Wedding Etiquette Forum

Is a "Wedding Crasher Invite" appropriate for acquaintances and friends with whom we are not close?


My Fiance and I were struggling with the catering costs for the wedding because of the size of our guest list and feeling obligated to invite family over friends. Our wedding planner suggested that we have the stationer create some "Wedding Crasher Invites" that would essentially be an invite to the last third of the wedding festivities (Dance, Live Band, Midnight Snack, Garter Toss/Bouquet Toss and subsidized bar)

We really liked the idea of being able to invite friends that we know loosely or through other friends to the last part of the wedding because we have hired an awesome band, have lots of dance floor space, can afford to buy more midnight snack food. We also know that our older relatives will leave earlier and we can essentially see it as a trade off of people. 

But we also see the huge faux pas in etiquette. Essentially telling guests that they are good enough to party with, but not important enough to be invited to the ceremony and dinner reception. 

We figured if the wording was done correctly, and we explained that we are not able to accommodate everyone for dinner, but we would love to have them come party with us, and have fun drinking and dancing, and not having to sit through a ceremony, speeches or at a dinner table with strangers and be stuck somewhere all day where they don't know anyone - that they would come join for just the party. With a live band, booze and dancing - its a cheaper night out then a club right?

Am I completely delusion in thinking that our acquaintances (like people on my fiance's hockey team, or my bookclub) would not be offended by this gesture. (To be clear I wouldn't expect gifts or anything else from these folks, just their company and good-natured party attitudes)

Please let me know your constructive thoughts on the matter.

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Re: Is a "Wedding Crasher Invite" appropriate for acquaintances and friends with whom we are not close?


  • My Fiance and I were struggling with the catering costs for the wedding because of the size of our guest list and feeling obligated to invite family over friends. Our wedding planner suggested that we have the stationer create some "Wedding Crasher Invites" that would essentially be an invite to the last third of the wedding festivities (Dance, Live Band, Midnight Snack, Garter Toss/Bouquet Toss and subsidized bar)

    We really liked the idea of being able to invite friends that we know loosely or through other friends to the last part of the wedding because we have hired an awesome band, have lots of dance floor space, can afford to buy more midnight snack food. We also know that our older relatives will leave earlier and we can essentially see it as a trade off of people. 

    But we also see the huge faux pas in etiquette. Essentially telling guests that they are good enough to party with, but not important enough to be invited to the ceremony and dinner reception. Go with your instinct. This is flat-out rude.

    We figured if the wording was done correctly, and we explained that we are not able to accommodate everyone for dinner, but we would love to have them come party with us, and have fun drinking and dancing, and not having to sit through a ceremony, speeches or at a dinner table with strangers and be stuck somewhere all day where they don't know anyone - that they would come join for just the party. With a live band, booze and dancing - its a cheaper night out then a club right?

    Am I completely delusion in thinking that our acquaintances (like people on my fiance's hockey team, or my bookclub) would not be offended by this gesture. (To be clear I wouldn't expect gifts or anything else from these folks, just their company and good-natured party attitudes) Yes.

    Please let me know your constructive thoughts on the matter.




  • My Fiance and I were struggling with the catering costs for the wedding because of the size of our guest list and feeling obligated to invite family over friends. Our wedding planner suggested that we have the stationer create some "Wedding Crasher Invites" that would essentially be an invite to the last third of the wedding festivities (Dance, Live Band, Midnight Snack, Garter Toss/Bouquet Toss and subsidized bar)

    We really liked the idea of being able to invite friends that we know loosely or through other friends to the last part of the wedding because we have hired an awesome band, have lots of dance floor space, can afford to buy more midnight snack food. We also know that our older relatives will leave earlier and we can essentially see it as a trade off of people. 

    But we also see the huge faux pas in etiquette. Essentially telling guests that they are good enough to party with, but not important enough to be invited to the ceremony and dinner reception. 

    We figured if the wording was done correctly, and we explained that we are not able to accommodate everyone for dinner, but we would love to have them come party with us, and have fun drinking and dancing, and not having to sit through a ceremony, speeches or at a dinner table with strangers and be stuck somewhere all day where they don't know anyone - that they would come join for just the party. With a live band, booze and dancing - its a cheaper night out then a club right?

    Am I completely delusion in thinking that our acquaintances (like people on my fiance's hockey team, or my bookclub) would not be offended by this gesture. (To be clear I wouldn't expect gifts or anything else from these folks, just their company and good-natured party attitudes)

    Please let me know your constructive thoughts on the matter.

