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Wedding Stationery

Invitations, save-the-dates, menus, signage, calligraphy — the paper trail that sets the tone of the day.

300 suppliers · page 13 of 13

Most UK couples spend roughly £300 to £1,500 on their full wedding stationery, with a typical mid-range suite (save the dates, invitations, RSVP and details cards, plus on-the-day items like menus, place cards and a table plan) costing around £500 to £1,200; luxury foiled or letterpress work runs higher. Order your save the dates and invitations early and order around 10 to 15 percent extra invitations to cover mistakes, late additions and keepsakes, as reprinting a small top-up batch is far more expensive per card than ordering enough in the first place.

Typical UK cost: Most UK couples spend around £300-£1,500 on wedding stationery, with a typical mid-range suite costing roughly £500-£1,200 and luxury foil or letterpress packages reaching £1,200-£2,500+.

English Stamp Company
English Stamp Company
Stationery
Written By Emily
Written By Emily
Stationery
London
CWB Illustration
CWB Illustration
Stationery
2Flux Stationery Studio
2Flux Stationery Studio
Stationery
City of Edinburgh
Rebecca Richards Designs
Rebecca Richards Designs
Stationery
West Midlands
L
Little Green Wedding
Stationery
Save The Date
Save The Date
Stationery
Retro Press
Retro Press
Stationery
Gloucestershire
T
Thirty Three Px
Stationery
Evans's of Bournville
Evans's of Bournville
Stationery
S
SK Wedding Stationery
Stationery
The Little Love Card Company
The Little Love Card Company
Stationery
County Durham

Frequently asked questions

How much does wedding stationery cost in the UK?

Most UK couples spend around £300-£1,500 on their wedding stationery overall. A basic set of invitations, RSVP cards and envelopes for about 100 guests typically costs £200-£400, a fuller mid-range suite with on-the-day items runs roughly £500-£1,200, and luxury packages with foiling, letterpress or custom illustration reach £1,200-£2,500 or more. Individual printed invitations usually work out at around £1.50-£6 each, while fully bespoke designs can be £10-£20+ per invite.

How far in advance should we order and send our wedding invitations?

For a bespoke stationery suite, order around 9-12 months before the wedding; for a ready-made or 'house collection' design, around 7-9 months ahead. Save the dates are usually sent about 12 months in advance, and formal invitations are typically posted 4-6 months before the day (closer to 6-8 months for a destination wedding or a date with lots of travelling guests). Set your RSVP deadline for roughly 6 weeks before the wedding so you have firm numbers for caterers and the table plan.

What's usually included in a wedding stationery package, and what should we ask the stationer?

A full suite commonly covers save the dates, the main invitation with details and RSVP cards, and on-the-day pieces such as order of service, menus, place cards, table names and a table plan. Always confirm what the quote includes, the price per extra card if you need more, whether envelopes, postage weight, design proofs and revisions are covered, and the print method (digital, letterpress or foil all affect cost and turnaround). Check the proofing process and lead times in writing, since reprints for late errors are charged at a premium.

How many wedding invitations do we actually need to order?

You need roughly one invitation per household, not per guest, because couples and families sharing an address receive a single invite, so your invitation count is usually well below your headcount. Order around 10-15 percent more than your initial list to cover addressing mistakes, last-minute additions to the guest list, and a few keepsakes for yourselves and parents. Ordering the top-ups in your original print run is far cheaper than commissioning a small reprint later.

How can we save money on wedding stationery without it looking cheap?

The biggest savings come from being selective about which pieces you actually need, as trimming optional extras like wax seals, envelope liners and ribbon can cut a stationery budget by around 30-40 percent. Digital invitations or print-at-home templates can bring the whole job down to as little as £10-£50, and choosing digital printing over foiling or letterpress lowers the cost significantly while still looking polished. Ordering everything in one go, keeping the design to one or two ink colours, and using standard rather than oversized card sizes (which reduce postage costs) all help stretch the budget.