By Mustafa Bilgic · Last updated 23 June 2026
Adding Your Wedding Website to Invitations
A wedding website is the modern home for all the details an invitation can't carry. Here's exactly where to put the link, how to word it, and what belongs on the site versus the card.
Where the link goes
| Where | Show the website? |
|---|---|
| Save-the-date | Yes — the best, earliest place for it |
| Details / enclosure card | Yes — alongside travel and RSVP info |
| RSVP card | Optional — if you're collecting RSVPs online |
| Main invitation | Avoid — keep it clean (small bottom line only if you must) |
For a fuller treatment, see adding your wedding website to invitations.
How to word the link
- "For all the details, visit emilyandjames.com"
- "Travel, accommodation & RSVP: emilyandjames.com"
- "Find everything you need at emilyandjames.com"
- "RSVP and details online — emilyandjames.com"
What to put on the site vs the card
The invitation suite carries the essentials; the website carries everything else:
| On the invitation suite | On the wedding website |
|---|---|
| Names, date, time, venue | Schedule / timeline of the day |
| RSVP method & deadline | Travel, parking & hotel blocks |
| Dress code (short) | Registry & gift info |
| FAQs, kids policy, and your story |
This is also the correct home for registry information, which should never appear on the invitation itself — see gift & registry wording.
Make the URL typeable
- Keep it short — first names work best (emilyandjames.com).
- Skip the "https://" and "www" on the card; just print the domain.
- Don't bury it in fancy script — clarity beats flourish for a URL.
- Test that it loads before printing, and keep the site live a few weeks past the wedding.
Word it, then make it beautiful
Pick a template, type your wording straight onto it, and download a print-ready invitation in minutes. Free, no account, no watermark.
Open the free editor →Frequently asked questions
Where do you put your wedding website on the invitation?
Put it on the save-the-date and on a details or enclosure card, not crowded onto the main invitation. The save-the-date is the earliest and best place, since it gives guests time to explore travel and accommodation.
How do you word a wedding website on an invitation?
Keep it short and clear: "For travel, accommodation and RSVP, visit emilyandjames.com." Print just the domain — no "https://" or "www" — and use a short, easy-to-type URL based on your first names.
Should the wedding website be on the main invitation?
It's best kept off the main invitation to preserve its clean, formal look. If you have no separate details card, a small line at the bottom is acceptable, but a save-the-date or enclosure card is the proper home.
What goes on a wedding website versus the invitation?
The invitation carries names, date, time, venue and RSVP. The website carries the schedule, travel and hotel details, registry, FAQs and your story — everything the card has no room for, including gift information.
Can registry information go on the wedding website?
Yes — the website is exactly where registry details belong. Etiquette says you never print registry or gift information on the invitation itself, so directing guests to your site solves it gracefully.
Related: the free editor · Wedding website inserts · Insert cards · The stationery suite · RSVP card wording · Gift & registry wording · Save the date wording