Announcing the Adventure Ahead
A castle in the Scottish Highlands, a vineyard in Tuscany, a villa in the Algarve, or a piazza in Florence. Destination weddings are extraordinary, but they ask a great deal of your guests. Flights, accommodation, annual leave, travel insurance, and sometimes a visa all need arranging well in advance. Destination wedding save the date cards give your guests the notice they need, and they set the tone for the celebration before a single formal invitation has been printed.
Send your destination save the dates 9 to 12 months before the wedding. For international destinations, particularly those involving long-haul travel or a visa requirement, lean toward the earlier end. The earlier your guests receive notice, the better their chances of securing flights at a reasonable price and arranging time away from work.
Cadwch y dyddiad / Save the Date: for couples with guests travelling across Wales or the wider UK, a bilingual touch on your cards is a small but memorable detail.
Destination Save the Date Etiquette
For a destination wedding, you need to give your guests good notice well in advance. If they have to travel, they need ample time to book flights, secure accommodation, and request annual leave. Consider sending your destination save the date cards 9 to 12 months before the date. The further guests need to travel, and the more international your guest list, the more important it is to lean toward the earlier end of that window.
What Your Destination Save the Date Needs to Say
A destination save the date carries more responsibility than a local one. Your guests are being asked to make significant commitments: booking flights, arranging accommodation, requesting annual leave, and possibly organising visas. The earlier and more clearly you communicate the essential details, the better.
Beyond the date and general location, consider including:
Accommodation block information: If you have reserved a room block at a hotel or secured preferential rates at nearby properties, include the booking window deadline. Guests booking outside that window may not get the same rate, and rooms at popular venues sell out.
Travel booking guidance: Give guests a rough steer on when to book flights for the best fares. For peak periods or busy destinations (summer Mediterranean, Christmas ski resorts, Amalfi Coast in July), booking eight to ten months out can make a significant difference. Your guests will appreciate the practical guidance.
Visa note for international destinations: If your destination requires a visa for guests travelling on a British passport, a brief note such as "visa required; check FCDO entry requirements" is genuinely helpful. You are not responsible for arranging it, but flagging it early prevents last-minute stress.
Wedding website link: A destination save the date cannot fit everything guests need. A wedding website covering venue addresses, accommodation options, local transport, and FAQs is worth setting up before your save the dates go out.
Format Options for Destination Weddings
The right format can reinforce the spirit of your destination visually, not just in words. Browse the full save the dates collection to find the format that fits your setting.
Passport booklet: A multi-page booklet designed to resemble a travel passport. It opens to reveal your wedding details inside and works beautifully for international destinations with a strong sense of place, whether that is a Scottish island or a Sicilian hilltop.
Boarding pass format: A single card designed to look like a boarding pass, with departure city and destination, your names in place of passenger details, and your wedding date as the "flight number." It communicates travel and creates excitement immediately.
Map-themed designs: A stylised map of your destination region with your venue marked works for any location. It orients guests geographically and makes a striking standalone design, particularly effective for guests who have never visited your chosen area.
Traditional with destination motif: For couples who prefer a classic aesthetic, a traditional typographic save the date with a subtle nod to the destination (a local botanical illustration, a sketch of a landmark, or colours pulled from the landscape) balances formality with a sense of place.
If you want something guests are less likely to misplace while planning travel, save the date magnets keep your details visible on the fridge for months. For a more personal touch, save the date photo cards help guests connect immediately with your celebration.
Magnets
If your heart is set on taking pride of place on your guests' fridges, choose save the date magnets for your destination wedding. Paired with a great photo of you and your partner, your destination save the date will not disappear under a pile of post. Magnets are ideal for any design featuring a destination theme: mountain, beach, Scottish loch, or continental European villa. At Paperlust, the whole back of your card is a top-quality magnet, so it will have no trouble holding its spot on the fridge.
Luggage Tags
Luggage tag save the dates are entirely fitting for a destination wedding (whether printed on paper or on real luggage tags). A chance to get away is always exciting, so why not fan the flame with something that sparks your guests' gleeful travel plans? A passport or boarding pass save the date is equally appropriate and carries that same sense of anticipation.
Postcards
A destination save the date postcard fits the travel theme beautifully and reminds guests what they have to look forward to. Choose a double-sided design so your lovely couple photo can brighten up the fridge while the information sits safely on the reverse. Destination wedding save the date postcards also evoke a simpler, more romantic era of travel and work well for couples planning a wedding with vintage details: think heritage venues, rural escapes, or a ceremony in the Italian countryside.
Cultural Destination Weddings
There are plenty of tropical destination save the date ideas, but what about the cultural destination wedding? Just because you have a lot of relatives there does not mean it is not a destination wedding for you and many of your other guests. Make the most of it and embrace the culture of your destination, whether it is India, Brazil, Ireland, or Scotland. Destination save the dates can reflect the location, the wedding theme, or a sophisticated mix of both.
Tropical Destination Weddings
For a tropical island save the date, you could choose a design featuring a palm tree or pineapple motif in real gold foil, or use letterpress to create an impression of waves on a minimalist card. Your save the date does not need to match a specific theme. If your wedding aesthetic happens to be entirely opposite to your chosen location, that is perfectly fine. Just make sure you are getting the wedding of your dreams.
Timing Guide for British Couples
If most of your guests are based in the UK or Ireland, use these windows as your starting point.
International destination wedding (guests flying from the UK to another country): send your save the date 12 to 14 months before the wedding date. This gives guests time to budget, request annual leave, and book flights when fares are still reasonable.
Remote British or Irish destination (guests travelling within the UK or to Ireland): 9 to 12 months is the recommended window. Domestic travel is generally more flexible to arrange, but guests still need time to book accommodation, sort transport, and plan around bank holidays.
If your wedding falls on or near a bank holiday weekend, your venue is particularly remote, or you expect a significant number of guests to arrange childcare, err toward the earlier end of these windows.
Once your guests have saved the date, your formal wedding invitations will carry the full details and set the tone for the celebration.
Frequently Asked Questions
Include the date, destination city or region, your names, and a note that a formal invitation with full details will follow. If you have a wedding website, include the URL. Avoid trying to fit accommodation details, visa information, and travel tips onto the save the date itself: that is what the wedding website is for.
If you have already arranged an accommodation block, yes. Include the hotel name, booking deadline, and a note about the reserved rate. If you have not arranged a block yet, send the save the date without that detail and follow up by email once the block is confirmed.
Not always. A passport booklet works best when the destination itself is the point and your wedding has a travel-adventure aesthetic. If your destination wedding is at a local country house, a private estate, or a coastal venue in the UK, a more traditional design often fits better than a travel-themed format.
For a destination wedding abroad, aim for 12 to 14 months before the date. For a remote British or Irish venue where guests need to travel and book accommodation, 9 to 12 months is the recommended window. Bank holidays and school holiday periods reduce guest availability, so the earlier the better.
Yes. At checkout you can add a pre-applied magnet backing to any save the date design. Your card becomes a full-face fridge magnet, which is especially useful for destination weddings: it keeps your details visible while guests make their travel arrangements over the coming months.
Yes. All cards are printed in our Melbourne studio and delivered to the UK via DHL Express, arriving in 3 to 5 business days from dispatch. Pricing is shown in pounds at checkout, and free shipping is available on qualifying orders (threshold shown at checkout).
Gold flat foil suits tropical or glamorous destination themes and gives a mirror-bright metallic effect. For a more tactile, handcrafted feel, letterpress on Wild Cotton paper suits rustic, garden, or heritage venues. Foil stamp combines the pressed impression with the metallic finish, and suits international or formal destination weddings.
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