Tips for Your Wedding Seating Plan
The seating plan is often the most logistically complex part of wedding planning. The key is to start with your constraints — accessibility requirements, family dynamics, language barriers — and build outward from the top table rather than trying to fill tables from the back.
Round tables of 8–10 work best for conversation and keep everyone at a similar distance from their tablemates. Rectangular tables seat more guests per square foot but can isolate people at the ends. The top table is traditional with immediate wedding party, though many modern couples prefer a sweetheart table (just the two of them) with their wedding party distributed among guests.
Seat by relationship, not just name. The best seating plans group people who already know each other or who have clear common ground — shared history with the couple, similar ages, similar interests. Avoid isolating guests who won't know anyone else at their table.