Wording

RSVP Wording: 25 Examples for Every Wedding Style

Every RSVP request needs exactly three things: a reply-by date, a way to reply, and clarity about who's invited. The other hundred words are tone. Below are 25 tested lines — formal, casual, funny, online-first — to copy, paste and adjust. The reply-by date math is in our invitation timeline guide; short version: three to four weeks before the day.

Formal & traditional

For engraved-style invitations and classic weddings. Third person, no contractions.

  1. The favour of a reply is requested by the fifth of June.
  2. Kindly respond by June 5th.
  3. Please reply by the fifth of June, two thousand twenty-seven.
  4. Kindly reply by June 5th. We look forward to celebrating with you.
  5. Your reply is kindly requested by June 5th, whether or not you are able to attend.

Casual & warm

  1. Please let us know by June 5th — we can't wait to see you!
  2. Hope you can make it! Reply by June 5th.
  3. Save us the guesswork — let us know by June 5th.
  4. Yes? No? Maybe so? Tell us by June 5th.
  5. We're saving you a seat — confirm it by June 5th.

Funny (use with a crowd that will laugh)

  1. RSVP by June 5th, or we're giving your dinner to the dog.
  2. Reply by June 5th — the caterer is scarier than either of us.
  3. ☐ Wouldn't miss it   ☐ Will celebrate from afar   ☐ Still deciding (pick one by June 5th!)
  4. RSVP by June 5th. "Maybe" is not a food order.

Online RSVP & QR code

For invitations that point to an event page instead of a reply card — the setup our invitation maker prints, QR code included.

  1. Please reply online at gatsbys.party/e/anna-and-tom by June 5th.
  2. Scan to RSVP — replies close June 5th.
  3. Point your camera here to reply (it takes thirty seconds, we promise).
  4. RSVP, menu and directions: scan the code or visit our event page by June 5th.

Deadline & gentle-pressure lines

  1. Replies needed by June 5th — the caterer counts heads on the 6th.
  2. If we haven't heard from you by June 5th, we'll miss you on the dance floor.
  3. No reply by June 5th counts as a regretful no — we'd much rather hear from you.
  4. Kindly reply by June 5th so we can finish the seating chart.

Plus-ones, kids and adults-only

  1. We have reserved 2 seats in your honour. Names: ______
  2. Please reply for each guest named on the envelope.
  3. We love your little ones, but this will be an adults-only celebration.

Stop transcribing reply cards

Whatever wording you pick, the replies have to land somewhere. With a free online RSVP page each guest gets a personal link or scans the card's QR code; names, plus-ones and dietary notes write themselves into your guest list, reminders chase the silent ones, and the form closes itself on your deadline — no shoebox of reply cards to decode.

Frequently asked questions

What must an RSVP request always include?

Three things: a clear reply-by date, how to reply (card, website, QR code or phone), and whose names the invitation covers. Everything else is style.

How do I ask about dietary restrictions politely?

One open line works best: "Please let us know of any dietary requirements." Avoid listing options — guests with real restrictions will tell you, and an online RSVP form gives them a field to do it.

How do we say adults-only without offending?

Say it warmly and put it on the details page, not the invitation itself: "We love your little ones, but this will be an adults-only celebration." Address the envelope to the adults by name — that does most of the work.

Is it okay to put a QR code on a wedding invitation?

Yes — it's now common at formal weddings too. Keep the card's wording classic and let the QR code sit quietly in a corner with a short line like "Scan to reply". Older guests appreciate a short URL printed next to it.

Put your favourite on paper: make the invitation free — every line is yours to phrase — or create your event and collect the replies online.