The question "what goes on a wedding invitation" is one of those wedding-planning rabbit holes — there's a 200-year-old etiquette playbook, a modern minimalist playbook, and a cousin telling you "we just put our Instagram handle." Three valid answers, three different invitations.
Here's the clear version: what every wedding invitation actually needs in 2026, what's optional but smart, and what to leave off.
The 12 essentials (in the order they appear)
1. The host line
Who's hosting (and paying for) the wedding. Traditionally: the bride's parents. In 2026: usually both sets of parents, the couple themselves, or both families together.
- "Mr. and Mrs. James Carter request the honor of your presence..." (formal, parents host)
- "Together with their families, Sarah and Daniel request the pleasure..." (modern, families share)
- "Sarah and Daniel invite you to join them..." (couple hosts themselves)
2. The request line
The formal "you're invited" wording.
- "request the honor of your presence" — most formal, traditionally implies a religious ceremony
- "request the pleasure of your company" — formal, secular
- "invite you to celebrate with them" — modern, warm
- "would love for you to celebrate with them" — casual
3. The couple's full names
First and last names for traditional weddings. First names only for casual ones. Whichever you pick, be consistent with both partners' name formats (don't do "Mr. Daniel Cohen and Sarah").
4. Day of the week + 5. Full date
Both. Always. "Saturday, the twelfth of October, two thousand and twenty-six" (formal) or "Saturday, October 12, 2026" (modern). Spelling out numbers is a formal convention — not a requirement.
6. Ceremony time
Spell it out for formal invitations: "at half after four in the afternoon". Modern format is fine for everything else: "4:30 PM". Always include AM/PM. "5 o'clock" without AM/PM has caused real RSVPs that landed at the wrong end of the day.
7. Venue name + 8. Venue address
Full address including ZIP code. Even if every guest knows the church — a small fraction of attendees use a navigation app right from your invitation. They need the address.
For destination weddings, include the city + country here too.
9. The reception line
A single line letting guests know where (and when) the reception is.
- "Reception immediately following" (same venue)
- "Reception to follow at The Hayloft Barn, 11 Mill Lane" (different venue)
- "Dinner and dancing to follow" (when you want the vibe to land)
10. Dress code
Underrated. The most common guest question after a wedding invitation arrives is "what should I wear?" — answering it on the invitation saves your bridesmaids 40 frantic group texts.
Standard tiers:
- White tie (rarest, full tuxedo + floor-length gown)
- Black tie (tuxedos + cocktail/evening dress)
- Black tie optional (suit or tuxedo + cocktail dress)
- Formal / Cocktail attire (suit + cocktail dress)
- Semi-formal (dress shirt + dress)
- Garden / Beach formal (linen, neutral palette, no flip-flops)
11. RSVP method
One method, not three. Pick:
- RSVP card with self-addressed envelope (formal, expensive, but yields the highest reply rate ~85%)
- Wedding website RSVP form (modern, free, ~75% reply rate — chase the rest by text)
- Text/email to a single number (casual weddings, ~65% reply rate)
For digital wedding invitations, an embedded RSVP link is standard — guests click it and respond in 10 seconds.
12. RSVP deadline
Always include a specific date. Three weeks before the wedding is standard (gives you time to chase late replies and finalize numbers with your venue).
"Kindly respond by September 21, 2026"
The 3 optional extras
A. Wedding website URL
Include it if you have one. Modern guests expect it. Format the URL short and memorable: sarahanddaniel.com rather than sarahanddaniel.theknot.com/our-wedding-2026.
B. Children policy
If your wedding is adults-only, this is where you say it — gently. "Adult reception" on the lower edge of the invitation, or in italics under the RSVP. Saves multiple awkward conversations.
C. Registry info
Don't put registry information on the wedding invitation itself. It's still considered tacky by most etiquette guides. Put it on your wedding website instead. The exception: many couples now include a "Your presence is gift enough" line on the invitation and let the website handle the rest.
What to leave OFF
- Hashtags. They were a 2017 trend. Most guests don't use Instagram the way they did then. If you want one, put it on a separate "details card" inside the envelope, not on the main invitation.
- "No gifts please." Reads as awkward. The wedding website is the place for this.
- Gift registry URLs. Same — website only.
- GoFundMe / honeymoon fund links. Strongly discouraged on the main invitation.
- Emoji. Even on the most casual invitation, emoji on the printed/animated card reads off. Save them for the RSVP nudge texts.
3 templates you can copy
FAQ: what goes on a wedding invitation
Frequently asked
No — modern etiquette gives you three valid options. Parents host, families share, or you host yourselves. Pick the one that reflects who's actually paying for + organizing the wedding, and word the host line accordingly.
Put 5:00 PM. Don't pad it — telling guests to arrive at 4:30 for a 5:00 PM ceremony makes the punctual guests sit and wait, and the late ones still arrive at 4:45. If you genuinely want everyone seated 30 minutes early, write "5:00 PM ceremony · doors at 4:30."
On the main invitation — bottom-right or below the RSVP. Putting it on a separate insert means half your guests miss it (those inserts get lost), and you'll spend the next 4 months answering "what should I wear?" texts.
Yes — and you should. The wedding website handles everything the main invitation can't: registry, accommodations, schedule, FAQ, group photos. Format the URL short and memorable so guests will actually remember to visit.
Forgetting the year. Especially on save-the-dates and casual invitations. "Saturday, October 12" is easy to read as next year by accident — write "October 12, 2026" every time.
Ready to send?
If you'd rather not lay out all 12 fields yourself, every animated wedding invitation template we sell ships with all 12 fields already laid out — you replace the placeholder text in Canva (5 minutes), and you're done. Starting at $19.99.




