The 2026 wedding website checklist
A wedding website used to be optional. In 2026 it's table stakes — but most of them are bloated. Here's the short list of what guests actually use, in priority order.
The non-negotiables
1. The when and the where. Date, time, ceremony venue, reception venue. Big and clear. If a guest can't find this in three seconds on their phone, you've already lost.
2. RSVP that works from WhatsApp. Most guests will tap your invitation link from a WhatsApp thread. The page they land on needs to be mobile-first, with one obvious RSVP button.
3. Travel and parking. Closest airport, recommended hotels, parking notes, public transit, ride-share zones. Drop a Google Maps embed.
4. Dress code in plain language. "Garden formal", "Black tie optional", "Smart casual — bring a sweater for the rooftop". Don't make guests guess.
The nice-to-haves
5. Story section. "How we met" is a guest's favorite page. Keep it short — under 300 words.
6. Schedule. If you have multiple events (rehearsal, ceremony, reception, brunch), a clear timeline beats a dense block of paragraphs.
7. Photo gallery. Three to seven engagement photos. More than that and you're showing off.
8. Registry link. External link to your registry — don't host it on the wedding site.
What you can skip
- Bridesmaid / groomsmen bios that nobody reads
- "Our journey" with thirty photos
- A countdown that pulses aggressively
- Music that auto-plays (please)
- Long lists of historical facts about the venue
A wedding website should feel like a beautifully designed magazine spread — not a real-estate listing. Keep it tight, mobile-first, and let the typography do the work.
How Vowly handles this
Every Vowly theme ships with these sections pre-built. Toggle on/off, customize copy and photos, and your page is ready in under an hour. Multi-event RSVP, WhatsApp link previews, and QR check-in are included on every plan.
Vowly turns this checklist into reality — premium themes, RSVP, guest list, QR check-in, multi-language. Start free.