Wedding Program Examples: Complete Templates for Every Ceremony Style

A wedding program does more than list the order of events – it sets the tone for your ceremony, helps guests follow along, and becomes a keepsake they actually hold onto. Whether you are planning an intimate civil ceremony or a full Catholic mass, these real wedding program examples will show you exactly what to include and how to lay it all out.

Wedding Program Quick-Reference Cheat Sheet

  • Must-haves: Couple’s names, date, venue, ceremony order, wedding party list
  • Nice-to-haves: Song titles, reading citations, welcome note, memorial mention, thank-you message
  • Formats: Single page, bi-fold, tri-fold, booklet, fan
  • Ceremony types covered below: Civil, Catholic, non-denominational, outdoor/beach, destination
  • When to order: 6-8 weeks before the wedding; proof arrives within 1-2 business days
  • How many: One per couple (not per guest) plus 10-15% extras

Wedding program booklet showing order of service spread in different stylesShare on Pinterest

What to Include in a Wedding Program

Every wedding program has a few non-negotiables, and then a layer of personal touches that make it yours. Here is what goes in and what you can skip depending on your ceremony length and style.

The essentials (every program needs these)

Element What to include
Cover Couple’s names, wedding date, venue name and city
Ceremony order Each event in sequence with timing notes if helpful
Wedding party Names and roles – officiant, maid of honor, best man, bridesmaids, groomsmen, flower girls, readers
Thank you A brief line of gratitude to guests for traveling and celebrating with you

Optional but appreciated

  • Song titles and artists – guests love knowing what they are listening to during the processional and recessional
  • Reading citations – note the source (poem, scripture, or prose) and who is reading it
  • Welcome note – a short personal message from the couple, 2-4 sentences
  • How we met – a fun snapshot of your love story works especially well in booklet format
  • Memorial mention – a line honoring loved ones who could not be there in person
  • Unplugged ceremony note – kindly ask guests to put phones away during the vows
  • Reception details – venue address, timing, and any special instructions
  • Cultural tradition explanations – a brief note explaining unity candle ceremonies, handfasting, or other rituals helps guests feel included

Complete Wedding Program Examples by Ceremony Type

Below are full, copy-ready program examples for the most common ceremony styles. Swap in your own names, songs, and details.

Elegant wedding stationery suite assembly flat lay showing program and invitation piecesShare on Pinterest

Civil ceremony program example

Civil ceremonies are typically 20-30 minutes and work perfectly on a single page or bi-fold.

Emma & Daniel

Saturday, October 4, 2026
The Botanical Gardens, San Francisco, California

Order of Ceremony

Prelude – “Can’t Help Falling in Love” by Elvis Presley

Processional – “A Thousand Years” by Christina Perri

Welcome and Opening Remarks

Reading – “i carry your heart with me” by E.E. Cummings, read by Sarah Chen

Exchange of Vows

Ring Exchange

Pronouncement of Marriage

Recessional – “You Are the Best Thing” by Ray LaMontagne

Wedding Party

Officiant: Michael Torres

Maid of Honor: Sarah Chen

Best Man: James Rivera

Bridesmaids: Lauren Park, Jessica Moore, Amanda Williams

Groomsmen: Tyler Brooks, Marcus Johnson, Kevin Lee

Thank you for celebrating this day with us. Your love and presence means everything.

Non-denominational ceremony program example

Non-denominational ceremonies have flexibility in structure. This example includes a unity ceremony and a second reading – both popular additions.

Olivia & James

Friday, June 12, 2026
The Vineyard Estate, Sonoma, California

Order of Ceremony

Prelude Music

Seating of Honored Guests

Processional – “Marry Me” by Train

Welcome

First Reading – “Union” by Robert Fulghum, read by Claire Davis

Address

Second Reading – “Love” by Roy Croft, read by Nathan Wells

Exchange of Vows

Ring Ceremony

Unity Sand Ceremony

Blessing and Pronouncement

Presentation of the Couple

Recessional – “Lucky” by Jason Mraz

Wedding Party

Officiant: Rev. Patricia Nguyen

Matron of Honor: Claire Davis

Best Man: Nathan Wells

Flower Girl: Lily Chen

A note on our unity ceremony

We will combine two separate vases of sand into one – one strand representing each of our families and the life we have built together.

