or bag, tied with ribbon. Buy from a local chocolatier for something guests won’t have tasted before. Quality matters here — supermarket chocolate in a nice box still feels like a supermarket chocolate. One excellent truffle beats three average ones.

Cost estimate: $3–$6 per box Packaging tip: Small gift box, tissue paper, ribbon, thank-you card

6. Personalised tea or coffee sachets

A small tin or kraft envelope containing two specialty tea bags or a single-serve coffee sachet, with the couple’s names and date on the packaging. Perfect for morning-after guests at a destination wedding or anyone who appreciates a quiet cup. Practical, warm, and lasts longer than most edible favours.

Cost estimate: $2–$4 per favour Packaging tip: Small kraft envelope or tin, personalised sticker seal


DIY and Handmade Wedding Favours

These are the favours that carry the most emotional weight — because guests know someone spent time on them, and that means something.

7. Soy wax candles in tins

Pour soy wax into small metal tins or glass jars, add a fragrance that means something to the couple — the scent of the wedding venue, a favourite holiday destination, a seasonal smell — and print your own labels. Candle favours are kept far longer than almost any other non-edible option. People burn them and think of the wedding.

Cost estimate: $2–$4 per candle (materials in bulk) Difficulty: Moderate (thermometer and pouring jug needed)

8. Seed packet favours

Print kraft paper seed packet envelopes with the couple’s names, wedding date, and a short note. Fill with wildflower, herb, or vegetable seeds. Eco-friendly, genuinely useful, and the favour that keeps giving — guests plant them and think of the wedding every time something grows.

Cost estimate: $0.50–$1.50 per favour Difficulty: Easy

9. Herb bundles

Tie small bundles of fresh rosemary, lavender, or sage with twine and a printed tag (“For your kitchen, from ours” or “For your garden, from ours”). If you grow herbs, this favour costs almost nothing. The fragrance fills the room all evening and guests carry it home.

Cost estimate: $0.50–$2 per bundle Difficulty: Very easy

10. Wax melt hearts

Melt soy wax, pour into heart moulds, add a fragrance and press a dried flower into the top before it sets. Package in a small wax paper bag with a printed tag. These look beautiful, smell wonderful, and feel genuinely handmade in the best way.

Cost estimate: $1–$2 per wax melt Difficulty: Easy

11. Personalised bath salts

Mix Epsom salts with a few drops of essential oil (lavender, rose, eucalyptus), a pinch of dried herbs or flower petals, and fill small glass jars or cellophane bags. Print a label with the couple’s names and a note: “Relax. You just watched us get married.” People love a bath product they didn’t buy themselves.

Cost estimate: $1.50–$3 per favour Difficulty: Easy


Budget Wedding Favours Under $5

A smaller budget doesn’t mean a lesser favour. The most memorable favours on this list cost under $2. The key is choosing something with personality.

12. Seed paper bookmarks

Seed paper — paper embedded with wildflower seeds that can be planted directly in soil — cut into bookmark shapes and stamped with the couple’s names and date. Guests read with them, then plant them. Functional, beautiful, and biodegradable.

Cost estimate: $0.50–$1 per bookmark Where to buy: Specialist paper suppliers, online marketplaces

13. Personalised matchboxes

Plain matchboxes bought in bulk, with a printed or stamped cover featuring the couple’s names and wedding date. Guests use them at the candlelit tables during dinner. It’s one of those tiny details that makes a wedding feel meticulously considered — and costs almost nothing.

Cost estimate: $0.50–$1 per matchbox

14. Wildflower seed bombs

Small balls of clay, compost, and wildflower seeds that guests can toss into their garden. They look beautiful in a bowl or basket on the favour table, they’re completely eco-friendly, and they’re the kind of favour guests tell other people about.

Cost estimate: $1–$2 per seed bomb Packaging tip: Kraft paper wrap, twine, small tag

15. Mini olive oil bottles

Small bottles of quality olive oil with personalised labels. Perfect for a Mediterranean, vineyard, or Italian-themed wedding. People actually use olive oil, which makes this one of the most genuinely useful favours on any list.

Cost estimate: $2.50–$4.50 per bottle

16. Luggage tags

Personalised leather or faux-leather luggage tags with the couple’s names and date. Particularly meaningful for couples who love to travel, or for guests at a destination wedding. Practical, durable, and used every time the guest travels — which means the wedding comes to mind repeatedly, long after the day.

Cost estimate: $2–$4.50 per tag


Personalised and Keepsake Wedding Favours

These are the favours guests put somewhere specific rather than in a drawer — on a shelf, in a frame, by the kettle. They earn their place because they’re genuinely personal.

17. Personalised ornaments

A small ornament — ceramic, wood, or glass — with the couple’s names, wedding date, and a short message. Guests hang it on their Christmas tree every year and think of the wedding. A favour that comes back into people’s lives annually is one of the most meaningful things you can give.

Cost estimate: $4–$8 per ornament

18. Custom photo magnets

A small magnet printed with a photo of the couple — an engagement photo, a childhood photo, a favourite moment — with the wedding date. Goes straight onto the fridge. Guests see it every day. Simple, inexpensive, and one of the most consistently used keepsake favours.

