By Bliss & Bone
Save the date wording has one job: tell guests a wedding is happening, give them the date and location, and ask them to hold it. Everything else is optional. This guide covers what every save the date must include, twenty complete wording examples organized by style and tone, and the mistakes couples make before sending.
Every save the date needs four elements: the couple's names, the wedding date, the city and state (or destination), and a line confirming a formal invitation will follow. That last piece matters more than most couples expect. Without "invitation to follow," guests sometimes treat the save the date as the invitation itself and show up without RSVPing.
Beyond the four essentials, most couples include their wedding website URL. Venue name, dress code, and hotel block details are optional at this stage; those belong on the formal invitation. For timing, most couples send save the dates six to eight months before the wedding; see the full when to send your save the dates guide for destination and short-engagement timelines.
Six general examples, ranging from traditional to relaxed. Adjust names, dates, and cities to make them yours.
Classic: Parents Hosting
Mr. and Mrs. William Hartley and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Aldridge announce the upcoming marriage of Caroline and Benjamin Saturday, the Fourteenth of June, Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Newport, Rhode Island Formal invitation to follow
Modern: Couple Hosting
Natalie Bishop and James Tran are getting married. August Twenty-Second, Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Hudson, New York Save the date — invitation to follow [wedding website URL]
Short and Direct
Sofia & Oliver May 15, 2027 · Sonoma, California Save the date. Invitation to follow.
Same-Sex Couple, Modern
Harper Chen and Morgan Ellis are getting married. October 18, 2027 · Brooklyn, New York Invitation to follow [wedding website URL]
Same-Sex Couple, Formal
Mr. Thomas Aldridge and Mr. Jonathan Park request the pleasure of your company at their wedding celebration Saturday, the Eighteenth of October, Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Brooklyn, New York Formal invitation to follow
Elopement Celebration
We eloped — now we're celebrating. Please join Sofia and Oliver May 15, 2027 · Sonoma, California Formal invitation to follow
Formal wording uses spelled-out dates, no contractions, and parent names on the host line when relevant. It suits black-tie events, hotel ballrooms, and ceremonies where the physical stationery sets the occasion's tone from the moment guests open it. A letterpress save the date with formal wording signals everything before a single venue detail is revealed.
Traditional Host Line
Mr. and Mrs. William Hartley and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Aldridge request the pleasure of your company at the marriage of their children Caroline Hartley and Benjamin Aldridge Saturday, the Fourteenth of June, Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Newport, Rhode Island Formal invitation to follow
Couple Hosting, Spelled-Out Date
Please save the date for the marriage of Annalise Monroe and Edward Sinclair Saturday, the Twenty-Second of August Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Charlottesville, Virginia Invitation to follow
Single-Line Host, Title Used
Mr. Jonathan Winters and Dr. Claire Beaumont cordially request you save the date for their wedding Saturday, the Fifteenth of May, Two Thousand Twenty-Seven Newport, Rhode Island Formal invitation to follow
Spare, Formal Tone
Please save the date. The wedding of Annalise Monroe and Edward Sinclair August 22, 2027 · Charlottesville, Virginia Formal invitation to follow
Casual wording is shorter, warmer, and conversational. Standard date formats are fine. Contractions are fine. The goal is internal consistency: if the wedding weekend is relaxed and personal, the save the date should feel the same way. A minimalist save the date design pairs well with stripped-down casual copy.
Direct and Warm
We're getting married. Sofia Delgado and Oliver Park May 15, 2027 · Sonoma, California Invitation to follow
First-Person, Couple's Voice
We found each other. Now let's celebrate. James and Natalie · August 22, 2027 Hudson, New York Invitation coming soon | [website URL]
Short and Personal
Hey — save the date. Sofia + Oliver are getting married on May 15, 2027 Sonoma, California · Invitation to follow
Destination save the dates need three additions beyond the standard four: the country (not just the city), a note that travel details are coming, and earlier timing. Eight to twelve months out instead of the standard six. Guests booking international flights need enough advance notice to find reasonable fares. Pair destination wording with a website that already has hotel block and travel logistics posted before the save the dates go out; guests click through the same day.
