Envelope Addressing for Wedding Invitations: Etiquette Rules and 60+ Examples

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At a glance

  • Outer envelopes use full formal addressing (Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollis); inner envelopes are more casual (Thomas and Margaret).
  • Never abbreviate street names on formal outer envelopes: “Street” not “St.”, “Avenue” not “Ave.”
  • Each invited guest should be named – writing “and Family” only works if you intend to invite the whole family.
  • For same-sex couples sharing a surname: Mr. and Mr. Hollis / Ms. and Ms. Chen.
  • Children under 18 are named on the inner envelope only, not the outer.
  • Paperlust offers envelope address printing for ~$0.20 per address – import your guest list via Excel or Facebook. Browse wedding invitation suites that include envelope printing.

Addressing wedding invitation envelopes is one of those tasks that seems simple until you hit your third edge case in a row – the divorced couple with a shared surname, the guest with a PhD, the family where you are only inviting the adults. This guide covers 60+ envelope addressing examples for every guest scenario, with the full etiquette rules behind each convention explained in plain English – so you can make informed choices rather than just guessing.

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Outer vs. inner envelope: what goes where

Element Outer envelope Inner envelope
Purpose Mailing; goes through postal system Personal; directly addresses guests
Formality Most formal More personal/casual
Name format Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollis Thomas and Margaret
Street address Yes – full address required No address – names only
Children listed? No (outer shows head of household) Yes – children listed by first name
Abbreviations No (spell out Street, Avenue, etc.) More flexible

Addressing rules: what every outer envelope needs

Before getting into specific guest scenarios, here are the universal rules that apply to all outer envelopes:

  • Spell out everything: “Street” not “St.”, “Avenue” not “Ave.”, “Apartment” not “Apt.” on formal outer envelopes.
  • Spell out state names on the most formal invitations: “California” not “CA.” (This is optional for semi-formal and casual weddings.)
  • No abbreviations in names: “Robert” not “Bob,” “William” not “Bill” on formal outer envelopes.
  • Return address on the back flap is the traditional placement; top-left front is also widely accepted and more practical for machine-reading by USPS.
  • Guest’s address is centered on the front of the envelope.
  • Do not use punctuation after the street address line or city/state/zip line on most formal invitations – etiquette convention omits the comma after the city name.

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Married couples (same surname)

Traditional (husband’s name leads)

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas William Hollis
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Modern (both names listed, alphabetical or either order)

Mr. Thomas Hollis and Mrs. Margaret Hollis
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Inner envelope (same surname)

Thomas and Margaret

Married couples with different surnames

When spouses have different surnames, list both names. Traditionally the woman’s name comes first when her name leads the line; or list in alphabetical order by surname. For modern couples, either name can come first.

Different surnames – traditional (woman first)

Ms. Rachel Goldstein and Mr. David Chen
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

Different surnames – alphabetical by surname

Mr. David Chen and Ms. Rachel Goldstein
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

Inner envelope (different surnames)

Rachel and David

Single guests

Single woman (formal)

Miss Claire Bennett
789 Rosewood Drive
Savannah Georgia 31401

Single woman (contemporary – Ms. for any woman)

Ms. Claire Bennett
789 Rosewood Drive
Savannah Georgia 31401

Single man

Mr. James Hollis
101 Oak Lane
Nashville Tennessee 37201

Single guest invited with an “and guest”

Mr. James Hollis and Guest
101 Oak Lane
Nashville Tennessee 37201

Inner envelope – single guest with guest

James and Guest

Same-sex couples

Two men – same surname

Mr. James Hollis and Mr. Alexander Hollis
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Alternative: “Messrs. James and Alexander Hollis” (using the plural honorific “Messrs.”) – rare but correct.

Two women – same surname

Ms. Rachel Chen and Ms. Claire Chen
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

Two women – different surnames

Ms. Rachel Goldstein and Ms. Claire Bennett
789 Rosewood Drive
Savannah Georgia 31401

Non-binary guest (Mx. honorific)

Mx. Jordan Clarke
222 Birchwood Court
Portland Oregon 97201

Guests with professional titles

Both guests are doctors (same surname)

The Doctors Chen
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

One spouse is a doctor (woman is doctor)

Dr. Rachel Chen and Mr. David Chen
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

One spouse is a doctor (man is doctor)

Dr. and Mrs. David Chen
456 Magnolia Street
Atlanta Georgia 30301

Note: If the wife’s name is not subsumed into the husband’s professionally, list both full names: “Dr. David Chen and Ms. Rachel Goldstein.”

Judge

The Honorable Patricia Whitmore and Mr. Robert Whitmore
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Reverend / Pastor

The Reverend John Williams and Mrs. Susan Williams
567 Church Street
Nashville Tennessee 37201

Military addressing

Active military personnel use their rank on formal envelopes. Army and Air Force officers list rank before name on the same line. For enlisted personnel below officer rank, the branch follows the name on the next line.