Cost estimate: $1.50–$3 per magnet

19. Personalised mini notebooks

Small notebooks with the couple’s names and date on the cover — in a design that matches the wedding aesthetic. People use notebooks. They get picked up off the favour table almost universally because they look useful rather than decorative.

Cost estimate: $3–$6 per notebook

20. Engraved wooden keyrings

A small wooden or bamboo keyring engraved with the couple’s initials, wedding date, or a short word that means something to them. Guests carry it on their keys and notice it every day. Simple enough to be genuinely useful, personal enough to feel considered.

Cost estimate: $4–$8 per keyring

21. Pressed flower bookmarks in acetate sleeves

Press flowers from the wedding florals — or flowers that mean something to the couple — between two pieces of acetate and seal as a bookmark. Each one is slightly different, entirely natural, and takes a pressed piece of the wedding day into someone else’s home. One of the most quietly beautiful keepsake favours available.

Cost estimate: $2–$4 per bookmark Difficulty: Moderate (pressing and sealing needed in advance)


Luxury and Premium Wedding Favours

These are for smaller guest lists, higher budgets, or couples who want their favours to feel like a real gift rather than a gesture.

22. Miniature spirit bottles with personalised labels

A 50ml bottle of quality gin, whisky, rum, or champagne with a custom label. For weddings with a drinks theme or couples who want something adults will genuinely appreciate, a miniature of a spirit the couple loves is a favour that gets talked about. Personalise the label with the wedding date and a note.

Cost estimate: $8–$15 per bottle

23. Personalised linen napkins

A small linen cocktail napkin with the couple’s monogram or wedding date embroidered or printed on it. Practical, beautiful, and the kind of item that ends up used rather than stored. Works particularly well for elegant or classic wedding styles.

Cost estimate: $8–$18 per napkin

24. Artisan soap bars

A full-sized bar of handmade soap from a local artisan — wrapped in kraft paper with a personalised label. Choose a fragrance that connects to the wedding: rose and honey for a floral wedding, cedar and bergamot for an autumnal one, coconut and lime for a tropical or destination wedding.

Cost estimate: $6–$12 per bar

25. Personalised ceramic coasters

A set of two ceramic coasters with the couple’s names and date, or a simple design that matches the wedding aesthetic. People use coasters every day, which means the favour earns its place in a guest’s home rather than sitting in a drawer.

Cost estimate: $10–$18 per set of two

26. Luxury candles in branded boxes

A premium soy or beeswax candle in a branded box — with the couple’s names on the packaging, a signature fragrance chosen specifically for the wedding, and a quality burn time of 40+ hours. These feel like a real gift. Guests burn them slowly and think of the wedding every time.

Cost estimate: $12–$25 per candle


Eco-Friendly and Sustainable Wedding Favours

These are for couples who want their favours to leave something behind in the world rather than in a landfill.

27. Plantable seed paper cards

A card-sized piece of seed paper with a heartfelt note from the couple printed on it. When the guest is done reading, they plant the card in soil and wildflowers grow. The most literal version of a favour that keeps giving — and completely zero-waste.

Cost estimate: $1–$2.50 per card

28. Mini succulent or cactus pots

A small succulent or cactus in a terracotta pot with a printed tag. Succulents are nearly impossible to kill, which makes them the ideal plant favour for guests without a green thumb. They live on desks and windowsills for years. A living favour is a living memory.

Cost estimate: $3–$6 per pot

29. Beeswax wraps

A small piece of reusable beeswax food wrap — a sustainable alternative to cling film — with a printed card explaining how to use it. Practical, eco-conscious, and the kind of favour that changes a small habit in a guest’s kitchen. Works beautifully for outdoor, garden, or sustainability-minded couples.

Cost estimate: $4–$8 per wrap

30. Charitable donation cards

Instead of a physical favour, make a donation to a cause meaningful to the couple on behalf of each guest, and present a small card explaining what was given in their name. For couples who genuinely don’t want more stuff in the world, this is the most honest and generous favour option available. Choose a charity that connects to your story.

Cost estimate: Variable — set a per-guest donation amount Packaging tip: Simple printed card in a small envelope


Favours Guests Actually Keep vs Leave Behind

Be honest with yourself about this table before you decide.

