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Wedding Etiquette Forum

Requesting a Plus One

My fiancé and I are on a tight budget and only gave +1's to guests who were already in relationships (and guests' SOs of course).  Single friends and family members over 18 did not receive +1's.  Recently, a groomsman asked if he could bring his girlfriend, whom he started dating recently.  The groomsman is out of town and we have not met the girlfriend.  We invited a little over the capacity of the venue, knowing some who could not make it that deserved an invite regardless, but I do not think we have room to invite this new gf.  We would definitely tack her onto the list after receiving all the RSVPs, however, since they are out of town she would have to had booked a flight in advance, which puts us in a problematic situation.  I do not want to risk inviting too many people but feel like it would be rude not to invite her, even if she's a recent gf.  What should we do?

Re: Requesting a Plus One

  • dandreap said:
    My fiancé and I are on a tight budget and only gave +1's to guests who were already in relationships (and guests' SOs of course).  Single friends and family members over 18 did not receive +1's.  Recently, a groomsman asked if he could bring his girlfriend, whom he started dating recently.  The groomsman is out of town and we have not met the girlfriend.  We invited a little over the capacity of the venue, knowing some who could not make it that deserved an invite regardless, but I do not think we have room to invite this new gf.  We would definitely tack her onto the list after receiving all the RSVPs, however, since they are out of town she would have to had booked a flight in advance, which puts us in a problematic situation.  I do not want to risk inviting too many people but feel like it would be rude not to invite her, even if she's a recent gf.  What should we do?
    The bolded, never a good idea.  You should plan for 100% attendance.  What happens if everyone decides to come to you wedding?

    I am in the camp that members of the wedding party deserve to bring a date if they are truly single because these people are taking time out of their life and money out of their wallet to be in your wedding.  The least you could do is allow them to bring someone, especially if they have to travel.

    And since this is his girlfriend he should have been invited with her regardless because they are a couple, she is not just some random date.  It does not matter if you have met her or not.

  • dandreap said:
    My fiancé and I are on a tight budget and only gave +1's to guests who were already in relationships (and guests' SOs of course).  Single friends and family members over 18 did not receive +1's.  Recently, a groomsman asked if he could bring his girlfriend, whom he started dating recently.  The groomsman is out of town and we have not met the girlfriend.  We invited a little over the capacity of the venue, knowing some who could not make it that deserved an invite regardless, but I do not think we have room to invite this new gf.  We would definitely tack her onto the list after receiving all the RSVPs, however, since they are out of town she would have to had booked a flight in advance, which puts us in a problematic situation.  I do not want to risk inviting too many people but feel like it would be rude not to invite her, even if she's a recent gf.  What should we do?
    I think that if there is any possible way to include his GF, I would recommend you try.  I personally feel that a +1 should automatically be given to any member of the wedding party, regardless of relationship status.  Depending on how you have arranged for your wedding party to sit at dinner, I would think adding one chair would not tip the scales. I am sure the groomsman would appreciate it.
  • I think (for lurkers, not much you can do now) that you never ever invite a little over capacity for a venue and you should always leave yourselves wiggle room in the budget and the venue capacity for single guests who start dating. 
    I also am of the opinion that all wedding party should get a +1 regardless of relationship status and especially if they are traveling. 


    That being said:
    I think it is understandable if invites went out before he started dating, but if invites haven't gone out yet, you need to find a way to make room for her. If invites have already gone out, let me know the situation, apologize for messing up (in my opinion), and tell him you will let him know asap if room opens up. 

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  • I agree with all PPs. You should not have invited over the capacity of your venue. Note to lurkers, don't do that.

    If this GM was dating this girl when the invites went out, she should have been invited. Your having not met her is utterly irrelevant to anything whatsoever.

    If they started dating since the invites went out, you don't have to include her, but it would be nice if you could, because I'm also in the camp of people in the WP get special privileges and should be allowed to bring plus-ones.
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    I'm gonna go with 'not my circus, not my monkeys.'
  • I had texted one of J's friends for his address and asked if he was currently seeing anyone and what her name is so I could extend him a +1. He said he wasn't seeing but "Can I have a +1 anyway? I'm sure I can find someone to bring." Ummm, holy wow! I was so irritated, but J said to go ahead and give him the +1 since he will most likely just come with one of the single girls already invited. 

