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An Insider Report: How To Decode Wedding Cake Prices

Why do wedding cakes cost so much? They're made out of flour, not gold. Do you suspect you're being gouged? Here is the quick and dirty on wedding cake prices.

First off, know the lingo. Wedding cake prices are calculated by serving. Most cakes are priced from $1.50-$6.00 per serving. Do the math before you fall in love and avoid sticker shock.

Here's what goes into a wedding cake, and how it affects the cost.

Yes, Virginia, Size Matters

The bigger the cake, the higher the price. We're not talking just diameter here. Six tiers of sugary perfection are great. But you better be willing to pay extra for it.

A three-tiered cake is standard. Anything more involves more work for the baker: baking, frosting, assembling. Keeping a tall cake upright is a trick, and the baker will pass that price on to you.

Now you know why sheet cakes are so cheap. If your budget is tight, buy a small wedding cake. Make up the difference with sheet cakes.

What's In The Mix

The most basic building block in cake-ology is the cake itself. And the type of wedding cake you choose can drastically affect its price.

The most basic cake is a twist on a sponge cake — often a genoise. Think flavors like chocolate, vanilla ... or even banana or carrot. They're safe, crowd-pleasers, and the least expensive.

Cheesecakes are at the other end of the spectrum (in price, not flavor). They're absolutely decadent — and time-intensive to make. You'll be lucky to find a cheesecake at $6 a serving. Most of them are quite a bit more.

It's impossible to name every type of wedding cake out there. We haven't even touched pound cake, whose price is somewhere between a sponge and cheesecake.

But here's a rule of thumb: The more time-intensive a cake is to make, the steeper the price.

And here's a rule for the other thumb: The more "stuff" in your cake (liquers, fruit, nuts), the higher the price.

Beauty That's Precisely Skin Deep

Ah, icing. You either love it or you hate it. Your choice of frosting will have to reflect your personal tastes, and your budget.

BUTTERCREAM. This is your basic birthday cake frosting.
Pro: It tastes great. It's easy to use. That makes it inexpensive.
Con: It's harder to get that perfectly smooth look so popular these days, and it doesn't do well in the heat.

CREAM CHEESE. This is the traditional frosting for a carrot cake.
Pro: The price is about the same as Buttercream. It tastes great.
Con: You can't have intricate designs. But if you use live flowers on your cake that doesn't matter.

FONDANT. Think of this as sugar playdough. It's used in ultra-hip wedding cakes.
Pro: A good cake designer can do almost anything with it. It pleats. It folds. It does everything but cut the cake for you.
Con: It's expensive. And the least tasty of the frostings.

It's Hip to be Square

Square cakes are very cool, but they'll cost you.

A square cake requires special pans (this you knew). They're also harder to frost. The edges have to be built up, and look even. And as you know by now, more work means more money.

So there you have it. The basic parts of your wedding cake, and how they affect the price. What you spend on your cake is a personal decision. Armed with this information, sally forth into the wedding cake world and get the most for your money.

It's your day. You deserve it.

Amy Lee Johnson is a freelance writer that often contributes to Wedding Vows 4U - a site that offers information on such topics as writing wedding vows and selecting wedding cakes.

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CakeGirl
wrote
on August 17th, 2007 at 9:36 am

Don’t forget that some of the costs cover the time spent shopping or ordering products, samples, books and magazines, continuing education, boxes and paper products, research and even insurance.

 
jerry
wrote
on June 9th, 2007 at 5:08 pm
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This is my ? . if I give a wedding cake as a gift. am I responciple for the reception ? Plates,Forks napkins and serving as well. you can send me an instant message at hamilton2904@yahoo.com thankyou JC hamilton

 
jaime
wrote
on May 1st, 2007 at 8:11 am

i was surprised to see that you said that buttercream was cheaper than fondant. i find the opposite, butter is so expensive (i’m in canada) that my fondant cakes are almost always significantly cheaper…and you’re right buttercream tastes soooo much better

 
char
wrote
on April 27th, 2007 at 8:24 am
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Rosa,

Thanx for your response. I am in Chicago (obviously a major city). The list of price ranges you gave me will be very helpful in the future. After falling in love with my cake samples, the customer looked at several possible designs. Most of the ones she liked were buttercream with royal flowers, fresh flowers or fondant accents (e.g. ribbons). Therefore, I am comfortable that I quoted her good prices in the $3-$4 price range. Thank you.

 
rosa1748
wrote
on April 27th, 2007 at 6:46 am
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Hi there. Your price quote is really competitive if your flowers are Royal Icing and the cake is covered in fondant. But if youre flowers are buttercream and so is the icing, then you are on the higher end. If your cake is covered in fondant and your flowers are fondant as well you are well underpriced.

When you quote a customer a price, remember to sell the product first. Show them your album of cakes, show them the flowers so they can see the result. Visit them at their house with a taste sample of your cake. I dont know where you are but here in Miami, exclusive cakes like the ones you bake at home with fondant icing and fondant flowers for more than 100 people sell easily for $5-6.00 per person. If you are in a big city, then that is the price.

