Postcard-format wedding invitations get the job done in one card. The design goes on the front, the essential details go on the back, and the whole thing mails directly to your guests without an envelope. It is a clean, modern approach that cuts stationery costs, reduces postage, and still lands in the mailbox looking polished and intentional.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Standard invitation size | 4" x 6" (102 x 152 mm) |
| Envelope required | No envelope needed |
| USPS postcard rate (April 2026) | $0.61 per piece |
| vs. standard letter rate | $0.78 (save $0.17 per card) |
| Designer proof | Within 1-2 business days |
| Edits included | Two rounds at no extra cost |
| Print options | Digital, flat foil, foil stamp, letterpress, metallic |
| Happiness guarantee | 100% satisfaction: free reprint or refund |
What Is a Postcard Wedding Invitation?
A postcard wedding invitation is the wedding invitation itself printed in postcard format. One card. Both sides printed. Mails to your guests without any envelope. This is not a save-the-date card sent early in the planning process, and it is not an RSVP card enclosed inside a larger suite. It is the full invitation, reformatted to the compact, mail-ready postcard shape.
The format works because you have two sides to work with. The front holds your artwork, your names as the headline, and the visual identity of your wedding. The back divides into two functional zones: the left side carries your invitation text (date, venue, RSVP details), and the right side is reserved for the mailing address block, return address, and postage stamp. Once printed and addressed, you stamp each card and send it directly. No stuffing envelopes, no sealing, no inner envelope, no tissue paper. The postcard handles everything in one step.
That simplicity is the format's core appeal. Postcard invitations give you a professionally printed, beautifully designed invitation that mails itself, costs less to produce than a multi-piece suite, and qualifies for a lower USPS postage rate than a standard letter.
Postcard Sizes and USPS Mailing Requirements
The standard size for a postcard wedding invitation in the United States is 4 inches by 6 inches, or 102 x 152 mm. This is the most common postcard size because it hits a practical sweet spot: enough surface area to carry a strong design and clear text, small enough to qualify for the USPS postcard rate, and familiar to guests as a postcard-format piece.
Qualifying for the USPS Postcard Rate
As of April 2026, the USPS postcard rate is $0.61 per piece. To qualify, a card must be no smaller than 3.5" x 5" and no larger than 4.25" x 6", and its thickness must fall between 0.007" and 0.016". A standard printed card stock sits comfortably within that range. The standard first-class letter rate is $0.78 per piece, so each postcard invitation saves you $0.17 in postage. For a guest list of 100, that is $17 in postage savings before you account for the cost of envelopes you are no longer buying.
Some couples prefer a 5" x 7" postcard for a larger design canvas and more text room. That size does not qualify for the postcard rate, but it still eliminates the envelope cost and keeps the format simple.
One practical note: postcards pass through USPS sorting machines, which can leave light postal ink marks on the card surface. Matte and linen-textured paper stocks handle this more gracefully than glossy surfaces, making them the go-to paper choice for postcard invitations that need to arrive looking clean.
Single-Sided vs. Double-Sided Layouts
Almost all postcard wedding invitations are double-sided, and for good reason. A double-sided layout lets you dedicate the front entirely to your design and couple names, using that surface for maximum visual impact, while keeping all the event information cleanly organized on the back.
The back of a double-sided postcard invitation typically follows a standard two-column format. The left column holds your invitation text: names, date, time, venue, and RSVP details. The right column is the mailing zone: a space for the guest address, your return address printed in the upper left, and a stamp or postal indicia in the upper right.
A single-sided postcard invitation, where only the front is printed and the back is left blank for handwritten addressing, is far less common. It can work for very small, informal gatherings where you are addressing each card yourself, but it removes most of the production and mailing advantages that make the postcard format worthwhile. For most couples, double-sided printing is the practical and professional choice.
What to Include on Your Postcard Invitation
Space is the defining constraint of postcard invitations. The text area on the back of a 4" x 6" card is roughly half the card width and the full height, minus margins. That gives you approximately 3 inches by 3 inches of usable copy space. Enough for everything essential, not enough for every detail.
