Creating Your First Wedding Website
Learn how to create a beautiful wedding website in just a few minutes.
Getting Started with Marry The Details
Creating your wedding website is exciting and easier than you might think. This guide walks you through the entire process from start to finish.
Step 1: Sign Up and Start Your Free Trial
- Visit our homepage and click Start Free Trial
- Enter your email address and create a password
- You'll receive a confirmation email — click the link to verify your account
- Your 7-day free trial begins immediately with full access to all features
Step 2: Complete the Onboarding Wizard
After signing up, you'll be guided through our onboarding wizard:
Your Names and Wedding Date
- Enter both partners' names as you'd like them displayed
- Set your wedding date (you can change this later if it's not finalized)
- Add an optional tagline like "We're getting married!" or your wedding hashtag
Choose Your Template
- Browse our 9 professionally designed templates
- Click any template to see a live preview
- Don't worry — you can switch templates anytime without losing your content
Add Your Venue Details
- Enter your ceremony and reception locations
- Add addresses for guest convenience
- Include any special instructions (parking, dress code, etc.)
Step 3: Preview and Publish
Once you complete the wizard:
- Review your website in the preview mode
- Make any quick adjustments using the dashboard
- Click Publish to make your site live
- Share your unique URL with guests!
Your Website URL
You'll receive a free subdomain like yournames.marrythedetails.com. This is ready to share immediately. If you want a custom domain like yournames.com, you can add that anytime from your dashboard settings.
What's Next?
After creating your website, explore these features:
- Add your guest list and send RSVP invitations
- Upload photos to your gallery
- Set up your wedding budget tracker
- Customize colors and fonts to match your theme
Tip: Your website saves automatically as you make changes, so you never have to worry about losing your work.