Having a baby shower is a rite of passage and an exciting way to celebrate the upcoming birth of your child. It’s a meaningful time shared with friends and family, so you want to be able to make sure they can attend and celebrate with you. For this reason, many people choose to send out a save the date baby shower card before they send out their baby shower invites. This gives everyone plenty of notice and lets them know they are going to be invited and should keep the date free for it!Â
Your time frame for baby shower save the dates is different than for a wedding or other event, since it’s limited by the time of the pregnancy. For most, a save the date baby shower card goes out soon after announcing the pregnancy. This usually happens around 3 months, and assuming you have the baby shower within the last month of your pregnancy, you can aim to give guests 4 months notice with your baby shower save the date cards. Let guests know the date, and the city where the shower will take place. You can also give them the time if you already have that decided. Invitations are then sent out about 4 weeks before the baby shower to give all the details and remind everyone it is happening. Â
Choosing the Right Design for a Baby Shower Save the Date
Baby shower save the dates land in a genuinely sweet spot: they need to be welcoming and warm, practical enough to secure dates on busy calendars, and personal enough to reflect the parents and the occasion. Here is how to think about design and format.
Design directions to consider:
Soft pastels and gentle tones: blush, sage, lavender, butter yellow, and soft mint are perennial choices for baby shower save the dates. They read as gentle and celebratory without skewing heavily gendered. These palettes work beautifully with botanical illustration, watercolor washes, and soft typography.
Bold and modern: not every shower is soft and pastel. If the parents have a maximalist or modern aesthetic, a bolder design, bright color, graphic pattern, or strong typography makes a stronger statement and feels more personal to them.
Gender-neutral designs: increasingly popular, and often the right call when the gender is not being revealed before the shower or the parents prefer to keep things open. Neutrals (warm white, oat, terracotta, sage, yellow) with illustration-led designs work well.
Themed designs: if the shower has a specific theme (jungle animals, floral garden, book-themed, vintage), carry it through the save the date. Coordinating the save the date with decorations and invitations creates a cohesive event aesthetic.
Photo card option: if you want to make the save the date feel especially personal, a photo of the expecting parent or parents is a warm choice. It makes the event feel immediate and real for guests who may live far away.
Format Options
Card: the standard format, appropriate for most baby showers. Easy to display on a fridge or notice board.
Postcard: lower postage, no envelope required, and an immediate visual impact in the mailbox. Save the Date Postcards work especially well for casual showers.
Magnet: particularly useful when guests need to keep the date visible for a longer window. Any design becomes a magnet at checkout -Â explore Save the Date Magnets for options that stay front-of-mind. Great when the shower is being organized well in advance.
What to Include
Keep it simple. A baby shower save the date should include: the honoree's name, the date, the city or general area, and a note that a full invitation with venue details will follow. If you have a host's name and contact details, those are optional but helpful.
Avoid overloading with logistics. The save the date is a placeholder. Let the invitation do the heavy lifting on specifics.
FAQ
For a local baby shower, four to six weeks notice is plenty. If guests are traveling from out of town, or if the shower coincides with a busy holiday period, six to eight weeks gives everyone a comfortable window to plan. The full invitation can follow two to three weeks later with all the venue and timing details.
Not always. For small, intimate showers with local guests, a single invitation sent four to six weeks out covers both functions. Save the dates make more sense when you want to lock in dates early, when guests need to arrange travel, or when your planning timeline means the invitation won't be ready for a while.
Absolutely. Gender-neutral designs, neutral color palettes (sage, oat, terracotta, warm white), and wording that focuses on the parents rather than the baby work beautifully for pre-reveal showers. Many couples choose to keep the save the date intentionally neutral even when they do know the gender.
Cards are the most traditional and versatile. Postcards are a modern alternative that skip the envelope and cost slightly less to mail. Magnets are a practical choice when you want guests to keep the date visible on their fridge. Add pre-applied magnet backing (from $8 USD for 10) or self-adhesive magnet stickers at checkout to turn any card into a fridge magnet. All three formats are available through Paperlust.
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