International Destination
We found each other. Now please find your passport. Sofia Delgado and Oliver Park are getting married May 15, 2027 · Tuscany, Italy Invitation and travel details to follow
Domestic Destination, Extended Weekend
Please save the weekend. The wedding of Caroline Hartley and Benjamin Aldridge October 3–5, 2027 · Asheville, North Carolina Invitation and accommodation details to follow
Beach Wedding, Warmer Tone
Join us in paradise. Sofia & Oliver · May 15, 2027 Tulum, Mexico Formal invitation and travel details to follow | [website URL]
Creative save the date wording works best when it reflects something specific about the couple rather than generic quirkiness. "We said yes. Now save the date." works for a casual backyard wedding. "We found each other, now please find your passport." works for a destination wedding. What reads as clever in context reads as try-hard without it. The one rule that holds at every formality level: "invitation to follow" belongs on every save the date.
Playful, Short
We said yes. Now say you'll be there. May 15, 2027 · Sonoma, California Sofia + Oliver · Invitation to follow
Punchy, Confident
Save this date. Regret nothing. August 22, 2027 · Hudson, New York Natalie & James · Invitation coming
Warm and Understated
Something good is coming. Sofia Delgado and Oliver Park are getting married. May 15, 2027 · Sonoma, California Details to follow.
Digital save the dates follow the same four-element rule as printed cards: names, date, location, invitation to follow. The wording differences are minor: digital formats allow slightly shorter copy because design and live links carry some of the informational load. For couples who want to track opens and manage RSVPs in one place, electronic save the dateshandle the logistics automatically.
The biggest practical difference is the website link. On a printed save the date, the URL appears at the bottom of the card. On a digital send, it's a live link guests click immediately. Make sure the site is live and has at least date, location, and hotel block information before the save the dates go out. Guests visit the same day.
For couples sending both a digital save the date and a printed invitation, keep the wording consistent in tone. A warm, casual digital save the date followed by a formal printed invitation creates a tonal mismatch that guests will notice before the ceremony begins.
Including RSVP language. RSVPs belong on the wedding invitation, not the save the date. A save the date is an announcement. Asking guests to RSVP at this stage creates confusion about whether a formal invitation is still coming.
Skipping "invitation to follow." Without this line, guests may treat the save the date as the final word on the event. Some show up without RSVPing. This line is non-negotiable regardless of format or tone. For full etiquette guidance, the save the date etiquette guide covers timing, addressing, and what to do when plans change.
Wording that doesn't match the wedding. A formal save the date sets expectations guests will carry to the ceremony and reception. If the wedding is relaxed, formal wording creates a mismatch that the rest of the event has to walk back. Pick a tone and maintain it across every piece of wedding communication.
Including the full venue address. City and state is sufficient at the save the date stage. Full venue name, street address, and ceremony location belong on the formal invitation.
Every save the date needs four things: the couple's names, the wedding date, the city and state or destination, and a line confirming a formal invitation will follow. A wedding website URL is recommended but optional. RSVPs, full venue addresses, dress code, and hotel block details belong on the invitation, not the save the date.
Send save the dates six to eight months before the wedding for local or domestic guests. Destination weddings or events requiring significant travel should go out eight to twelve months in advance, early enough for guests to book flights at reasonable rates and request time off work.
No. City and state is sufficient. Full venue name, street address, and ceremony location belong on the formal wedding invitation. Including the venue name is fine but not required at the save the date stage.
Include the destination city and country, the wedding date, and a note that travel details are coming: "invitation and travel details to follow." Send eight to twelve months in advance and make sure your wedding website has hotel block or accommodation recommendations posted before the save the dates go out.
It should match the tone of the wedding. Formal weddings call for spelled-out dates, titles on the host line when parents are named, and no contractions. Casual weddings can use standard date formats and warmer, conversational language. Consistency across all wedding communications matters more than adhering to a specific formality rule.
No. RSVPs belong on the wedding invitation. A save the date is an announcement, not a request for a response. The exception is a wedding website link, which guests may use to find accommodation information or register attendance informally.
Browse save the date designs online or explore wedding save the dates to find options that coordinate with your wording style and wedding tone.