How to write a wedding invitation: the complete guide
Published 5 June 2026
The essential information
Before polishing the style, make sure all the practical information is there. A guest should understand where, when and what to do in seconds.
- Your names and, if you like, the families' names.
- Date and time of the ceremony.
- Ceremony and reception venues (with address).
- How to RSVP and by when.
- Any useful notes: dress code, children, parking, gift registry.
The structure that works
A clear invitation almost always follows the same order: an opening line, the announcement with your names, the practical details, the RSVP request and a closing greeting.
Keep each block short. Secondary information (directions, partner hotels, FAQs) can sit lower down or on a dedicated page.
Choosing the right tone
The tone should reflect your party. A formal ceremony calls for sober words; a countryside party can afford lightness and humour.
Whatever tone you pick, stay consistent from start to finish: the style of the invitation is the first impression guests get of the day.
The most common mistakes
- Forgetting how or when to RSVP: without it, you won't know your numbers.
- Incomplete addresses or no map link.
- Too much information at once: prefer hierarchy and white space.
- Not stating whether children are welcome: it creates doubt and questions.
A full example
“Laura & Marco — We're getting married! Join us on Saturday, June 19th 2027, at 4:00 PM, at Villa Carlotta (Tremezzo). Reception to follow at the Grand Hotel Tremezzo. Let us know if you'll be there by April 19th. With love, Laura and Marco.”
With a digital invitation this text can adapt automatically to each guest's language and collect every reply in one place.