Invitations

Address label maker.

Paste or import your guest addresses and print Avery-ready labels as a PDF — 30 per sheet (5160) or 10 per sheet (5163), plus a return-address mode. Free, with no signup.

Invitations

Envelopes, handled.

Hand-addressing a hundred invitation envelopes is a beautiful idea until the third cramp sets in. Printed address labels get you the same tidy, consistent result in a fraction of the time — and they make the RSVP and thank-you mailings just as painless.

This maker turns a pasted or imported address list into a print-ready PDF laid out to standard Avery sheets — 5160 for 30 envelope labels per page, or 5163 for 10 larger labels — using each product’s exact margins and pitch so the text sits squarely inside every die-cut. Each entry is a multi-line address: the name on the first line, then the street and city beneath it. Flip on return-address mode to fill a whole sheet with your own address for the back of the envelope. Print at 100% on the matching sheet, run one plain-paper test page to check alignment, and you’re done. When the wedding is over, the same list prints your thank-you-card labels too.

Questions

Label questions.

Which Avery label sheets does this support?

Two of the most common US Letter sheets: Avery 5160 (30 labels per sheet, 2.625 × 1 inch) for envelope address labels, and Avery 5163 (10 labels per sheet, 4 × 2 inch) for larger shipping-style labels. The PDF uses each sheet’s published margins and pitch, so the text lands inside the die-cut labels. Many other Avery products share the 5160 layout (5260, 8160, 8460), so this template works for those too.

How do I print so the text lines up with the labels?

Load the matching Avery sheet in your printer, open the downloaded PDF, and print at 100% — turn off “Fit to page,” “Shrink to fit,” or any scaling, as that shifts every label off its die-cut. Print one test page on plain paper first and hold it against a label sheet to confirm alignment before committing your real labels.

How should I format my address list?

Put the name on the first line of each address, then the street and city lines below it, and leave one blank line between addresses. You can also import a CSV — each row becomes one label, with the columns stacked as address lines. The importer handles quoted fields, so commas inside an address won’t split it incorrectly.

Can I print return-address labels?

Yes. Tick “Return-address mode” and the tool fills an entire sheet with copies of your first address — 30 labels on a 5160 sheet or 10 on a 5163 sheet — perfect for the back flap of your invitation and RSVP envelopes.

Is the address label maker free, and is my list private?

It’s completely free with no signup, and everything runs in your browser — your address list is never uploaded to a server. It’s part of a set of free wedding planning tools.

Plan the whole wedding

One free tool here. The whole celebration inside.

Budget, guest list, RSVPs, seating, timeline and your wedding website — every feature free, kept in one calm place.

Free to start · no card required