    I have to say, during the course of our engagement I have been able to explain to J why just taking anyone to a wedding is rude. It's common here to just assume you can take someone as a guest. Of course, the fact that every person that comes is another head to pay for has helped...our caterer is reasonable, but it adds up!
    ~*~June 21, 2014~*~


  • dandreapdandreap member
    First Comment First Anniversary
    edited March 2014
    The people invited over capacity already stated they could not attend, so the invite was more a formality to let them know we would have wanted them there.  At any rate, it's over zealous to say 100% invited guests would attend if you're not the hosts and have no inkling as per the state of each individual guest.  For instance, we invited an elderly relative who is bedridden and can in no way attend our wedding.
  • mobkaz said:
    I think that if there is any possible way to include his GF, I would recommend you try.  I personally feel that a +1 should automatically be given to any member of the wedding party, regardless of relationship status.  Depending on how you have arranged for your wedding party to sit at dinner, I would think adding one chair would not tip the scales. I am sure the groomsman would appreciate it.
    Thanks for being polite in your answer.  The guests of our bridal party will not be sitting at the head table, so we could sit her at any table where she would feel welcome.  I guess the main issue we see is that there are other people on the B List who are ahead of her.  If we can't extend invites to all of them, would it be right to push her to the top?  I wouldn't feel comfortable with that, especially because the others on the B List are friends and family I have known for awhile.
  • dandreap said:
    They were not dating when invites went out, so the request was a surprise.  In terms of inviting over capacity, I do not think it's as big of an issue as many are stating.  Those extras are people who already said they couldn't make it, due to cost, travel, etc., but they are family who we wanted to appreciate with an invite.  Regardless, if we had invited just at capacity and then had this request, it would still put us over cap and the question remains the same.

    First: It IS a big deal to invite over capacity. Venues have these caps to ensure the safety/comfort of the persons using the room, and to comply with state/local laws.

    Second: if ONE MORE person puts you over the cap of the venue, then you messed up. Period. Why would you ever want to stress yourself out like that?

    To answer your question:

    You and/or FI need to call the groomsman and be honest & humble.

    "We made a mistake when planning our guest list and are currently over the capacity of the venue. We would love for your girlfriend to come, but we need to make sure we have (X number of) declines before we can extend the invitation to her. We are terribly sorry and AS SOON AS we get those declines, we will call you directly. Our RSVP deadline is (X date). We are also going to talk to the venue and see if there is ANY wiggle room/additional options so we can include your girlfriend. We feel so bad putting you in this position and WE ARE WORKING on resolving this."

    Then do ALL OF THAT.  

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  • I think (for lurkers, not much you can do now) that you never ever invite a little over capacity for a venue and you should always leave yourselves wiggle room in the budget and the venue capacity for single guests who start dating. 
    I also am of the opinion that all wedding party should get a +1 regardless of relationship status and especially if they are traveling. 


    That being said:
    I think it is understandable if invites went out before he started dating, but if invites haven't gone out yet, you need to find a way to make room for her. If invites have already gone out, let me know the situation, apologize for messing up (in my opinion), and tell him you will let him know asap if room opens up. 
    You're right in saying the situation changes depending on if they'd been dating before or after the send out of invites.  They had not bee dating at the time, so my gut reaction is to say we will put her on the B List.  The problem is she would need to book a flight, and the longer she waist the more costly it will be.  At the same time, we have other on our B List who we have personal relationships with and we would have to bump them down the list to invite her.  Thoughts?
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  • dandreap said:
    mobkaz said:
    I think that if there is any possible way to include his GF, I would recommend you try.  I personally feel that a +1 should automatically be given to any member of the wedding party, regardless of relationship status.  Depending on how you have arranged for your wedding party to sit at dinner, I would think adding one chair would not tip the scales. I am sure the groomsman would appreciate it.
    Thanks for being polite in your answer.  The guests of our bridal party will not be sitting at the head table, so we could sit her at any table where she would feel welcome.  I guess the main issue we see is that there are other people on the B List who are ahead of her.  If we can't extend invites to all of them, would it be right to push her to the top?  I wouldn't feel comfortable with that, especially because the others on the B List are friends and family I have known for awhile.
    Also, you should not separate bridal party members from their dates. That is just rude. If you have a head table, you should sit the dates with them at the head table. 

