Make the wording clear without making it cold
Use this page when you want wording that sounds clear, warm and intentional instead of awkward or over-explained.
Wedding wording gets easier when you know the job of the message: inform, request, remind or thank.
Wedding Wording Guides works best when it leads to a clear next action, whether that is choosing a supplier, revising the guest list, setting a budget cap or downloading a more structured planning file.
What this page should help you decide
- Examples for different tones and situations
- What details guests actually need
- How to avoid over-explaining
How to use it well
- Keep the main instruction short, then add practical detail only where guests genuinely need it.
- Match the tone to the format: invitation wording can be simpler than a follow-up explanation sent later.
- Read examples aloud before using them so you catch phrases that feel stiff or defensive.
Example wording
- Keep the main request in one sentence.
- Put deadlines or practical details in a separate sentence.
- Choose wording you would actually say out loud.
Common mistakes
- Trying to explain every decision in the invitation itself.
- Using overly formal language that does not sound like you.
- Hiding the practical detail so guests still need to ask questions later.