Army officer

Captain James Hollis
United States Army
101 Oak Lane
Nashville Tennessee 37201

Navy officer

Lieutenant Commander James Hollis
United States Navy and Mrs. Margaret Hollis
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Enlisted (below officer rank)

Mr. James Hollis
United States Army
101 Oak Lane
Nashville Tennessee 37201

Families with children

Children under 18 are typically listed on the inner envelope only. The outer envelope addresses the parents. If you are inviting children to the wedding, make that clear via the inner envelope – listing only parents’ names on both envelopes signals that children are not invited.

Family – outer envelope

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollis
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Family – inner envelope (with children invited)

Thomas and Margaret
Lily, Jack, and Sophie

Family – inner envelope (adults only)

Thomas and Margaret

(Children’s names absent from inner envelope signals adults-only invitation.)

“And Family” – when to use it

The phrase “and Family” is appropriate only when you genuinely intend to invite all family members living at that address, including children. If you want only the named adults, do not use “and Family.”

The Hollis Family
124 Elmwood Avenue
Charleston South Carolina 29401

Divorced guests

Divorced woman who has reverted to maiden name

Ms. Rachel Goldstein
789 Rosewood Drive
Savannah Georgia 31401

Divorced woman who has kept ex-husband’s surname

Mrs. Rachel Hollis
789 Rosewood Drive
Savannah Georgia 31401

Note: Use “Mrs.” for a divorced woman who has kept the married surname; “Ms.” for one who uses her maiden name or prefers Ms. regardless.

Addressing envelopes without inner envelopes

Many modern weddings skip the inner envelope entirely – it is an optional tradition, not a requirement. If you are not using inner envelopes, the outer envelope takes on the role of naming all invited guests. List everyone’s full name on the outer, or use “and Guest” / “and Family” as appropriate.

Scenario Outer envelope (no inner)
Married couple, same surname Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollis
Married couple + children invited The Hollis Family
Single + guest Mr. James Hollis and Guest
Children named Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollis, Lily and Jack
Skip the handwriting marathon: envelope printing at Paperlust

Addressing 100+ envelopes by hand takes hours and risks consistency errors. Paperlust offers professional envelope printing for approximately $0.20 per address – import your guest list via Excel or Facebook, and addresses are printed in a font matching your invitation suite. Available as an add-on when you order wedding invitations. The Address Manager tool handles the full import and layout process.

About this guide

Created by the Paperlust stationery team. Since 2014, Paperlust has helped thousands of couples navigate wedding invitation etiquette – from paper selection to postage. Our designers review every order and are available via live chat for wording questions. Every order includes a 100% happiness guarantee.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need inner and outer envelopes for a wedding invitation?

No. Inner envelopes are a traditional convention, not a requirement. Many modern couples skip them. If you use only one envelope, address it with the same formality you would use for the outer envelope, and include all invited guests’ names (or “and Guest,” “and Family”) on the single envelope.

Should I spell out state names or use two-letter abbreviations?

For the most formal invitations, spell out the state name: “South Carolina” rather than “SC.” For semi-formal and casual invitations, two-letter postal abbreviations are fine. The USPS preference is actually the abbreviated format for deliverability, so many couples use abbreviations regardless of formality.

Should I use “Miss” or “Ms.” for single women?

“Miss” is the traditional honorific for an unmarried woman, especially one under 18-25. “Ms.” is the contemporary-neutral honorific that does not indicate marital status – preferred by many adult women. When in doubt, use “Ms.” – it is universally appropriate.

How do I address an envelope to a couple who are not married?

List both names on the outer envelope on the same line (if they share an address). Alphabetical order by first name is the neutral choice. “Ms. Claire Bennett and Mr. James Hollis” or “James Hollis and Claire Bennett” are both correct for an unmarried cohabitating couple.

What if I do not know someone’s preferred honorific?

Use their first and last name with no honorific. “James Hollis” with no “Mr.” is completely acceptable on modern invitations and avoids any potential misgendering or incorrect title. Alternatively, ask a mutual friend or contact the guest directly.

Where does the return address go?

The traditional placement is centered on the back flap of the envelope. Top-left front is also widely used and more compatible with USPS automated sorting (return address must be visible on the front for machines to read it). Either is correct – choose based on your envelope design.

Can I print envelope addresses instead of handwriting them?

Yes, and for larger guest lists it is practically a necessity. Paperlust’s Address Manager tool allows you to import guest addresses from Excel or Google Sheets and prints addresses in a coordinated font. This is available as an add-on to your wedding invitation order for approximately $0.20 per address.

How do I address an invitation to a family when I only want to invite the parents?

Name only the parents on the outer envelope and the inner envelope. Do not use “and Family.” The inner envelope convention is clear: only the names listed there are invited. If there is no inner envelope, include a brief note in your RSVP or info card clarifying the event is adults-only.

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