How to Address Wedding Invitation Envelopes: A Complete Guide

March 13, 2026

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Addressing your wedding invitation envelopes is one of those tasks that seems simple until you’re actually sitting down to do it. Suddenly you’re wondering whether to include titles, how to handle guests with different last names, what to do about plus-ones, and whether you’re supposed to spell out “Avenue” or if “Ave.” is fine.

Here’s the truth: there are no rules. Address your envelopes in whatever way feels right for your wedding, your guests, and your relationship with them. What follows is a guide — not a rulebook — to help you navigate the most common situations without overthinking it. Take what’s useful, leave what isn’t.


setting up your guest address file

Before anything else, your file needs to be formatted correctly. Whether I’m printing your addresses or you’re doing them yourself, a clean, organized spreadsheet saves everyone a headache.

Use separate columns for each field:

  • Guest name(s)
  • Street address
  • City
  • State
  • Zip code

Do not combine fields — putting the city, state, and zip in one column makes it nearly impossible to format correctly for printing.

A few things that actually matter for delivery:

  • Enter names and addresses exactly as you want them to appear.
  • If you want an ampersand (&) instead of “and,” use it in the spreadsheet — I won’t make that call for you. Double-check spellings, especially names. Addresses will be printed exactly as submitted.
  • Use a Google Sheet or Excel file.

On abbreviations: if your invitations are more formal, spelling out “Street,” “Avenue,”. If they’re relaxed and casual, abbreviations are completely fine — just stay consistent throughout the list.

You can download my guest address template here.


how many invitations do you actually need?

One invitation per household is the general starting point — but use your judgment. A few situations where sending separately can feel more thoughtful:

  • Adult children (18+) who still live at home
  • Unmarried couples who live separately, if you’re inviting both
  • Adult roommates who are all on the guest list

If you’ve extended a plus-one and know the name of their partner, addressing the envelope to both is a lovely gesture. If you don’t know yet, “and guest” after your guest’s name works perfectly — written as: Mr. James Walsh and guest.


formal, modern, or somewhere in between — all of it is fine

Some couples love the elegance of full names and formal titles. Others would rather keep things warm and personal and skip titles entirely. Both are completely valid, and so is everything in between.

The only thing worth being consistent about is your overall approach — mixing formal and informal addressing across the same guest list can feel a little uneven. But even that isn’t a hard rule; some guests naturally call for a different approach than others, and that’s okay too.

One thing worth knowing if you haven’t come across it: Mx. is a widely accepted gender-neutral title for guests who don’t identify with Mr., Mrs., or Ms. If you’re unsure of a guest’s preferred title, it’s always fine to ask — or simply use their full name without any title at all. That works beautifully across the board.


wording guide

Think of everything below as a starting point. Mix and match, skip titles entirely, use first names only — whatever feels like you. These are the most common situations couples run into, with a few options for each depending on how formal or relaxed you want to go.

Married Couples

Classic/formal: Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Bishop

Both names, more modern: Mr. Christopher Bishop and Mrs. Mary Bishop

Wife kept her maiden name: Mr. Christopher Bishop and Mrs. Mary Turner

Hyphenated last name: Mr. Christopher Bishop and Mrs. Mary Turner-Bishop

Wife’s name first — a growing preference: Mrs. Mary Bishop and Mr. Christopher Bishop

First names only — perfectly lovely for close friends and family: Mary and Christopher Bishop

Unmarried Couples Living Together

Lead with whoever you’re closest to, or go alphabetical if you’re equally close with both:

Ms. Mary Turner and Mr. Christopher Bishop

or on separate lines: Ms. Mary Turner Mr. Christopher Bishop

Unmarried Couples Living Apart

Traditionally, each person receives their own invitation. That said, if they’re practically inseparable and you’d rather send one, that works too.

Same-Sex Couples

The same approaches above apply — married or not, living together or apart. List names in whatever order feels natural to you.

Two women: Ms. Mary Turner and Ms. Sophie Smith

Two men: Mr. Christopher Bishop and Mr. John Smith

Married, shared last name: Ms. Mary and Ms. Sophie Turner-Smith

First names only: Mary and Sophie

Non-Binary Guests

With Mx.: Mx. Jordan Riley

Without any title — equally graceful: Jordan Riley

Singles

With title: Ms. Mary Turner Mr. Christopher Bishop

Without title — equally fine: Mary Turner Christopher Bishop

For guests who don’t use gendered titles, their full name on its own is always a graceful choice.

Families

With children listed: Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Bishop Oliver, Emma, and James

Listing children’s names beneath their parents’ makes it clear they’re included. If they’re not listed, it’s generally understood the invitation is for the adults only — which is a helpful way to avoid any confusion about whether kids are invited.

Casual and simple: The Bishop Family

Plus-Ones

If you know their name: Ms. Mary Turner and Mr. James Walsh

If you don’t: Ms. Mary Turner and guest

Doctors

One doctor: Dr. Mary Bishop and Mr. Christopher Bishop

Two doctors, same last name: Drs. Mary and Christopher Bishop

Two doctors, different last names: Dr. Mary Turner and Dr. Christopher Bishop

Military Titles

Spell out the full rank if you’d like to honor it — but again, only if it feels right for your relationship with that guest:

Captain James Walsh and Ms. Sarah Walsh


a few genuinely helpful tips

Check spellings twice. Misspelling a guest’s name on something as personal as a wedding invitation is one of those things that’s hard to overlook — for them and for you.

Verify addresses before submitting. Once your file comes to me, updates won’t automatically sync. Send it when it’s final.

Take a finished invitation to the post office before mailing. Weight varies depending on what’s in your suite, and you want to confirm postage before sending everything out.

Start collecting addresses earlier than you think you need to. Tracking down current addresses — especially for relatives or guests who’ve recently moved — takes longer than expected. Building the list as you build your guest list saves a lot of scrambling later.


ready to order?

If I’m printing your addresses, your guest file is due before final approval — typically about one to two weeks after you place your order. I’ll send a reminder when that deadline is approaching.

Not sure how to handle a specific situation on your list? Reach out through the inquiry form here — I’m happy to help you work through it.