Catholic wedding program example

A full Catholic wedding mass runs 60-90 minutes and has a detailed order of service. Guests who are not Catholic will appreciate the extra context a booklet provides.

The Sacrament of Holy Matrimony

Sofia & Anthony

Saturday, May 9, 2026
Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, New York

Introductory Rite

Prelude

Processional

Opening Prayer

Liturgy of the Word

First Reading – 1 Corinthians 13:4-8, read by Maria Russo

Responsorial Psalm

Gospel Acclamation

Gospel – John 15:9-12

Homily by Father Thomas Sullivan

Rite of Marriage

Statement of Intentions

Exchange of Vows

Blessing and Exchange of Rings

Liturgy of the Eucharist

Prayer of the Faithful

Offertory – “Ave Maria” by Franz Schubert

Nuptial Blessing

Holy Communion – “Panis Angelicus” by Cesar Franck

Prayer After Communion

Concluding Rite

Final Blessing

Recessional – “Ode to Joy” by Ludwig van Beethoven

All are welcome to observe Holy Communion. If you are not Catholic or not receiving, you are welcome to come forward for a blessing – simply cross your arms over your chest as a signal to Father Sullivan.

Outdoor and beach ceremony program example

For outdoor weddings, a fan-style program serves double duty – program and cooling device. Keep the ceremony order concise and front-loaded so guests can hold the fan during the ceremony.

Maya & Noah

Sunday, August 16, 2026
Malibu Beach, California

Ceremony

Processional – “Wildest Dreams” by Taylor Swift (acoustic)

Welcome

Reading – “Somewhere I Have Never Travelled” by E.E. Cummings

Vows

Ring Exchange

The Kiss

Recessional – “Better Together” by Jack Johnson

Please feel free to use this as a fan!

Reception follows immediately at The Beach Club. Cocktails at 4:30 PM.

Wedding program with grace design on ceremony sign displayShare on Pinterest

Wedding Program Formats: Which One Is Right for You?

The format you choose depends on your ceremony length, guest count, and how much detail you want to include.

Format Best for Typical size
Single page Short civil ceremonies, minimal guest lists 5×7″ or A5
Bi-fold (4 panels) Most ceremonies – enough space for full order + party list 5×7″ folded
Tri-fold (6 panels) Longer ceremonies with readings and extra details 4×9″ folded
Booklet Catholic mass, Jewish ceremonies, lengthy order of service 5.5×8.5″ saddle-stitched
Fan Outdoor summer weddings, beach ceremonies 4×9″ paddle or teardrop

If your ceremony includes multiple readings, a unity ritual, and a full wedding party of 16 people, go with a booklet. If it is a 20-minute civil ceremony in a garden, a single well-designed page is plenty. When in doubt, the bi-fold is the most versatile – four panels give you room to breathe without overwhelming guests.

Wedding Program Design Ideas by Style

Your program should feel like it belongs with the rest of your stationery suite. Here are the most popular styles for 2026 and what to look for.

Minimalist and modern

Clean typography, generous white space, and a single accent color or foil detail. These programs let the words do the work and look especially sharp in black ink on thick cotton or premium paper stock. A single line of flat gold foil on the couple’s names makes a strong impression without overdesigning.

Romantic and botanical

Watercolor florals, delicate line illustrations of greenery, and soft blush or sage color palettes. This style is consistently the most popular for spring and summer weddings. It pairs beautifully with letterpress printing, which gives the botanical illustrations a tactile depth that digital printing cannot replicate.

Boho and earthy

Terracotta, dusty rose, and warm ivory tones with pampas grass, dried palm leaf, or geometric line work. Fan programs work particularly well here – they can be designed to look like a natural pressed-leaf shape, which doubles as a takeaway piece guests keep.

Classic and formal

Navy or deep green with ivory and gold. Script headings, serif body text, and a formal layout with section dividers. This works for black-tie weddings, cathedral ceremonies, and any couple who wants their program to feel like a proper printed document rather than a casual card.