Here is what fits well on a postcard invitation back:
- Full names of the couple (or first names only for a more casual tone)
- Day of the week, the full date, and year
- Ceremony time (and reception time, if different)
- Venue name and full street address, city, and state
- RSVP deadline
- RSVP method: a wedding website URL or a short email address is the most space-efficient option
Here is what works better on a wedding website, a digital insert card, or a separate printed details card:
- Accommodation recommendations and hotel room block information
- Travel directions and parking details
- Dress code notes longer than one line
- Registry information
- Reception details when the ceremony and reception are at different venues with different addresses
A QR code linking to your wedding website solves the information-overflow problem elegantly. One small element on the postcard back gives guests instant access to every extended detail, without crowding the invitation itself.
When a Postcard Invitation Fits Your Wedding
Postcard wedding invitations are not a budget shortcut or a step down from a traditional suite. They are the right format for certain wedding personalities and planning approaches. Here is where they work best.
Casual and Modern Weddings
If your wedding is relaxed, contemporary, and light on ceremony, a postcard invitation signals that tone to guests before they even arrive. A well-designed card on quality stock reads as intentional, not informal. It tells guests that you made a deliberate choice and that your event will follow suit.
Destination and Beach Weddings
Postcard invitations carry an inherent travel reference. A 4" x 6" card feels like something that arrived from a beautiful place, which makes it a natural match for beach weddings, tropical destinations, vineyard events, and any wedding where the location is part of the story. Couples getting married at a resort, on an island, or at a lakeside venue often lean toward postcard invitations specifically because the format reinforces the destination theme.
Micro-Weddings and Elopement Celebrations
Couples who eloped and are throwing a post-elopement party, or those planning an intimate gathering of 20-40 guests, frequently choose postcard invitations. The scale matches the format. A simple, single-card invitation suits a casual dinner or garden gathering far better than a formal multi-piece suite.
Budget-Conscious Couples
Every piece you remove from a traditional suite saves money: no inner envelope, no outer envelope, no RSVP envelope, no tissue paper, no wax seal. Postcard invitations strip the suite to its essential piece and reduce per-card postage at the same time. For couples managing a tight stationery budget without compromising on print quality, postcard format is one of the most efficient moves available.
Eco-Minded Couples
Fewer materials per invitation means a smaller paper footprint. Paperlust also plants a tree with every order, adding an environmental commitment to the reduced-material approach of postcard stationery.
Design, Paper, and Print Finish Options
The most important design decision for a postcard invitation is how you divide the visual work between front and back. The front should carry your full creative statement: a motif, illustration, or photographic element, your names as the primary typographic element, and a clear color palette. The back should prioritize legibility above everything. Font size, contrast between text and background, and clean layout hierarchy all matter more on the detail side than anywhere else in your invitation design.
For paper stock, matte finishes perform well for postcard invitations because they hold postal processing without showing marks. Linen-textured card adds a tactile quality that feels elevated in the hand, making it a popular choice for couples who want the postcard format with a premium feel. Cotton stocks are a natural pairing with letterpress designs, where the impression into the thick fiber paper is a central part of the aesthetic.
Print method options for wedding invitation postcards at Paperlust include:
- Digital print: the widest color range at the most accessible price point, and the fastest production time. Works on matte, linen, premium, metallic, kraft, and vellum stocks.
- Flat foil: a mirror-bright metallic accent on headline text or a graphic detail, with no custom die required and a lower minimum order than foil stamp.
- Foil stamp: a full debossed foil impression using a custom die that presses the metallic into the card surface. Minimum order of 50 applies.
- Letterpress: a deep, handcrafted impression pressed into 300gsm or 600gsm Wild Cotton paper using hand-mixed inks. A luxury choice for couples who want a tactile, heirloom-quality feel even on a compact format.
- Metallic print: a subtle gold or silver pigment effect printed digitally at a 5th imaging station. Less mirror-bright than foil, and available at a lower price point.
