- Casual invitations use first-person phrasing (“Join us,” “We’re getting married”) instead of third-person hosting lines.
- You can skip the hosting line entirely if the couple is self-hosting or parents are not prominently involved.
- Dates and times can be written as numerals: October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM is perfectly acceptable.
- Casual does not mean incomplete – still include: who is getting married, date, time, location, and RSVP details.
- Venue address can be listed directly on the invitation rather than on a separate details card.
- Browse casual wedding invitation designs at Paperlust – from wildflower to boho to modern minimalist.
Not every wedding calls for “Mr. and Mrs. request the honour of your presence.” If you are hosting a backyard barbecue ceremony, a beach elopement reception, a restaurant buyout with 30 of your closest people, or just a wedding where “vibes” matters more than tradition, casual invitation wording lets you set the right tone from the envelope. These 45+ templates cover everything from warmly informal to full-on playful – with explanations for when each one works best.
| Element | Formal | Casual |
|---|---|---|
| Person | Third person | First person |
| Request line | “request the honour of your presence” | “Join us,” “Celebrate with us,” “We’re getting married!” |
| Date format | Spelled out in full | Numerals fine (October 18, 2026) |
| Time format | “at half past four in the afternoon” | “4:30 PM” or “4:30 in the afternoon” |
| Hosting line | Required (names the hosts) | Optional – couple can host without naming parents |
| Venue address | On envelope or details card | Can appear on the invitation itself |
| Tone | Stately, restrained | Warm, personal, occasionally playful |
Simple casual invitation wording
These templates cover the essentials in plain, friendly language. They work for any casual wedding style: garden, barn, restaurant, park, or backyard.
Clean and minimal
Join us to celebrate
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch
1234 Meadow Lane, Austin, Texas
RSVP by September 20th
Warm first-person
Eleanor Whitmore
and
James Hollis
Saturday, October 18, 2026
Ceremony at 4:00 PM – Reception to follow
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
Kindly respond by September 20th
Short and sweet
are getting married!
Please join us
October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, TX
Dinner and dancing to follow
RSVP by September 20th at [website]
With parent names (casual style)
along with Robert and Anne Hollis
invite you to celebrate the wedding of
Eleanor Whitmore and James Hollis
Saturday, October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
Dinner and dancing follow the ceremony
Please RSVP by September 20th
Backyard and at-home wedding wording
Home weddings and backyard celebrations have their own warm energy – the invitation can reflect that without feeling under-designed.
Backyard ceremony
as we say our vows in the backyard
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
October 18, 2026 at 3:30 PM
12 Maple Street, Austin, Texas
Dinner and good company to follow
Please RSVP by October 1st
Intimate home reception
now come help us celebrate!
Eleanor and James
invite you to our reception
October 18, 2026 at 5:00 PM
12 Maple Street, Austin, Texas
Dinner, drinks, and dancing
RSVP by October 5th to [email or phone]
Beach and destination wedding wording
Destination weddings deserve invitation wording that evokes the setting and sets expectations for travel. Keep the tone adventurous but informative – guests need to know this is not a local event.
Beach ceremony
as we get married on the beach
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
Saturday, October 18, 2026
Ceremony at 5:00 PM – Sunset reception to follow
Rosemary Beach, Florida
Dress code: Beach formal
RSVP by August 1st – travel arrangements appreciated early
Destination wedding
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
are getting married in Tuscany
September 5, 2026
Villa delle Rose, Montepulciano, Italy
Ceremony at 4:00 PM local time
Dinner and dancing to follow
Please reply by June 1st
Accommodation and travel details at [website]
Casual elopement reception invite
Come celebrate with us
Eleanor & James
Saturday, October 18, 2026
6:00 PM – late
The Rooftop at Hotel San Jose
Austin, Texas
Dinner, drinks, and dancing
No gifts – just your presence (and good dancing shoes)
RSVP by October 5th
Micro-wedding and small celebration wording
Micro-weddings (under 30 guests) have a different energy – everyone is close to the couple, and the invitation can reflect that intimacy without sacrificing style.
Intimate gathering
You are one of the people we want by our side
as we marry.
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
October 18, 2026 at 4:00 PM
Juniper House, Austin, Texas
Dinner to follow
Please RSVP by September 25th
Restaurant wedding or dinner reception
to celebrate our wedding
Eleanor & James
Saturday, October 18, 2026
7:00 PM
The Carriage House Restaurant
512 Oak Street, Austin, Texas
Dinner is hosted – dress smartly casual
RSVP by October 1st
Fun and playful casual wording
For couples with a strong sense of humor or a quirky wedding theme, playful wording can make an invitation genuinely memorable. The rule: funny is fine, but every guest still needs to know when, where, and what to expect.
