Send invitations too early and guests set them aside to deal with later. Send them too late and calendars are already full. Between those two failure modes sits a fairly narrow window, and it moves depending on the event: a wedding needs months of runway, while a dinner party needs days.
The ranges in this guide reflect widely shared etiquette guidance and the practical deadlines that shape real events, such as caterer headcounts and travel booking. They apply to digital and paper invitations alike, with one welcome difference: a digital invitation arrives the moment you send it, so there is no mail buffer to pad in and no printing timeline to work around.
Getting the send date right is half the job. Collecting responses on time is the other half, and the right platform helps with both. Greenvelope’s online invitations with RSVP tracking let hosts schedule invitations in advance, watch responses arrive in real time, and send automatic reminders only to guests who have not yet replied, so the timelines below largely run themselves once the invitation goes out.
At a Glance
- A quick-reference table with save the date timing, invitation send dates, and RSVP deadlines for 18 event types
- The three rules that generate every timeline: work backward from hard deadlines, add time for travel and formality, and use digital tools for reminders rather than earlier sends
- Category guidance for weddings, family milestones, corporate events, and casual gatherings
- When to set your RSVP deadline and when to send reminders
- What to do when you are already behind schedule
The Quick-Reference Timeline
All ranges are measured from the event date unless noted otherwise.
| Event |
Save the date |
Send invitations |
RSVP deadline |
| Wedding | 6 to 12 months ahead | 6 to 8 weeks before | 3 to 4 weeks before |
| Destination wedding | 9 to 12 months ahead | 10 to 12 weeks before | 6 to 8 weeks before |
| Engagement party | Not typical | 4 to 6 weeks before | 1 to 2 weeks before |
| Bridal shower | Not typical | 4 to 6 weeks before | 1 to 2 weeks before |
| Bachelor or bachelorette trip | 3 to 4 months ahead for travel | 6 to 8 weeks before | 3 to 4 weeks before |
| Rehearsal dinner | Not typical | 3 to 4 weeks before | 1 week before |
| Baby shower | Not typical | 4 to 6 weeks before | 1 to 2 weeks before |
| Kids’ birthday party | Not typical | 2 to 3 weeks before | 3 to 5 days before |
| Adult birthday party | Optional for milestones | 3 to 4 weeks before, 4 to 6 for milestones | 1 to 2 weeks before |
| Graduation party | Not typical | 3 to 4 weeks before | 1 week before |
| Bar or bat mitzvah | 6 to 12 months ahead | 6 to 8 weeks before | 3 to 4 weeks before |
| Housewarming | Not typical | 2 to 3 weeks before | 3 to 5 days before |
| Dinner party or casual get-together | Not typical | 1 to 2 weeks before | 2 to 3 days before |
| Holiday party | Optional in December | 4 to 6 weeks before | 1 to 2 weeks before |
| Corporate client dinner | Not typical | 2 to 3 weeks before, 4 to 6 for larger events | 1 week before |
| Gala or fundraiser | 3 to 6 months ahead | 6 to 8 weeks before | 2 to 3 weeks before |
| Conference or large corporate event | 3 to 6 months ahead | 8 to 12 weeks before | 2 to 4 weeks before |
| Virtual event | Not typical | 1 to 2 weeks before | 1 to 2 days before |
Ranges assume a typical guest list. Add one to two weeks when many guests will travel, when the event falls in a busy season such as December or graduation season, or when the date lands on a holiday weekend.
The Three Rules Behind Every Timeline
Rule 1: Work backward from the hard deadline
Every range in the table above is generated the same way. Start from the date your numbers become fixed, usually the caterer’s or venue’s final headcount deadline, and set your RSVP deadline about a week before it. Then send invitations far enough ahead of that RSVP deadline for guests to check calendars, arrange travel or childcare, and respond, which takes two to four weeks for most events. If you know those two anchor dates, you can build a correct timeline for any event that is not listed here.
Rule 2: Add time for travel, formality, and busy seasons
Guests need more notice whenever attending takes more than showing up. Out-of-town travel, formal attire, gift shopping, and childcare all push the send date earlier, which is why destination weddings and black-tie galas sit at the long end of every range. Crowded calendars have the same effect: December parties, graduation season celebrations, and summer weekend weddings compete with everything else on the calendar, so invitations for those dates should go out at the early end of the range.
Rule 3: Digital changes the reminders, not the lead time
A common misconception is that digital invitations can be sent later because they arrive instantly. Guests need the same planning time no matter how the invitation travels, so use the same lead times as paper. What digital genuinely changes is everything after the send: invitations can be scheduled ahead of time, updates reach every guest instantly if details change, and reminders can target only the guests who have not responded. Greenvelope supports scheduled sending and automatic RSVP reminders from the same dashboard, which is where most of the real timing work happens.
Weddings and Wedding Events
Save the dates
Send save the dates 6 to 12 months before the wedding, and 9 to 12 months for a destination wedding so guests can book travel early. A save the date needs only the couple’s names, the date, and the location. It is also the natural moment to gather mailing details for anything printed later: Greenvelope’s digital save-the-dates can collect guests’ physical addresses through the Mailing Address collection feature as responses come in.
