Two phases that do the work for you
Phase one is the save-the-date: each household gets a lightweight page asking a simple question — can you make it? For a multi-function celebration they answer per event (they can make the Mehndi and the Reception, but not the Sangeet; or the party but not the morning pooja). Phase two is the real invitation, and here's the trick: everyone who said "yes" is pre-marked as attending. Their RSVP opens already filled in, with a gentle "please confirm" — so instead of starting from a blank form weeks before the day, most guests tap once and they're done.
A real availability picture, months ahead
Long before invitations go out, you get a dashboard of who's available, who's a maybe, and who can't come — per event. That changes how you plan: you can size the Mehndi differently from the Reception, the intimate pooja differently from the big party, negotiate catering numbers with confidence, and stop guessing. For destination weddings and milestone trips, where flights need booking a year out, early availability is the difference between a full celebration and a half-empty one.
Built on households, the way invitations actually work
Like the rest of Jubily, save-the-dates are sent to households, not individual email addresses — because that's how South Asian guest lists work. One code per family, one link, and the whole household responds together. Each save-the-date goes out by email with a single tap, and you can see exactly who's been asked and who's replied.
What's inside
Built to handle the full job.
Availability, not commitment
A friendly "can you make it?" — yes / maybe / no — long before the formal invite.
Per-event answers
Multi-function weddings capture availability for each function separately.
Auto-filled invitations
Available guests are pre-marked attending on the real invite — one-tap to confirm.
Availability dashboard
See who's in, out or unsure per event, months ahead.
Household-based
One link per family; the whole household replies together.
Email in one tap
Send to selected households and track who's been asked and who's replied.
In real weddings
How couples are using it.
A destination wedding in Goa
Guests need to book flights a year out. You send save-the-dates 14 months ahead, collect availability, and know early who's realistically coming — so your hotel block and catering numbers are grounded in fact, not hope.
A 60th with a pooja and a party
Not everyone comes to everything. Guests mark availability per event, so you can plan a 40-guest Sashti Poorthi pooja and a 200-guest evening party — each sized from real answers rather than guesswork.
The one-tap confirm
When the real invitation lands, Auntie who said "yes" months ago opens it already marked attending. She taps confirm and moves on — no form to fill, no reminder needed.
Frequently asked