- Question:
- My future mother-in-law refuses to include her sister on our guest list. Should I invite her anyway? I really don't think it's proper to exclude my fiancé's aunt—she'll certainly find out about the wedding.
- Answer:
Don't do anything until you talk to your fiancé and find out what his relationship is with his aunt. If he wants to invite her, he should be the one to talk to his mother about it. If both your fiancé and his mother agree that they don't want their relative to attend, follow their lead and keep her off the list.
- How do we seat my divorced in-laws?
- Do I have to invite my five co-workers?
- Should we invite a recently divorced couple?
- Should I invite my fiancé's outcast aunt?
- Must I invite my practical-joker cousin?
- Should we let one couple bring a kid?
- Can I invite dad's parents, but not dad?
- How do we announce our two weddings?
- Should I invite my ex-husband to the wedding?
- Can kids be excluded on the invite?
- Must I invite my bad dad?
- Do I have to invite distant relations?
- Can I exclude my in-laws' pals?
- Do I have to invite my co-workers?
- Should I invite people who can't come?
- Should my in-laws have unlimited invites?
- How can I uninvite a guest?
- Must shower guests get wedding invites?
- Should I invite a jailed relative?
- How can I divvy up the guest list?
- Can I exclude stepparents from my wedding?
- How do we handle uninvited guests?
- Must single guests get a date invite?
- Does dad have to be my aisle escort?
- When must I send thank-you notes?
- How should I handle a forgotten thank-you?
- What should I do about forgotten invites?
- Should we ditch a nervous toast-giver?
- Who should propose a wedding toast?
- How can I seat remarried parents so that everyone feels equally important?
- When should we give our parents their gifts?
- I want a large rehearsal dinner and my fiancé's parents don't. What can I do?
- How do we ask the in-laws to pay for the rehearsal dinner?
Submit Your Own Etiquette Question
Have an etiquette question you'd like our editors to answer?
- I've been snubbed—what do I do?
- Is a small reception, big ceremony OK?
- How can I prevent my cousin from upstaging me at the wedding?
- How can I convince my fiancé's sister to accept me as his wife?
- Can I tell my cousin to stop seeing my married bridesmaid?
- Do I have to invite my cousin's boyfriend?
- How can we prevent our friends from playing a practical joke on our wedding night?
- Should I invite my fiancé's ex-girlfriend?
- How can I get my grandfather to behave at the wedding?
- Do I have to send invitations to everyone I verbally invited to the wedding?
- How can I make sure that my fiancé's mom will be on time?
- How should I handle guests who RSVP with their kids when children weren't invited?
- Do I have to call my fiancé's mother "mom"?
- Will we get divorced because our parents did?
- Should I change my wedding date so that my grandfather can attend?
- Who should initate the get-together between our parents?
- How should we handle complaints about our Friday night wedding?
- Can I ask a friend to help things run smoothly on the wedding day?
- Can I ask my close friend why she RSVPed "No"?
- Do we have to serve food at our wedding rehearsal?
- What do I do about a Facebook wall post about my wedding?
- Do I have to invite my sister's soon-to-be inlaws?
- How can I avoid fighting with my engaged friend over our wedding plans?
- Do I have to offer my single friends an and guest?
- How can I get his mother to back off?
- Should I allow one person to bring a guest?
- Should I plan extra activities for out-of-town guests?
- Can we ask our guests to give us cash gifts?
- Which side of the aisle do guests sit on at a same-sex union?
- How do you prioritize your wedding guest list?
- How do we let guests know what our Plan B is?
- Should I invite my boss's boss?
- Should we allow my friend to bring her one-month-old to the wedding?
- Should I warn my divorced friend that her ex husband is bringing a date to the wedding?
- Should you mail a wedding gift?













