RSVP Reminder Messages & Response Examples: Wording for Couples and Guests

 

Wedding planning guide · iCustomLabel.com

Polite reminder templates for couples chasing RSVPs, plus response wording examples for guests — every format and situation covered.

iCustomLabel.com 5 min read

Two of the most universally dreaded wedding tasks: sending an RSVP reminder to guests who haven't responded, and figuring out how to word your own RSVP when you receive an invitation. Both feel awkward. Neither has to be.

This guide covers both sides of the RSVP equation — ready-to-send reminder messages for couples (via text, email, and phone), plus RSVP response examples for guests in every situation, including how to decline gracefully and what to do when you respond late.


How to politely remind guests to RSVP

RSVP reminders are one of those wedding tasks that feels more awkward than it actually is. Most guests who haven't responded haven't deliberately ignored you — they've been busy, meant to get to it, and genuinely lost track. A warm, direct reminder almost always gets an immediate response.

The key: be warm, be specific about the deadline, and make it easy for them to respond in the same message. Three days before your RSVP deadline is the ideal time to send the first reminder — don't wait until the day of.

Choose your channel

💬
Text / iMessage

Best for close friends and family. Feels personal, gets read immediately, and is easy to respond to.

✉️
Email

Best for acquaintances, work colleagues, or anyone you don't text regularly. Slightly more formal.

📞
Phone call

Best for older guests or family members who may not check digital messages regularly.

RSVP reminder message — text / iMessage

Warm & casual

"Hey [Name]! Just a quick note — our RSVP deadline is [date] and we haven't heard back from you yet. Would love to know if you're able to make it! Just reply here or go to [website]. 💕"

Light & fun

"Hi [Name]! Our caterer is giving us the look 😅 — we need a final headcount by [date]. Are you able to join us on [wedding date]? Just let us know either way!"

Brief & direct

"Hi [Name] — just following up on the RSVP for our wedding on [date]. Deadline is [date] and we'd love to have you there! Can you let us know? Thank you so much."

RSVP reminder message — email

Formal tone

"Dear [Name], We wanted to reach out as our RSVP deadline of [date] is approaching. We'd be so honored to have you celebrate with us on [wedding date] and would appreciate knowing whether you're able to attend. Please RSVP at [website] or simply reply to this email. With warmest regards, [Names]"

Friendly tone

"Hi [Name]! We're getting close to our RSVP deadline ([date]) and realized we haven't heard back from you yet. We completely understand if things are busy — we just need to get our final count to the venue. Would love to know if you can make it! [Website link] or just reply here."

After the deadline — second reminder

If the deadline has passed and you still haven't heard back, one more message is entirely appropriate. Keep it brief and non-judgmental — most people feel a little sheepish about missing the deadline and respond quickly once prompted:

Post-deadline follow-up

"Hi [Name]! I know life gets busy — just wanted to check in one more time since our RSVP deadline has passed. We need to give the venue a final count this week. Are you able to join us? No worries at all if not — we just need to know either way. Thank you so much!"

Tip: Have someone else send reminders on your behalf if chasing RSVPs is stressing you out. A parent, maid of honor, or best man can handle the follow-ups while you focus on other planning — and it takes the awkwardness out of the equation entirely.

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How to respond to a wedding RSVP — examples for every situation

Whether you're responding to a physical RSVP card, a wedding website form, a text, or an email, the same principles apply: respond promptly, be specific about who's attending, and if you're declining, be brief and warm.

Accepting — formal RSVP card wording

If the invitation included a physical RSVP card with checkboxes, filling it out is straightforward. For those that require you to write in a response, these work well:

Formal acceptance

"[Name(s)] joyfully accept(s) and will attend. Meal preference: [choice]."

Warm acceptance

"[Name(s)] accept(s) with pleasure and look(s) forward to celebrating with you on your special day."

Accepting — text or email response

Text, close friend

"Yes! We would not miss it for anything. Both [Name] and I will be there — can't wait! 🥂"

Email, acquaintance

"Dear [Names], Thank you so much for the invitation. I'm delighted to confirm that I'll be attending on [date]. Looking forward to celebrating with you both. Warmly, [Name]"

Declining — graceful wording for every channel

Declining a wedding invitation is always a little awkward, but a warm, prompt decline is far better than silence. You don't need to explain in detail — a brief, sincere response is all that's required:

Formal decline (RSVP card)

"[Name(s)] regretfully decline(s). We send our warmest congratulations and best wishes for your celebration."