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  • misshart00misshart00 member
    2500 Comments 500 Love Its Fourth Anniversary First Answer
    edited March 2014
    I just wanted to say something about capacity that has nothing to do with weddings, but could relate. There is a restaurant near my house. I once counted the seats; 46. It's a fairly small restaurant and the tables are close together. I've been there when most tables were full and it's uncomfortable. The capacity is 95. I have no idea how that would work. This is how max capacity would be at most wedding venues too.
  • For the love all that is holy please seat this GF with her BF, the GM. She is going to be flying to an OOT wedding of a couple she has never met and therefore I assume only knows her BF. . . Who will be gone the entire day leading up to the reception bc he is doing wedding party crap. SO she is gong to be alone all day as it is, sit alone during the ceremony, then go through cocktail hour alone while you take pictures. . . And you want her to eat dinner alone as well.

    It sucks to be the date of a wedding party member, especially for an OOT wedding and for one in which you don't know anyone.

    Seat her with her BF for dinner and please allow her to spend the day with him leading up to the ceremony if she wants to.

    "Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends time and space."


  • dandreap said:
    The people invited over capacity already stated they could not attend, so the invite was more a formality to let them know we would have wanted them there.  At any rate, it's over zealous to say 100% invited guests would attend if you're not the hosts and have no inkling as per the state of each individual guest.  For instance, we invited an elderly relative who is bedridden and can in no way attend our wedding.
    It might be over zealous to say 100% of your guests will attend, but there is room for the possibility.  Your elderly bedridden relative is one example of someone very unlikely to attend a wedding, but you invited over capacity.  However many people you actually invited, you couldn't possibly know you would have that many declines.  Out of state relatives all suddenly decide your wedding is the perfect reunion, friends working overseas get a bonus that lets them make travel plans they normally couldn't afford, even someone winning the lottery could happen to make attending your wedding a possibility. 

    The fact is, you planned poorly when you decided to invite more than the venue could hold.  Some wiggle room should always be left in invites vs. capacity because at capacity, most rooms are crammed full of people who closely resemble anchovies.  What if not enough people decline and you're over capacity?  Fire codes shouldn't be taken lightly and that's what most venue capacities are based off of.  I won't even go into the fact that you want to separate people invited together and have a backup list in case you get enough declines to fall under capacity.  Most people are aware when they get an invitation with very little notice that they rank under your other guests who got theirs in a timely manner.

    All you can do at this point is throw out your B-list, check your primary guest list for anyone now in a relationship who might assume their SO is invited and hope to goodness these people will be kind enough to forgive you for your error.  Hopefully you have enough declines that the fire marshal doesn't make a guest appearance at your wedding to shut it down.
  • I just wanted to say something about capacity that has nothing to do with weddings, but could relate. There is a restaurant near my house. I once counted the seats; 46. It's a fairly small restaurant and the tables are close together. I've been there when most tables were full and it's uncomfortable. The capacity is 95. I have no idea how that would work. This is how max capacity would be at most wedding venues too.
    So much of this.  It's in a venues interest to give you the highest possible maximum number they can because that means more $$ for them even if it means your guests have to awkwardly squeeze between chairs to use the restroom.
    Don't worry guys, I have the Wedding Police AND the Whambulance on speed dial!
  • NYCBruin said:
    I just wanted to say something about capacity that has nothing to do with weddings, but could relate. There is a restaurant near my house. I once counted the seats; 46. It's a fairly small restaurant and the tables are close together. I've been there when most tables were full and it's uncomfortable. The capacity is 95. I have no idea how that would work. This is how max capacity would be at most wedding venues too.
    So much of this.  It's in a venues interest to give you the highest possible maximum number they can because that means more $$ for them even if it means your guests have to awkwardly squeeze between chairs to use the restroom.
    Lol, there is a popular restaurant in my town with great, affordably priced food that I will NOT go to because the tables and chairs are so close together I am constantly having people's asses rubbing against the side of my chair and table...or my own ass rubbing against theirs, lol.  Just no.  I never even thought about if a fire broke out (shudder). 
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  • Am I the only one thinking this might be fake? Starts off with one minor issue, then 'accidentally' mentions separating dates and pushing someone to the top of her B-list...
  • d2vad2va member
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    I couldn't stop reading. Lol
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