Bridal Shower Guess the Price Game: Rules, Questions & Prizes
A bridal shower guess the price game is one of those party games that sounds almost too simple, then somehow gets everyone arguing over the price of dish soap.
That is why it works.
Guests do not need to know the bride’s childhood nickname. They do not have to stand up in front of the room. They do not have to be loud, clever, or comfortable with a microphone. They just look at a basket of useful newlywed items, guess what each one costs, and see who gets closest.
It is also a nice game if you want the bride to leave with something useful. Instead of buying decorations that get thrown away, you can buy items the couple can actually use after the shower: tea towels, a candle, measuring cups, coffee mugs, stain remover, a date night deck, a small frame, or a few wedding day emergency items.
Below you’ll find the rules, what to buy, 40 item ideas, a ready-to-copy game card, tie-breaker prompts, and prize ideas that do not feel like junk.
What is the Bridal Shower Guess the Price Game?
The bridal shower guess the price game is a price guessing activity for a wedding shower. The host displays a group of household, wedding, or date-night items. Guests write down what they think each item costs. At the end, the host reveals the real prices and awards a prize to the guest with the closest guesses.
Some hosts call it a “Price Is Right-style” bridal shower game, but you do not need a stage, announcer voice, or complicated scoring. The shower version is easier. You can play it at a brunch, backyard shower, restaurant shower, couple’s shower, or bachelorette weekend.
The best version uses items the bride can keep. That makes the game feel less wasteful and more connected to the reason everyone is there.
What You Need to Play
You only need a few things:
8 to 12 small gift items
A basket, tray, or table display
Printed game cards
Pens or pencils
A host answer key
One small prize for the winner
If you do not want to design the cards yourself, you can buy bridal shower game cards on Amazon. If you are printing your own, a simple card with item numbers and blank lines is enough.
For a polished shower table, add a cup of pretty pens for the game cards, a small sign that says “Guess the Price,” and a basket the bride can take home after the party.
How to Play the Guess the Price Game
Here is the easiest way to run it.
1. Buy the items first
Do not write your answer key from memory. Prices change too much, and the whole game falls apart if you are guessing too. Buy the items, keep the receipt, and write down the real price of each item before the shower.
You can use the price before tax or after tax. Just choose one rule and stick with it.
2. Number each item
Place a small number card beside every item. This keeps guests from asking, “Wait, are we guessing the mug or the mug set?” If an item comes in a two-pack, write that clearly on the card.
Example:
1. Set of 2 coffee mugs
2. Cotton tea towel set
3. Scented candle
4. Mini sewing kit
3. Give each guest a card
Guests write their price guesses beside each item. You can let them walk around the table or pass the basket around if the shower space is small.
Give people 5 to 7 minutes. Any longer and the room starts turning into a grocery audit.
4. Reveal the prices
Read the actual prices one item at a time. This is the best part, because someone will almost always be deeply offended by how much a candle costs.
5. Score the cards
You have two good scoring options:
Option 1: Closest without going over. This feels like the classic price guessing rule. It is slightly stricter and usually creates more suspense.
Option 2: Closest overall. This is easier for a mixed-age group and usually feels friendlier. If someone guesses $8 and the item is $7.50, they are only 50 cents off.
For a bridal shower, I prefer closest overall unless your group is competitive. It keeps the math simple and avoids awkward complaints from Aunt Linda.
6. Award one prize
Give the winner something small but useful. A coffee gift card, candle, hand cream, chocolate, or cute notepad is better than a random favor with the wedding date printed on it.
You can browse bridal shower prizes on Amazon if you want something quick.
40 Items You Can Use for the Game
The trick is to use a mix of obvious, sneaky, cheap, and surprisingly expensive items. If every item is from the same aisle, the game gets predictable.
Here are 40 ideas you can use.
Kitchen and home items
1. Measuring cups
2. Measuring spoons
3. Cotton tea towels
4. Oven mitts
5. Silicone spatula
6. Sheet pan
7. Mixing bowl
8. Coffee mugs
9. Dish brush
10. Cutting board
11. Salt and pepper grinders
12. Kitchen scissors
13. Reusable food storage bags
14. Small picture frame
15. Throw blanket
Wedding day emergency items
16. Fashion tape
17. Stain remover pen
18. Mini sewing kit
19. Blister bandages
20. Compact mirror
21. Mini lint roller
22. Safety pins
23. Clear nail polish
24. Hair ties
25. Travel tissues
Date night items
26. Popcorn bowl
27. Movie candy
28. Deck of cards
29. Date night question cards
30. Pasta sauce
31. Box of pasta
32. Bottle opener
33. Picnic napkins
34. Charcuterie board
35. Small candle
Funny but useful household items
36. Dish soap
37. Sponge pack
38. Paper towels
39. Trash bags
40. Batteries
The boring items often get the best reactions. People know a candle might be overpriced, but nobody agrees on the cost of trash bags.
A 10-Item Round You Can Copy
Here is a balanced round that works well for most bridal showers:
Set of 2 coffee mugs
Cotton tea towels
Scented candle
Measuring cups
Mini lint roller
Fashion tape
Box of pasta
Dish soap
Date night card deck
Small picture frame
This gives you a mix of home, wedding day, date night, and practical items. It also keeps the total cost reasonable.
If you want the basket to become part of the bride’s gift, place everything in a reusable storage basket, laundry basket, picnic basket, or decorative bin. You can also include a card for the bride. This romantic accordion-style wedding card would fit nicely beside the game table or gift table.