Fun and playful

Newspaper layout with fake headlines (“LOCAL WOMAN MARRIES DREAM MAN”), illustrated portraits of the couple, a word search with key wedding-related words, or a playbill format with the wedding party listed as “cast.” These make excellent keepsakes and are conversation starters during the ceremony wait.

Wedding program booklet showing ceremony timeline and order of eventsShare on Pinterest

What to Say on the Cover of Your Wedding Program

The cover sets the tone immediately. You have a few options depending on how formal or personal you want to feel.

Simple and elegant

“Emma & Daniel – October 4, 2026 – San Francisco, California”

Just the essentials. Works for every style.

Warm and welcoming

“Welcome to our wedding – We are so glad you are here”
Emma & Daniel – October 4, 2026

A meaningful quote

“To love and be loved is to feel the sun from both sides” – David Viscott
Emma & Daniel

Ceremony title for religious weddings

“The Order of Service for the Marriage of Sofia and Anthony”
“A Celebration of Holy Matrimony”

How to Honor Loved Ones Who Have Passed

Many couples include a memorial line in their program – usually at the bottom of the back cover or inside back page. Keep it brief and warm.

  • “We remember and honor those who are with us in spirit today, especially [Name] and [Name].”
  • “Lighting a candle in memory of [Name], who we carry in our hearts.”
  • “In loving memory of [Name]. Forever with us.”
  • “Reserved seats in the front row honor the memories of those we have lost.”

Practical Tips: Printing and Ordering Your Programs

How many wedding programs do you need?

A general rule: one program per couple or adult guest (not per person), plus 10-15% extra for last-minute additions, vendors who want a copy, and keepsakes. For a 120-person wedding, 70-80 programs is usually plenty. If you want every single guest to have their own, order your full headcount plus 15%.

When should you order?

Order your programs 6-8 weeks before the wedding. This gives you time to receive your designer proof (which arrives within 1-2 business days of placing your order), review it with your partner, request any changes, and have programs in hand well before the day. Do not leave it until the week before – last-minute changes to the ceremony timeline have a habit of appearing right when you have least time to deal with them.

What if your ceremony is custom or non-standard?

If your ceremony does not fit a standard template – perhaps you are incorporating cultural rituals from two different backgrounds, having an outdoor ceremony with a detailed interactive element, or simply have more content than a standard booklet can hold – a custom order is the best option. With Paperlust’s custom design service, you reach out to the team with your ceremony details and style direction, receive a quote, and a designer creates your program from scratch. You will get a proof to review before anything is printed, so there are no surprises.

Browse our wedding programs collection to find designs that match your ceremony style, or explore our custom design service for something entirely your own. For specific wording ideas for each part of the ceremony, our wedding program wording guide has 30+ examples to draw from.

Botanical kraft wedding program booklet with wax seal held at ceremonyShare on Pinterest

Frequently Asked Questions

What should be included in a wedding program?

The essentials are the couple’s names, wedding date, venue, ceremony order, and wedding party with roles. Add song titles, reading citations, a welcome note, and memorial mentions if you have space. If your ceremony includes cultural rituals that guests may not be familiar with, a brief explanation is always appreciated.

How many wedding programs do I need?

One program per couple (not per person), plus 10-15% extra. For a 120-guest wedding, 70-80 programs covers most situations. If you want everyone to have their own, match your full guest count and add 15%.

When should I order wedding programs?

Order 6-8 weeks before the wedding. Your designer proof will arrive within 1-2 business days. That gives you time to review, request changes, and receive your finished programs with at least a few weeks to spare – enough buffer if anything needs adjusting after a final run-through with your officiant.

What is the best wedding program format?

The bi-fold is the most versatile – four panels cover the order of service, full wedding party, and a thank-you note without feeling cramped. For longer ceremonies (Catholic mass, full Jewish service), a booklet gives you more room. For summer outdoor weddings, a fan-style program doubles as a cooling aid.

Do I need a wedding program for a short ceremony?

For a 20-30 minute civil ceremony, a single-page program is sufficient – or skip it entirely if the ceremony is very intimate and informal. Printed programs matter most when the ceremony is longer than 40 minutes, includes multiple readings, or has religious elements that guests may not be familiar with.

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