Most parties don't need a year of planning. Six well-spent weeks is plenty for the vast majority of celebrations — birthdays, anniversaries, retirements, engagements, housewarmings. What matters more than time is sequence: doing the right thing in the right week.
The timeline below works for anything between 15 and 100 guests. Larger or more formal events (milestone weddings, big corporate parties) need a longer runway and a different checklist; for almost everything else, six weeks is the sweet spot.
Why six weeks?
Six weeks is short enough to keep momentum and long enough to lock the venue, send invitations with notice, and chase RSVPs without panic. Less than three weeks and guests start to feel ambushed; more than ten weeks and the planning bleeds into your evenings forever. Six is the magic number for casual to mid-formal events.
The six-week timeline
Six weeks
- Decide the date, vibe and rough guest count
- Lock in the venue (or commit to ‘at home')
- Set the budget and what's worth splurging on
Four weeks
- Send invitations via Availi
- Confirm catering or menu
- Plan one ‘moment' — speech, surprise, signature drink
- Order any decorations or signage
Two weeks
- Chase RSVPs (Availi does this automatically)
- Final headcount to caterer
- Decorations, candles, favours and small touches
- Brief one helper on the day-of run sheet
Three days
- Build the playlist (3+ hours)
- Write speech notes if you need them
- Backup plan if it's outdoors
- Buy the easy-to-forget basics — ice, mixers, garnishes
The morning of
- Charge your phone
- Eat something
- Print the run sheet
- Set up two hours earlier than you think you need
Three weeks vs six weeks vs ten weeks
Three-week sprint
- OK for 10–25 close friends at home
- Skip the formal invitation and send a quick Availi link
- Order catering trays rather than booking a caterer
- Risk: no time to chase RSVPs
Ten-week build
- Worth it for milestone or formal events
- Time for printed signage and a sit-down menu
- Allows a save-the-date plus formal invitation
- Risk: planning bleeds into every weekend
The four highest-leverage moves
- 1
Lock the venue in week one
Every other decision flows from this. A booked venue creates honesty about headcount, format and budget.
- 2
Send invitations early
Four weeks out is the sweet spot. Earlier than five and guests forget; later than three and they've already committed elsewhere.
- 3
Automate the chase
Manually chasing RSVPs is the worst part of party planning. Availi sends gentle reminders for you so you don't have to be the friend who asks twice.
- 4
Plan one ‘moment'
The thing guests remember a year later is rarely the food. It's the toast, the slideshow, the surprise live song, the signature cocktail. Pick one and make it land.