Buttercream - $2.00 per person
Buttercream and royal icing flowers $3.00-4.00 per person
Fondant and royal icing $4.00-4.50 per person.
Fondant and fondant flowers $5.00-6.00 per person

Good Luck

 
char
wrote
on April 24th, 2007 at 5:59 pm
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I have been doing cakes for some time, but I am new to wedding akes. My first potential customer said my prices were higher than any she’d seen. I quoted her $3.00 per serving for the simpliest design I showed her to $4.00 per serving for the most elaborate. This made the total price of the cakes (which ranged in serving size from 115-172) $348-$688. This seems perfectly reasonable. I cannot imagine where she’d find any baker to do wedding cakes for much less. [Maybe she was comparing a homemade/handdecorated cake (mine) to a grocery store bakery or something. That's not a fair comparison. It's like apples and oranges.] What have you all seen out there?

 
kasey
wrote
on April 22nd, 2007 at 11:17 am
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i was wondering….the cost of the wedding cake…meaning the serving per slice….is still seperate from the cost of the details and type of cake….for example….we were looking for a cake to serve 80 to 100 people….that would already be a certain price right…then what we want on it will cost another price right….sorry it sounds a bit confusing…but i’m not that sure how to explain..it…

 
wrote
on April 17th, 2007 at 8:29 pm
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I never understood either why cakes were soooo expensive until I took 4 courses in Cake Decorating. I have learned so much and now respect those bakers and designers. ALOT of work goes into this. It is an ART and designers will charge for the time it takes from baking to preparing the flowers ahead of time to laying down the pieces. It can all take as little as 4 hours to the most 8 hours. It is not just flour…. baking a good quality cake is just one small aspect of it all, decorating it requires an artist. I learned to do beautiful cakes and trust me, I have no interest in selling them -the liability is just to big , risky and costly. No way, cakes are not just flour…..

 
wrote
on April 14th, 2007 at 7:14 am

I noticed that you have some dated information on fondant. Not all fondant is created equal. Wilton fondant tastes terrible and is what a lot of home bakers use because you can get it at Wal-mart, Hobby Lobby or Michaels.

Some options today are Fondx fondant which has a wonderful flavor. Rolled white chocolate is an option as well and comes in white chocolate (all kinds of colors too) and white chocolate raspberry(ivory in color). They also have chocolate rolled icing and it is pretty good too. The price for fondant around this area is $4.25 to $5.95 and up based on design. I think what people get confused about is the texture of fondant. It is more like a dough instead of a whipped icing. Butter-cream icing always goes under the fondant so you are getting both cakes in one sometimes for just a dollar more a slice that is going to hold up better in the heat and show less imperfection.

All of the brides magazines show fondant cakes and most of us no matter how smooth you get the buttercream cannot make it look perfect like fondant. When a bride asks me to make her cake look like fondant I charge fondant prices because I have to work with the buttercream twice as long. All the time I am thinking I wish this were a FONDANT cake! Some of us have even gone to a same price for buttercream or fondant cake to encourage the bride to get the prettier presentation cake. Another thing when I work on a cake I am considering myself as a sugar artist. I do things that most bakeries do not do. I take extra time and I pay more for quality ingredients versus that cake came in frozen and has been frozen for one month that someone is on a massive time limit to make or possibly even have to ice on a scale to make sure you do not get one ounce more icing than you should.

 
Lori
wrote
on April 6th, 2007 at 11:15 am

I am trying to get prices on a wedding cake for approx. 60 people. The cake type I want is hummingbird cake with cream cheese icing. The prices I am being quoted are around $5/serving. Anyone know if this is a normal price?

 
Delayna
wrote
on March 18th, 2007 at 6:14 pm
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how much does wedding cakes ( the whole cake) usually cost?

 
wrote
on March 17th, 2007 at 5:38 pm

Comparing prices of wedding cakes and fees for deivery,
Can you help me.

Example: Wedding cake for 150 people, 3 tier, 40 miles driving distance, simplly decorated.

 
Jackie
wrote
on March 10th, 2007 at 3:24 pm
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Thanks for clarifying this!! I have so many brides-to-be that are surprised when I say I start at only $2.00 per serving! They just don’t know what is involved!!!

 
wrote
on February 22nd, 2007 at 2:57 pm
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I am wanting to know how to price wedding cakes, i am interested in doing cakes as an added income. could you please let me know how pricing is determined.

 
wrote
on February 21st, 2007 at 11:54 am

What’s your opinion on wedding cupcakes? Either a friend who is a talented baker can be enlisted or places like the California Cupcake Company can whip some delicious cupcakes out for $2.50 - $3.00 each.

 
Cheryl Jorgensen
wrote
on January 24th, 2007 at 2:39 pm

Thank you so much for this valuable and oh so helpful information. It is clear, concisce and totally makes sense. You don’t have to try and “decode” the website!:P:P

 
wrote
on December 13th, 2006 at 5:45 pm

On average, today’s wedding cake costs between $3-6 a slice. The per-slice cost varies a lot depending on factors like: your part of the country, who makes it (a private designer working out of their kitchen vs. a name artisan in a swanky bakery), how complicated or rich it is (cheescake costs more, fondant costs more, gold leaf costs more, handpainted porcelain or lace patterns cost a lot more.)

 
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