Wedding invitations and the RSVP deadline
Send wedding invitations 6 to 8 weeks before the wedding, or 10 to 12 weeks for a destination wedding. Set the RSVP deadline 3 to 4 weeks before the date, or 6 to 8 weeks out for destination events, which leaves room to chase stragglers before the caterer’s final count is due. Couples managing several guest groups, such as ceremony-only and reception guests, should build that segmentation into the guest list from the start rather than sending separate mailings on different clocks.
Showers, bachelor and bachelorette events, and the rehearsal dinner
Bridal shower invitations go out 4 to 6 weeks ahead. Bachelor and bachelorette gatherings follow the travel rule: a local night out needs about a month of notice, while a trip should be floated 3 to 4 months ahead with formal invitations 6 to 8 weeks before departure, since deposits and bookings depend on an early headcount. Rehearsal dinner invitations are sent 3 to 4 weeks before the wedding, after the main invitations have landed.
Baby Showers, Birthdays, and Family Milestones
Baby showers
Send baby shower invitations 4 to 6 weeks before the shower. Since showers are usually held 4 to 8 weeks before the due date, invitations typically go out around the start of the third trimester. That window gives guests time to RSVP and shop from the registry without pressing against the arrival date. Greenvelope’s digital baby shower invitations pair themed designs with built-in RSVP tracking, so the host can watch the headcount settle while there is still time to adjust plans.
Birthday parties
Kids’ birthday invitations should go out 2 to 3 weeks ahead, which is far enough for family weekend calendars but close enough that parents do not lose track of the date. Adult birthdays need 3 to 4 weeks, and milestone birthdays deserve 4 to 6 weeks, with a save the date a few months out if guests will travel. For milestone celebrations, Greenvelope’s customizable birthday invitation designs let hosts match the invitation to the theme while tracking RSVPs and guest messages in one place.
Graduations and religious milestones
Graduation party invitations go out 3 to 4 weeks ahead, and earlier is better in May and June when every weekend hosts a competing celebration. Bar and bat mitzvahs run on a wedding-style clock: save the dates 6 to 12 months out, invitations 6 to 8 weeks before, RSVP deadline 3 to 4 weeks before. Baptisms, communions, and similar celebrations follow the standard 3 to 4 week window.
Corporate and Professional Events
Business timing runs earlier than personal timing because attendees are coordinating work calendars, approvals, and travel. Client dinners need 2 to 3 weeks of notice, or 4 to 6 weeks for larger gatherings. Company holiday parties should be announced 4 to 6 weeks ahead, and December dates deserve the early end of that range. Galas and fundraisers typically circulate a save the date 3 to 6 months out with invitations 6 to 8 weeks before, since table sales and sponsorships depend on early commitments. Conferences and large-scale events open invitations or registration 8 to 12 weeks ahead. Casual team events and happy hours need only 1 to 2 weeks. Greenvelope’s digital event invitations handle each of these patterns from one guest list, with scheduled sending for multi-wave campaigns, tags for segmenting VIPs and internal teams, and exports for venues and caterers.
Casual Gatherings and Holiday Parties
Dinner parties, game nights, and backyard get-togethers need only 1 to 2 weeks of notice, and housewarmings 2 to 3 weeks. The exception is anything in late November or December: holiday calendars fill by Thanksgiving, so send holiday party invitations 4 to 6 weeks ahead, which usually means early-to-mid November for a December date. A short RSVP window is fine for casual events, since a response two or three days before the gathering still leaves time to shop and cook.
Setting RSVP Deadlines and Sending Reminders
Set the RSVP deadline about one week before you owe anyone a final number, whether that is a caterer, a restaurant, or your own grocery run. For weddings that lands 3 to 4 weeks before the event; for casual gatherings a few days ahead is plenty. Then plan on two nudges: a friendly reminder about one week before the deadline, and a brief final note one or two days before it, or immediately after it passes. Guests who still have not answered after the deadline warrant a personal text or call within a day or two, which resolves nearly every holdout.
Response speed also depends on whether guests open the invitation at all. Greenvelope invitations open with an animated envelope reveal, complete with a personalized liner, stamp, and wax seal, so they read as personal correspondence in a crowded inbox, and invitations that get opened promptly get answered promptly. Because reminders go only to non-responders, guests who replied on day one never see a repeat message.
Already Behind Schedule? Here’s the Recovery Plan
A late invitation beats no invitation, and digital delivery removes most of the penalty for lateness. Send today rather than waiting for a better moment, acknowledge the short notice in a one-line personal note, and set a tight but fair RSVP deadline, since even three or four days works for a casual event. For guests who are slow on email, resend by text message or share their personal invitation link directly. Greenvelope sends by email, SMS, WhatsApp, and shareable link from a single guest list, which is exactly what a compressed timeline calls for.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Resources
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