For postcard invitations, digital and flat foil are the most frequently ordered combinations. They balance visual impact with practical mailing durability. Letterpress on thick Wild Cotton is a standout option for intimate weddings where guests will handle and keep the card.
How to Order Postcard Wedding Invitations at Paperlust
Paperlust's design and ordering process is built around giving couples professional results without requiring design experience.
Browse and Personalize Online
Start by browsing the postcard invitation collection and filtering by color, style, or design aesthetic. When you find a design, open it in the online editor to personalize both sides: add your names, date, venue, and RSVP details, adjust fonts and colors within the design system, and preview the finished card before placing your order.
Designer Proof and Edits
After you place your order, a professional designer is assigned to your invitation and delivers a printed proof within 1-2 business days. Two rounds of edits are included at no additional cost, covering any refinements to wording, spacing, or design details before the cards go to print.
Shipping to the US
US orders ship via DHL Express. Free DHL Express shipping applies to orders of $350 USD or more. Production time before dispatch is approximately 8-10 business days for digital print invitations and around 20 business days for letterpress and foil stamp orders. After dispatch, DHL Express transit to most US addresses takes 2-4 business days.
Happiness Guarantee
Every Paperlust order is backed by a 100% happiness guarantee. If the printed cards do not match your approved proof, you receive a free reprint or a full refund.
For couples building out their full stationery suite, Paperlust's complete range of wedding invitations covers every format and aesthetic, from classic formal suites to modern minimalist designs. If you are coordinating your postcard invitation with an early announcement mailing, browse save the date cards to find a design that ties both pieces together.
Frequently Asked Questions
The standard size for a postcard wedding invitation is 4 inches by 6 inches (102 x 152 mm). This size qualifies for the USPS postcard mailing rate of $0.61 per piece, which is lower than the $0.78 standard first-class letter rate. Larger postcards, such as 5" x 7", are also an option and offer more design space, but they mail at the standard letter rate rather than the lower postcard rate.
Yes. Postcard invitations are designed to mail without an envelope. The back of the card has a left-side area for your invitation text and a right-side area for the guest mailing address, return address, and postage stamp. You stamp the card and send it directly. No envelope is needed, which reduces your stationery cost per invitation and qualifies each card for the lower USPS postcard rate.
A 4" x 6" postcard invitation comfortably holds couple names, the day of the week and full date, ceremony time, venue name and address, an RSVP deadline, and a RSVP method such as a wedding website URL or email address. Accommodation details, travel directions, registry information, and longer dress code notes are typically too detailed for the postcard format and work better on a wedding website. A QR code linking to your wedding website is a space-efficient way to give guests access to all extended details.
Postcard invitations work best for casual, modern, destination, beach, micro-wedding, and elopement-celebration formats. They suit any wedding where simplicity and a relaxed aesthetic are intentional choices. For a black-tie or highly formal wedding, a traditional multi-piece envelope suite typically better matches the tone guests expect. That said, postcard invitations on luxury paper with letterpress or foil finish can read as elevated and refined, especially for intimate guest lists.
Yes. Postcard wedding invitations at Paperlust are double-sided by default. The front carries your primary design and couple names, while the back is formatted for your invitation text on the left and the mailing address area on the right. You can personalize both sides in the online editor, and a designer proof is delivered within 1-2 business days of placing your order.
Postcard wedding invitations at Paperlust are available in digital print, flat foil, foil stamp, letterpress, and metallic print. Paper options include matte, linen, premium, cotton, kraft, vellum, and metallic stocks, depending on the print method selected. Matte and linen-textured stocks are particularly well-suited to postcard format because they handle postal machine processing without showing marks. Letterpress on Wild Cotton paper is a popular choice for couples who want a luxury tactile finish on a compact card.
After placing your order, a designer proof arrives within 1-2 business days. Once you approve the proof, production takes approximately 8-10 business days for digital print and around 20 business days for letterpress or foil stamp. After production, DHL Express delivers to most US addresses in 2-4 business days. Free DHL Express shipping is included on orders of $350 USD or more.
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