I spent $2,500 to throw my 30th birthday party in a French castle. I have only 1 regret.

9 hours ago 10

Celina Tolbert had a 30th at a chateau

Celina Tolbert celebrated her 30th birthday at a chateau. Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Celina Tolbert, 31, a social media manager from North Carolina who is based in Paris. This piece has been edited for length and clarity.

It started off as a joke. I'm not rich, so I didn't think I'd be able to afford to host a 30th birthday at a French chateau.

Then I started browsing Airbnb and realized there are hundreds of small chateaux throughout France, some of which were pretty affordable to rent.

So, in February 2025, I decided to spend about $2,500 hosting a three-night fantasy-themed birthday celebration for 21 friends at a chateau about 80 miles southeast of Paris.

I thought: if I can afford it, why wouldn't I?

I had a budget of 2,000 euros for the chateau

I'm a whimsical person who has always loved fantasy. I have a collection of fun costumes, and for my 30th birthday I wanted to do something just for me, as an act of self-love. That meant putting on a silly fantasy costume and renting out a chateau.

Celina Tolbert in a fantasy costume

Tolbert had a collection of fantasy costumes.  Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

When I started looking at chateaux on Airbnb, I knew I didn't want to spend more than 2,000 euros, or about $2,301, on the property itself. But finding something in my price range that could accommodate more than seven people was a challenge.

Expanding my search beyond the Paris region helped. Eventually, I found a chateau accessible by train from Paris that could accommodate up to two dozen people for 1,318 euros.

The exterior of the chateau Celina Tolbert stayed at

The chateau that Tolbert chose for her birthday weekend was close to Paris.  Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

I was surprised that for under 2,000 euros, I could find somewhere that hit the sweet spot: affordable, beautiful, and big enough for everyone.

I then spent roughly 800 euros more on food, alcohol, and decorations, bringing the total to a little over 2,100 euros.

I saw it as my version of a wedding

I justified the expense by thinking of it as the kind of money other people my age might spend on a wedding or kids.

I don't plan to have kids. My partner and I had a civil union instead of a wedding because he doesn't believe in marriage, and I have my own hangups around it. In 2023, we held a small celebration at his parents' house. At the time, we couldn't afford to hire a venue, but I still had this itch to one day rent an entire place and throw a big celebration.

By 2024, I realized I could either spend the money I'd saved on something like a really expensive dog, or on renting a chateau. I chose the chateau.

The theme was 'magical fantasy forest'

Celina Tolbert's 'Make Your Own Potions' station

Tolbert had a station where party guests could make their own "potions."  Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

The chateau had two dining rooms, a ballroom, and a living room.

The theme was "magical fantasy forest," so a friend and I decorated it with glitter, moss, leaves, and wooden details.

For our guests' arrival, we set up a make-your-own potion station, a pre-party playlist of medieval covers of modern music, and laid out food on a table my friend had beautifully tablescaped.

Celina Tolbert and a friend decorated the chateau with moss and leaves and candles

Tolbert and a friend created a fantasy-themed tablescape for dinners.  Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

Guests wore chainmail, and several of my friends were excited to finally have an excuse to buy cute corsets.

Throughout the weekend, we partied, drank Champagne, and danced. I'm a pretty simple girl at heart. I love snacks, drinks, and dancing with my friends.

Celina Tolbert handing out baguet

Tolbert spent about $2,500 on hosting the 30th birthday celebration.  Courtesy of Celina Tolbert

I'm really happy I spent my money on this birthday party. My only regret is not paying a local to take better photos. I couldn't afford a professional photographer or videographer, but I wish I'd at least hired someone nearby to capture the weekend properly.

It was a magical experience, and I would 100% do it all over again.

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Joshua Nelken-Zitser is an award-winning Senior Reporter at Business Insider’s London bureau covering wealth, spending, and consumer culture.Through features, on-the-ground reporting, and As Told To essays, he explores how people use their money, from everyday spending to elite lifestyles, and what those choices say about modern life. His work focuses on the culture of money: how money shapes places and people, and how the world around them influences how they choose to spend.Joshua previously spent five years on the news desk, reporting from the US, across Europe, and the Middle East. In 2024, he received the Axel Springer Award for Change — Journalistic Piece of the Year and was highly commended at the British Journalism Awards for a multi-year investigation into subsidized gender-transition surgeries in Iran.His debut book (TRAUMA BONDS: How Generational Trauma Shapes, Divides and Connects Us) will be published by HarperCollins in January 2027.Got a tip? Email [email protected]. You can also follow him on X or Instagram.ExpertiseFeatures and reporting on affluent lifestyles, consumer spending, and the culture of money, alongside first-person stories about how people live and spend.Popular articlesWealth and spending:Series: Welcome to the 'Hamptons of England'Series: Living large in tiny homesI watched the ultra-rich descend on Venice for Jeff Bezos' wedding — and was shocked by how little locals cared'Clients bring back entire wardrobes': Tailors say Ozempic is reshaping Wall StreetThe new millennial flex: spending thousands on a birthday weekend at a chateauInternational features reporting:Iran will pay for your gender-transition surgery, but it comes with a cost — your dignityShe was killed by a look-alike she met on Instagram, police say. It thrust her family in Africa into a true-crime nightmare.How the trans alpaca ranchers of Custer County, Colorado, are forging a new frontierThe European housing crisis warping millennial life: The average Croatian lives with parents until 33Lithuania is the world's happiest place for under 30s, but it's also Europe's suicide capitalThe 'fairytale' French castles being used to shelter Ukrainian refugeesMost armies ignore autistic people. Israel is calling them up.

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