Warm decline (text)

"We're so sorry — we won't be able to make it. We're so happy for you both and will be celebrating from afar. Wishing you the most beautiful day! 💕"

Prior commitment (email)

"Thank you so much for the invitation — we're so honored to be included. Unfortunately, we have a prior commitment that weekend and won't be able to attend. We're sending all our love and congratulations, and hope to celebrate with you soon."

Distance / travel (text)

"I'm so sad to miss this — the distance just makes it impossible this time. I'll be thinking of you both all day and cannot wait to hear every detail. Congratulations, you two. 🤍"

Responding late — what to say when you missed the deadline

If you missed the RSVP deadline, respond immediately and acknowledge it briefly — don't dwell on it, but don't ignore it either:

Late response, attending

"I'm so sorry for the late response — life completely got away from me. I absolutely want to be there and hope it's not too late to add me to the count. Please let me know if there's anything I can do to make it work! So excited for you both."

Late response, declining

"I'm sorry I missed the deadline — that's entirely on me. I'm unfortunately unable to attend, but I wanted you to know how much the invitation meant. Wishing you a beautiful wedding day and sending all my love."


Tips for couples — making the RSVP process actually work

Set your RSVP up for success

  • Set the deadline 3–4 weeks before the wedding — not one week. Caterers, venues, and seating charts all need lead time, and you'll need at least a week to chase non-responders after the deadline.
  • Include a clear deadline on the RSVP card. "Kindly respond by [date]" printed on the RSVP card is far more effective than a verbal mention.
  • Offer multiple response methods. A physical card, a website form, and a text or email option accommodates different guest preferences — older guests prefer mail, younger guests prefer digital.
  • Number your RSVP envelopes. Match each envelope number to your guest list so you can identify who returned the card — even if they forgot to write their name.
  • Assume non-responders are not attending for catering purposes, but follow up anyway — final venue headcounts often have a cutoff and a late addition is usually possible.

Custom RSVP cards that guests actually return

A beautiful RSVP card with a clear deadline and response options makes the process easier for guests and more organized for you. Coordinate with matching wedding invitations and save the dates for a cohesive stationery suite — all printed and shipped from Florida by iCustomLabel.

Shop custom RSVP cards

RSVP reminders & responses — quick answers

The most-searched questions on RSVP etiquette, answered directly.

Send a warm, direct message 2–3 days before the deadline — don't wait until the day of. Keep it brief and include a specific deadline: "Hey [Name]! Just a quick note — our RSVP deadline is [date] and we haven't heard back from you yet. Would love to know if you're able to make it! Just reply here or go to [website]." Text works best for close friends and family; email for acquaintances. If the deadline has passed, one more message is appropriate — most people respond quickly once they realize they've missed it.
For a formal RSVP card: "[Name] joyfully accepts and will attend." For a text to a close friend: "Yes! We would not miss it for anything. Both [Name] and I will be there — can't wait!" For an email to acquaintances: "Thank you so much for the invitation. I'm delighted to confirm that I'll be attending on [date]. Looking forward to celebrating with you both." Always specify exactly who is attending (yourself plus guest if applicable) so the couple has an accurate count without needing to follow up.
Be warm, be brief, and respond promptly — don't delay a decline just because it's awkward. You don't need to explain in detail. A good text decline: "We're so sorry — we won't be able to make it. We're so happy for you both and will be celebrating from afar. Wishing you the most beautiful day!" A formal card decline: "[Name] regretfully declines and sends warmest congratulations and best wishes." If you have a specific reason (travel, prior commitment), a brief mention is fine but not required.
Respond immediately — the moment you realize you've missed the deadline, send a message. Acknowledge it briefly without over-apologizing: "I'm so sorry for the late response — life completely got away from me. I absolutely want to be there and hope it's not too late to add me to the count." If you're declining: "I'm sorry I missed the deadline. I'm unfortunately unable to attend, but I wanted you to know how much the invitation meant." Couples generally appreciate any response over continued silence — it helps them finalize their headcount.


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