Fund your dream honeymoon with a Collection Pot Honeymoon Wishlist
If you’d love cash wedding gifts to go towards your honeymoon, but you don’t want the awkward money chat, there’s a simple answer: a **Collection Pot Honeymoon Wishlist**.
It’s one easy link you can share on your wedding website or in messages. Guests can chip in towards your honeymoon with a fun message, and the Wishlist turns “cash” into specific moments — flights, upgrades, and experiences — so giving feels personal and genuinely thoughtful.
Below is a step-by-step guide to building a honeymoon wishlist guests will love funding.
Step 1: Start with the honeymoon story (not the budget)
Before you list any items, get clear on the vibe of your trip.
Ask yourselves:
- What do we want this honeymoon to feel like?
- What moments will we talk about for years?
- What would we never usually treat ourselves to? When guests can picture the trip, chipping in feels like they’re helping create memories — not just giving cash.
Step 2: Choose wishlist items that feel like “moments”
The best wishlists read like a mini itinerary — little highlights people can imagine you doing.
A few Japan-inspired ideas:
- “Onsen day for two” — £40
- “TeamLab tickets” — £45
- “Sushi tasting night in Tokyo” — £180
- “Ryokan stay upgrade” — £400 - “Flights to Tokyo” — £1,850
Tip: name items like memories, not invoices. “Sunset ramen date” beats “Food budget” every time.
Check out our example Japan wishlist here
Step 3: Mix price points (so everyone can take part)
Guests love choice — and different budgets.
A simple starting mix:
- Smaller treats under £50
- Mid-range experiences (£50–£200)
- A few bigger “wow” items (£200+) With Collection Pot Wishlists, you can also choose whether an item is funded by one person or whether multiple guests can chip in together — perfect for group gifting.
Step 4: Use wording that feels warm and optional
The best wording is grateful and low-pressure.
Wedding website wording you can copy: “We’re so excited to celebrate with you — that’s the main gift. If you’d like to give something, we’ve set up a honeymoon fund with a little wishlist of moments we’d love to do on the trip. Totally optional, but it would mean the world.”
If someone asks in person:
“That’s so kind — we’ve set up a honeymoon wishlist so people can chip in towards moments on the trip. If you did want to give something, you can chip in here. Please don’t feel any pressure at all.”
Step 5: Share one link (so guests don’t have to hunt)
Keep it simple: one link, everywhere.
Good places to share:
- Your wedding website (usually under “Gifts”)
- A WhatsApp message if people ask
- A small insert card with your invitations
- A QR code (optional, but handy)