    You already answered your own question, really. If YOU see the possibility of this invitation communicating this to them then that's exactly what you are communicating to them. 
    Who is paying for this wedding? If it is you and your FI you only have to invite who you want to come. The ladies on this board are wonderful at coming up with ways to save money.
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  • CMGragainCMGragain member
    10000 Comments 500 Love Its Fourth Anniversary 25 Answers
    edited October 2015
    I can't believe we have another tiered reception bride!  I think this is the fourth one this week!

    There is no such thing as a wedding-crasher invitation.  Everyone who is invited to the reception MUST be invited to the entire reception, not just a part of it.  In addition, unless you are having a very private ceremony, they need to be invited to that, too.
    Invite whom you want to be at your wedding.  No partial invitations!  This is horribly rude.  Fire your wedding planner, immediately!
    httpiimgurcomTCCjW0wjpg
  • You're trying to put lipstick on a pig. This is rude.
  • Thank you Justsie for your CONTRUCTIVE feedback. 

    We are paying for everything on our own for the wedding, no help. But we do feel obligated to invite family, and we each have quite the compliment of Aunts, Uncles, and cousins. 

    I've never heard of a tiered reception - so I guess I was not aware of how people felt about them. I can only look at it from my lens - and I actually think it would be really fun to get an invite like this to a wedding reception. Me and my fiance wouldn't be offended at all, and I think that's why we have been considering the possibility. We could both instantly think of people that would fit into this category. 

    If weddings are supposed to be the events that the bride and groom want to celebrate their marriage, then why do we have to follow all these etiquette rules that don't resonate with us. 
    Weather its a tiered reception, a wedding crasher invite, an after party invite or whatever else someone wants to call it - why is it so wrong in this day and age?

    I've love to hear from somebody who actually did this and can tell me if it was a big deal or not.


  • Trust your instincts and don't do this. People are either invited to the wedding or they're not. If you're not that close to these people, just don't invite them.
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  • I do appreciate the feedback - honestly - and I'm not at all surprised by the responses. I do understand this is an etiquette board - and that's what people want to push - good etiquette. That is admirable. I know everyone here has good intentions and want to protect people form themselves and bad decision making.

    I would just like to hear about the flip side of the coin. Perhaps I need to find a board called : "They Said don't it...but"

    The band we hired, is amazing and they only cost slightly less than the catering if you can believe it. And because my Fiance is a singer/songwriter - that is the real show piece of the wedding - so of course we want as many people to see the band as possible. It's basically a private concert at the end of the wedding...do that is the true nature of my dilemma - it seems so wrong to not invite people to see the band.

    All that being said, your opinions have be heard and I will certainly take it all under advisement.
  • Just no. Don't do this.


    Daisypath Anniversary tickers Daisypath Anniversary tickers



  • I do appreciate the feedback - honestly - and I'm not at all surprised by the responses. I do understand this is an etiquette board - and that's what people want to push - good etiquette. That is admirable. I know everyone here has good intentions and want to protect people form themselves and bad decision making.


    I would just like to hear about the flip side of the coin. Perhaps I need to find a board called : "They Said don't it...but"

    The band we hired, is amazing and they only cost slightly less than the catering if you can believe it. And because my Fiance is a singer/songwriter - that is the real show piece of the wedding - so of course we want as many people to see the band as possible. It's basically a private concert at the end of the wedding...do that is the true nature of my dilemma - it seems so wrong to not invite people to see the band.

    All that being said, your opinions have be heard and I will certainly take it all under advisement.
    Jic
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  • Super rude.  Don't do it.  It tiers your guests and tells them they weren't as important as the A-listers. I don't care where I know you from, I'm going to be offended if I show up expected a wedding ceremony and find out I've just been invited to the last part.    


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  • It must be because it's Halloween week that all these tiered reception posts are popping up! Don't do this - it is so rude to your guests. Your wedding isn't something to invite your acquaintances to come celebrate with you. People at your wedding should be the people who are important in your and your FI's lives.
  • ^ That is a really good option. Also, hosting a totally separate party a bit later is a great one too. You can still celebrate with the guests you originally wanted to. Everyone has been giving you some good options to consider.

    However, taste in music is a pretty personal thing. You are super excited about how awesome this band is, but will everyone be as excited? Will everyone else enjoy their music? Will everyone else want to stand/sit around for however long listening to them play?

    If I went to a wedding, I would be too tired after all the festivities, dancing, drinking to want to stay and listen to a band play. I would probably either pass out somewhere or go back to my hotel room.

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