Tell your guests exactly what you're wishing for
No formal registry, no store sign-up — just a simple, personal list of things you'd genuinely love.
Not every couple wants the formality of a store registry — the account setup, the fixed categories, the retailer branding on top of what’s supposed to be a personal list. A wishlist is looser by design: a handful of things you’d genuinely love, described your way, shared through the invitation guests already have.
It’s not a lesser version of a registry — it’s a different tool for couples who’d rather keep things simple, especially for smaller or more intimate weddings where a full registry can feel like overkill.
Worth knowing
A wishlist doesn’t need a minimum number of items, a store account, or a formal setup — it just needs to be true to what you’d actually want.
How it works
- 1
Add what you’d love
Link specific items or just describe what you’re hoping for — there’s no required format.
- 2
It lives with your invitation
Guests see your wishlist in the same place they RSVP, so it’s never a separate thing to remember.
- 3
Update it as you go
Add or remove items any time before the wedding — the link stays the same.
Personal, not formal
A wishlist skips the parts of a registry that feel more like paperwork than planning — no retailer sign-up, no required categories, no minimum list size. It’s simply a place to say what you’d love, in your own words if you want to.
One link, nothing extra to share
Because it’s attached to the same invitation link guests already have, there’s no second link to send out or lose track of. Anyone who opens your invitation to RSVP sees your wishlist in the same visit.
As small as it needs to be
Some couples want a dozen ideas; others want three. Neither is wrong. A wishlist scales down naturally for smaller, more intimate weddings, where a full registry can feel disproportionate to the guest list.