Foodie couple
Oh, and we’re getting married too.
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
RSVP by September 20th – your seat at the table awaits
Adventure couple
One lifelong journey.
Countless reasons to celebrate.
Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
are getting married – and we want you there.
October 18, 2026 at 4:00 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
RSVP by September 20th
Music lover theme
Headliners: Eleanor Whitmore & James Hollis
Opening act: a ceremony
Main event: dinner, open bar, dancing
October 18, 2026 – Doors open at 4:00 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
RSVP by September 20th
Laid-back brunch wedding
Join Eleanor & James
for their wedding brunch
Sunday, October 19, 2026
Ceremony at 11:00 AM
Brunch reception follows
The Garden House, Austin, Texas
RSVP by October 1st
Casual wording when parents are hosting
Parents hosting a casual wedding often want to be acknowledged without full formal phrasing. These templates find the middle ground.
Casual parental hosting
invite you to celebrate the marriage of their daughter
Eleanor
to James Hollis
October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
Reception to follow
Please RSVP by September 20th
Both families noted, casual tone
Eleanor Whitmore and James Hollis
invite you to share in the joy of their wedding
Saturday, October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM
The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas
Dinner and dancing to follow
RSVP by September 20th
The best invitation design amplifies your wording’s tone. Casual wording pairs naturally with watercolor florals, hand-lettered scripts, earthy textures, or bold modern typography. Paperlust offers 500+ designs across every casual style. Browse wedding invitations or filter by style to find your match – and pair with RSVP cards from the same suite.
What to always include, even on a casual invitation
Casual does not mean incomplete. However relaxed your tone, every invitation must answer these questions for guests:
- Who is getting married – both full names (first names only are fine for casual)
- When – date and time of the ceremony
- Where – venue name and city at minimum; full address recommended for casual weddings
- What to expect – a short line about what follows the ceremony (dinner, dancing, cocktails)
- How to respond – RSVP instructions and deadline
- Dress code – optional but appreciated, especially if it is not obvious from the venue
Created by the Paperlust stationery and design team. Founded in Melbourne in 2014, Paperlust has designed custom wedding invitations for thousands of couples across the US and beyond. Our designers work with you on wording, layout, and print choices – with a 100% happiness guarantee on every order.
Frequently asked questions
Is it okay to use first-person wording on a wedding invitation?
Absolutely. First-person wording (“Join us,” “We’re getting married”) is the standard for casual invitations and is increasingly common even in semi-formal contexts. The only situation where first-person feels out of place is a traditional formal invitation where parents are hosting in the third-person convention.
Can I skip the hosting line on a casual invitation?
Yes. Many casual and modern invitations begin directly with the couple’s names or a warm opener like “Join us” without listing parents or hosts. If parents are contributing financially and want to be acknowledged, you can include their names casually: “Jim and Margaret Whitmore invite you to celebrate…”
Do casual wedding invitations need to spell out the date?
No. Numerals are perfectly acceptable on casual invitations: “October 18, 2026” or “10/18/2026” are both fine. Only formal invitations require dates spelled out in full.
Can I include the venue address on a casual invitation?
Yes – and for casual weddings it is often more practical than a formal approach. Formal invitations traditionally omit the street address, but casual invitations can include the full address directly. This is especially useful for backyard weddings, home venues, or locations guests may not recognize.
How do I word a casual invitation for a ceremony-only event?
Keep it simple and honest. State that it is a ceremony, name the time and location, and do not imply a reception will follow: “Join us for our wedding ceremony – October 18, 2026 at 4:30 PM – The Old Oak Ranch, Austin, Texas.” If a small intimate dinner follows for close family, note that separately.
What is the difference between casual and semi-formal invitation wording?
Semi-formal occupies the middle ground: it often uses the hosting line but softens the language, may use first and third person together, and formats dates with some spelled-out elements. Example: “Together with their families, Eleanor Whitmore and James Hollis invite you to celebrate their marriage.” Casual uses first-person throughout and drops most conventions.
Should I include a dress code on a casual invitation?
If the dress code is not obvious from the venue name and tone, yes. Guests at a beach wedding need to know not to wear stilettos; guests at a backyard wedding need to know whether “casual” means jeans or garden party. Add a short line: “Garden party attire,” “Smart casual,” or “Come as you are” covers the range.
Where can I find casual invitation designs to match this wording?
Paperlust has 500+ designs spanning boho, wildflower, modern minimalist, rustic, and illustrated styles – all customizable with your wording. Browse wedding invitation designs and filter by style. Digital print options start from $2.04 per card.