Formal vs informal wedding anniversary invitation wording: how to choose the right tone
Choosing how your invitation sounds is just as important as the design. The right tone helps guests understand the kind of celebration you’re planning—black-tie dinner, cosy pub gathering, afternoon tea, or a come-and-go garden party. This guide explains the difference between formal and informal anniversary wording, shows you how to structure each option, and includes ready-to-use text templates you can copy and personalise.
If you are preparing a silver celebration, you’ll find a broad range of editable designs in our 25th wedding anniversary invitations collection. Utterly Printable invitations can be personalised online (fonts, colours, wording and photos) and printed on four premium card stocks—or downloaded as a high-resolution PDF—with optional QR codes for RSVP.studio, matching stationery, and envelopes.
Celebrate a milestone with these 25th wedding anniversary invitations, offering both classic text and personalised photo collage options.
1) Formal vs informal at a glance
What makes wording “formal”?
Formal wording follows time-honoured conventions. It uses full names, a structured order of information, and neutral, respectful language. It often spells out dates (“Saturday, the fourteenth of June 2025”), and includes a separate RSVP line.
What makes wording “informal”?
Informal wording is relaxed and friendly. It uses first names, conversational phrases, digits for dates (“Sat 14 June, 7.30pm”), and a direct RSVP method (mobile, email, or QR code).
Quick decision checklist
- Venue & format: black-tie dinner, private dining room or hired hall lean formal. Home gathering, pub, garden or casual restaurant lean informal.
- Guest mix: older relatives and colleagues formal usually lands well; close friends and family informal feels natural.
- Dress code: “Black tie” / “cocktail attire” formal; “dress as you please” informal.
- RSVP method: postal address and reply card formal; email/phone/QR code informal.
- Design cues: clean serif typefaces, plenty of white space, no photo formal. Photos, modern sans-serif type, playful icons informal. Browse both looks under our 25th anniversary invitation styles.
Celebrate your milestone with 25th wedding anniversary invitations, personalised with a favourite photo and stylish script on a white card design
2) How to write formal anniversary invitations (with examples)
The building blocks of formal wording
A classic formal invitation typically follows this order:
- Host line (e.g., “Mr and Mrs Andrew Clarke request the pleasure of your company…”).
- Honourees (the couple, if the hosts are someone else).
- Occasion (“on the occasion of their Silver Wedding Anniversary”).
- Date & time (spelled out; avoid abbreviations).
- Venue (full name and address on one or two lines).
- Dress code (optional).
- RSVP details (postal address or email/phone, often on a separate card).
Style tips for a refined finish
- Names: use full names and titles where appropriate.
- Numbers: spell out key numbers (“twenty-fifth wedding anniversary”).
- Punctuation: minimal; let line breaks do the work.
- Typography: classic serif faces suit a timeless layout. For inspiration, see our classic 25th anniversary designs.
- Paper choice: a softly textured board elevates formal wording. Utterly Printable offers Premium 324gsm off-white and Super Thick 650gsm options for maximum impact; both print beautifully on Canon iX presses.
Design note: Formal layouts benefit from breathing room. Consider A5 or 5”×7” sizes for a dignified feel, and keep colour palettes restrained. If you prefer to include a photograph, choose a tasteful black-and-white image and consider our Photo Silk Touch 400gsm stock for crisp reproduction.
Formal wording templates you can copy
Formal Dinner (hosted by the couple)
Mr and Mrs Andrew Clarke
request the pleasure of your company
at a dinner to celebrate
the twenty-fifth anniversary of their marriage
on Saturday, the fourteenth of June two thousand and twenty-five
at half past seven in the evening
The Orangery, Chiswick House, London
Black tie
RSVP by 20 May to 12 Maple Avenue, London W4 2AB
Formal Reception (hosted by children)
Jonathan and Emma Clarke
request the pleasure of your company
at a reception celebrating
the Silver Wedding Anniversary of their parents
Andrew and Sarah Clarke
on Saturday, the fourteenth of June two thousand and twenty-five
at three o’clock in the afternoon
The Drawing Room, The Lansdowne Club, London
RSVP to [email protected]
Vow Renewal & Supper
Together with their family
Andrew and Sarah Clarke
request the honour of your presence
at the renewal of their wedding vows
on Saturday, the fourteenth of June two thousand and twenty-five
at St Mary’s Church, Barnes
followed by supper at The River Rooms
Carriages at eleven
RSVP by 20 May
Celebrate your milestone with 25th wedding anniversary invitations, beautifully designed with photo collages and refined silver-themed details.
3) How to write informal anniversary invitations (with examples)
The building blocks of informal wording
Informal text is warm and uncomplicated. It still communicates the essentials:
- Opening line (“Come and celebrate with us!”).
- Names (first names are fine).
- Occasion (“25 years married”).
- Date, time, place (digits and abbreviations are acceptable).
- Any extras (“kids welcome”, “please bring a dish”, “no gifts”).
- RSVP (mobile, email, or a QR code to your RSVP page).
Tone and formatting tips
- Keep it friendly: contractions (“we’re”, “it’s”), short sentences, and a smile in the language.
- Be flexible with order: guests scan; put the standout detail on its own line.
- Use modern touches: emojis are fine on digital versions; keep print to well-chosen icons.
- Make responding easy: our online editor lets you add a QR code linking to RSVP.studio so guests can reply in seconds.
- Design ideas: photo-based layouts suit casual parties—try a “then & now” image. If you’d like keepsakes for the day itself, have a look at our photo gifts.
Informal wording templates you can copy
Casual Drinks & Nibbles
Come and celebrate with us!
Sarah & Andrew — 25 years married
Saturday 14 June, from 7.30pm
The Crown, Richmond (upstairs room)
No gifts please — just your lovely selves
RSVP: 07xxx xxxxxx or scan the QR code
Garden Party (drop-in)
25 years! We’re throwing a garden do
Sunday 15 June, 2–6pm
12 Maple Avenue, London W4 2AB
Pop in when you can — kids welcome
Text Sarah on 07xxx xxxxxx
Afternoon Tea
Join us for tea and cake
as we toast our silver anniversary
Saturday 14 June, 3.00–5.00pm
The Orangery Café, Chiswick
RSVP by 1 June to [email protected]
Tip: After the celebration, consider sending co-ordinated notes from our range of thank you card designs to round off the stationery suite.
Frequently asked questions about anniversary invitation wording
Here are brief, practical answers to common wording dilemmas so you can finalise your text with confidence.
Not always, but they help. If you’re inviting a mixed crowd or using a classic layout, write full names (“Mr and Mrs Andrew Clarke”). For an elegant middle ground, use full names without titles.
For formal wording, spell it out in the main line and keep numerals for dates if space is tight. For informal invites, “25th” is perfectly fine.
Place it on its own line near the end. Formal: “Black tie” or “Cocktail attire”. Informal: “Dress as you please” or leave it out.
Add a clean RSVP line with a mobile number or email, or include a small QR code that links to your RSVP.studio page. It keeps things tidy and modern.
Yes—add a gentle, positive note: “Your presence is the only present we need.” If you do welcome contributions, be specific and polite.
Where this fits with Utterly Printable
When you’re ready to choose a design and personalise your text, explore our 25th wedding anniversary invitations for both classic and contemporary looks. If you prefer a traditional style, head straight to our curated classic 25th anniversary designs; or browse the full range of 25th anniversary invitation styles. Don’t forget co-ordinated thank you card designs and meaningful photo gifts to complete your celebration suite.