Favour typeKept rateWhy
Edible (quality)Very highNo decision needed — just eat it
Candles (quality)HighUsed and useful at home
Succulents / plantsHighLiving things are hard to abandon
Personalised photo itemsHighSentimental, goes on fridge or shelf
Seed packets / seed bombsHighCuriosity — guests want to try them
Personalised keyringsMedium-highUseful if design is subtle
Generic trinketsLowNo personal connection
Cheap sweetsLow-mediumOften eaten, packaging left behind
Coasters (non-personalised)LowFeels impersonal
Charity donation cardsHighEmotionally meaningful to receive

Favour Ideas by Wedding Style

Wedding styleBest favour options
Rustic / barnHoney jars, herb bundles, seed packets, homemade jam
Garden partySucculent pots, wildflower seed bombs, pressed flower bookmarks
Beach / coastalMini spirit bottles, beeswax wraps, shell-decorated candles
Elegant / classicPersonalised ceramic coasters, linen napkins, luxury candles
BohoWax melts, seed paper cards, artisan soap bars
Modern / minimalistCustom photo magnets, personalised notebooks, charitable donations
Destination weddingLuggage tags, local artisan products, mini olive oil bottles
Christmas / winterPersonalised ornaments, mulled wine spice sachets, luxury candles

DIY vs Bought: Honest Comparison

FactorDIY favoursBought favours
Cost per unitLowerHigher
Time investmentHighLow
Personal feelVery highMedium
Quality controlVariableConsistent
Scalability (100+ guests)ChallengingEasy
Best forIntimate weddings under 60 guestsAny size wedding
RiskUnderestimating time neededLess personal feel

Seasonal Favour Guide

SeasonFavour ideasWhy it works
SpringSeed packets, herb bundles, pressed flower bookmarksPlanting season — seeds feel timely
SummerHoney jars, mini olive oil, wildflower seed bombsOutdoor, fresh, abundant
AutumnHomemade jam, personalised candles, hot sauceWarm, rich, harvest-feel
WinterLuxury candles, bath salts, personalised ornamentsCosy, indulgent, gift-like

Packaging Ideas by Favour Type

FavourBest packagingWhat to avoid
CandlesKraft box, tissue paper, wax sealPlastic wrap — looks cheap
Edible jarsFabric lid, twine bow, hand-stamped tagPrinted sticker only — needs more
Seed packetsKraft envelope with custom printPlain white envelope
SucculentsTerracotta pot, kraft tag tied onPlastic pot — defeats the eco message
Cookies / biscuitsCellophane bag, satin ribbon, tagNo packaging — looks unfinished
Bath saltsSmall glass jar, cork lid, labelLoose in a bag — too casual
Soap barsKraft paper wrap, twine, labelShrink wrap — impersonal
Donation cardsSmall printed card in a linen envelopePlain white office envelope

A note on what makes a favour worth giving

The question to ask isn’t “what can I give 100 people?” It’s “what would I want to receive at a wedding I loved?”

The favours that get kept are the ones that feel chosen rather than bought. A jar of jam you made. A candle with a fragrance that tells a story. A seed packet with a note about why you chose that flower. A donation to a cause that explains something about who you are as a couple.

Guests don’t remember the favour itself as much as they remember the feeling of receiving something that was actually thought about. That’s available at every budget. It just requires a little more intention than clicking “add to cart.”


Frequently Asked Questions

What are the most popular wedding favours?

The most popular wedding favours — based on what guests actually take home and keep — are edible items, especially honey jars, homemade jam, and quality chocolates or biscuits. After edibles, candles (particularly soy or beeswax in branded or personalised packaging) and small plants like succulents consistently rank as the favours guests are most likely to keep and use. Personalised keepsakes like photo magnets and ornaments perform well for guests who have a close relationship with the couple. The common thread across all popular wedding favours is usefulness or genuine personal connection — guests keep things they can eat, burn, grow, or display.

How much should you spend on wedding favours?

The standard budget for wedding favours is $2–$8 per guest, which covers the vast majority of edible, DIY, and keepsake options on this list. For a wedding of 100 guests, that’s $200–$800 in favours — a reasonable line in the overall budget. Luxury favours run $10–$35 per guest and work best for smaller, more intimate weddings where the favour genuinely feels like a gift. Budget favours under $2 per guest are entirely viable — seed packets, matchboxes, and herb bundles all come in under $2 and are consistently well received. The amount spent per favour matters far less than whether the favour feels personal. A $1 favour with a thoughtful note outperforms a $12 generic item almost every time.

Do wedding guests actually keep their favours?

Honestly — not always. The favours most likely to be left on the table are generic trinkets with no personal connection, low-quality sweets, and items that feel mass-produced rather than chosen. The favours most likely to be taken home and kept are edible (because the decision is made for you — you eat it), living (succulents are hard to abandon), or genuinely personal (a photo, a reference to the couple’s story, something handmade). The best way to increase the odds that guests take your favour home is to display them attractively, mention them during the reception (“please take a favour home”), and choose something with a clear purpose rather than a decorative object that needs a place to live.

What wedding favours are actually worth the money?

The wedding favours with the best return on investment — meaning guests value them significantly more than they cost — are quality candles (a $5 candle feels like a $15 gift), honey jars from a local beekeeper (the local provenance adds perceived value), personalised ornaments (guests display them annually), succulent pots (living favours feel generous regardless of cost), and seed packets with a personal note (the story makes them meaningful beyond their price). The favours least worth the money are generic personalised items (keyrings, bottle openers, fans) that guests have no particular reason to keep, and low-quality edibles that feel like an afterthought. Spend slightly more per favour and give fewer if needed — one excellent favour beats three forgettable ones.