Printable Game Card Wording
You can copy this wording onto a printable card:
Bridal Shower Guess the Price Game
Look at each item on the table and write down what you think it costs. The guest with the closest total wins a prize.
1. __________________________ $__________
2. __________________________ $__________
3. __________________________ $__________
4. __________________________ $__________
5. __________________________ $__________
6. __________________________ $__________
7. __________________________ $__________
8. __________________________ $__________
9. __________________________ $__________
10. _________________________ $__________
Tie-breaker: What is the total price of the whole basket?
$____________________________
Name:________________________
Tie-Breaker Ideas
Tie-breakers are worth planning before the shower. Otherwise you end up making up a rule while three people stare at you with their scorecards.
Use one of these:
Guess the total price of the entire basket.
Guess the price of the most expensive item.
Guess the price of the cheapest item.
Guess how many items are in the basket.
Guess the total price including tax.
Guess which item the bride would use first.
Guess which item the couple already owns.
The cleanest tie-breaker is the total basket price. Put it at the bottom of the game card, but only use it if you need it.
Prize Ideas That Actually Feel Useful
You do not need a big prize. The game itself is the entertainment. The prize is just a small thank-you for playing.
Good bridal shower game prizes include:
Coffee shop gift card
Mini candle
Pretty hand cream
Chocolate box
Cute notepad
Nice pen set
Lip balm set
Small plant
Tea sampler
Nail polish
Local bakery gift card
Scratch-off lottery ticket, if your group is comfortable with that
One good prize is better than five things people will throw in a drawer.
How to Make This Game More Personal
A plain price guessing game is fine. A personalized one is better.
Here are a few ways to make it feel like it belongs at this shower, not just any shower.
Add the bride’s favorite item
Include her favorite candy, candle scent, coffee, tea, or snack. Guests who know her well may have an advantage, which makes the game feel more personal.
Include one item from the couple’s registry
Pick a small registry item and include it in the game. If the couple registered for a kitchen towel set, measuring cups, or mugs, it becomes both a game item and a real gift.
Use one “ridiculous” item
Add one item people always misprice: batteries, trash bags, sponges, or a tiny jar of fancy jam. These get better reactions than the cute items.
Let the bride reveal one answer
The bride can read the price of one item and say whether she would have guessed higher or lower. It gives her a small role without making the whole game about performing.
Make the basket match the shower theme
For a tea party shower, use tea, honey, biscuits, a teacup, napkins, and a candle. For a pool party shower, use sunscreen, sunglasses, towel clips, drink pouches, and lip balm. For a book-themed bridal shower, use a bookmark, tea, reading socks, annotation tabs, and a gift card.
If you need another activity to go with it, pair this game with Bridal Jeopardy questions
Version for a Couple’s Shower
For a couple’s shower, avoid making every item pink, floral, or bride-specific. Use items both partners might actually use.
Good couple’s shower items include:
Pizza cutter
Coffee mugs
Movie night snacks
Dish soap
Tape measure
Batteries
Grill seasoning
Travel laundry bag
Board game
First aid kit
You can also split the game into “home,” “date night,” and “wedding day emergency” categories.
Version for a Bachelorette Weekend
For a bachelorette trip, make the game smaller and easier to pack. Use 6 to 8 items instead of 10 to 12.
Good bachelorette items include:
Liquid IV or electrolyte packets
Lip balm
Mini sunscreen
Sunglasses
Blister bandages
Dry shampoo
Hair ties
Travel mirror
Deck of cards
Bride sash or veil
This version works well as a hotel room game before dinner. It is quieter than a dare game and gives everyone something to do while people are getting ready.
Mistakes to Avoid
Using too many items
Ten items is plenty. Twelve is the maximum I would use. Anything more starts to feel like homework.
Choosing only expensive items
You need cheap items too. The low-cost items are what make the guessing funny.
Forgetting to write down the prices
Do this before guests arrive. You will not want to search your order history while people are eating cake.
Making the scoring too complicated
Do not use multiple rounds, bonus multipliers, or team deductions. Bridal shower games should be easy to explain in one minute.
Buying items the bride does not want
If the bride hates candles, do not buy five candles. The basket should be useful after the party.
What to Say When You Start the Game
Here is a simple host script:
“We’re going to play a quick guess-the-price game. Each item on the table is numbered. Write down what you think each one costs. The person with the closest guesses wins a prize, and the bride gets to keep the basket. No phone searching, no asking the person who shops at Target three times a week.”
That is enough. Hand out the cards and keep it moving.
FAQs
How many items do you need for a bridal shower guess the price game?
Use 8 to 12 items. Ten is the easiest number because it gives guests enough variety without making the game drag.
Who keeps the items after the game?
Usually the bride keeps the items. You can also give the basket to the couple if it is a couple’s shower.
How long does the game take?
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes total. Give guests 5 to 7 minutes to write their guesses, then spend another 5 minutes revealing prices and scoring.
Should the winner be closest without going over?
You can use that rule, but closest overall is usually easier for a bridal shower. Choose the rule before the game starts.
Can you play this without buying items?
Yes, but it is less fun. You can print pictures of items and use online prices, but physical items make the game easier to understand and give the bride something to take home.
What is the best prize for this game?
A small gift card, candle, chocolate box, hand cream, or coffee gift card works well. Keep it simple and useful.
The bridal shower guess the price game works because it gives guests something easy to talk about. It is low-pressure, inexpensive, and flexible enough for almost any shower theme.
The best part is that the game doubles as a useful gift. Guests get a laugh, the winner gets a small prize, and the bride leaves with a basket of things she might actually use after the wedding.

