
Wedding registries should include things youll use every day in your kitchen, bedroom, and bathroom. Focus on cookware, bedding, towels, and appliances that suit your cooking style and home life.
A timeless wedding registry covers the basics first: kitchen gear for cooking and eating, bedroom and bathroom linens, and everyday dishes and glassware. After that, add appliances youll use weekly, decor for your walls and furniture, and tech that makes life easier.
| Kitchen | Bedroom | Bathroom |
|---|---|---|
| Cookware set (pots, pans, skillets) | Cotton sheets (300-500 thread count) | Bath towels (4 per person) |
| Bakeware (sheet pans, mixing bowls, casserole dish) | Comforter or duvet cover | Hand towels |
| Small appliances (blender, coffee maker, toaster) | Pillows (different firmness levels) | Washcloths |
| Dinnerware set (8-12 place settings) | Throw blankets | Shower caddy or wall organizer |
| Glassware (water, wine, rocks glasses) | Extra sheet set | Soap dispensers and toothbrush holders |
| Serving bowls and platters | Down alternative comforter | Bath mats and wastebaskets |
Your kitchen is where youll spend most of your time cooking, eating breakfast, and having people over. Register for pots, pans, appliances, and dishes that match how often you cook and what kind of food you make.
Start with a cookware set that has different pot and pan sizes—one large stockpot for pasta, a medium saucepan for rice and sauces, and a couple of skillets. Non-stick pans handle eggs and fish without sticking, stainless steel works for high-heat searing, and cast iron goes from stovetop to oven. If youre not sure which materials to prioritize, Consumer Reports cookware buying guide tests different options and shows that budget-friendly pans often perform just as well as expensive ones. For baking, you need sheet pans, a 9x13 casserole dish, mixing bowls, a muffin tin, and cake pans if you bake often.
Register for appliances youll use regularly:
Register for everyday dishes that can go in the dishwasher. A full set with eight to twelve place settings covers dinners and having people over. White or neutral colors match everything. Get water glasses, wine glasses, and rocks glasses if you make cocktails at home. You need serving bowls, platters, and a salad bowl for meals beyond just plating individual dishes. Cutting boards work for prep and for serving cheese and charcuterie.
Register for sheets, comforters, duvet covers, and pillows that youll both find comfortable. Add bath towels, hand towels, washcloths, and bathroom organizers to keep everything tidy.
Get bath towels, hand towels, and washcloths. Four bath towels per person give you enough to rotate through the week. Add a shower caddy or wall organizer for shampoo and body wash bottles. Soap dispensers, toothbrush holders, wastebaskets, and bath mats keep your bathroom functional. Storage baskets under the sink hold extra toilet paper and cleaning supplies.
Round out your registry with decor items:
Get cotton sheets with a thread count between 300 and 500. Anything higher than 400 can trap body heat and make you sleep hot, according to the Sleep Foundation. Percale feels crisp and cool, sateen feels smooth and silky. You need at least two full sheet sets, so you have extras when ones in the wash. Add comforters or duvet covers for warmth, and a down alternative if either of you has allergies. Extra pillows in different firmness levels mean you can both sleep how you like.
Choose registry stores based on what they carry and how much things cost. Include kitchen gear, home goods, tech, and smart home devices on your list.
Macys, Nordstrom, and Bloomingdales have big selections if you want to scan items in person. Target and Crate & Barrel work for couples who want style without spending a fortune. Amazons universal registry pulls items from any website, not just one store. Zola and Honeyfund handle experiences, donations, and cash funds along with physical gifts. Link all your registries on your wedding website so guests know where to shop.
Here are some tech items worth adding to your registry:
Share your registry through your wedding website, not on invitations. Update it as items get purchased so guests know whats left. Send thank you notes after receiving gifts, mentioning the specific item and what youll use it for. If someone gives cash or contributes to a fund, let them know what you bought with it. Pick items youll use for years instead of trendy stuff thatll look outdated quickly.
Not everything on your registry has to be a physical item you unwrap and put in a cabinet:
Engagement parties, bridal showers, and wedding days all deserve their own photo collections. QR codes let guests upload their photos straight to your Google Drive without downloading apps or logging into anything. You get original quality images from every event in one spot. Check out WedUploader at weduploader.com to collect unlimited photos from all your wedding events with one flat fee.
Add the stuff youll use every day, like sheets, towels, pots and pans, and dishes. Save the fancy serving platters and specialty gadgets for later, since you need the basics way more than a fondue set.
Aim for about 8 to 10 items per guest so people have options at different prices. This gives you enough variety without going overboard and making your registry look like youre opening a department store.
Yes, many couples add honeymoon funds or cash registries for specific things like furniture or home projects. You can even register for services that collect guest photos from all your wedding events using simple QR codes that send everything straight to your own storage.
Register for upgrades to what you already own like higher quality cookware, better sheets and towels, and small appliances youve been putting off buying. Include items for entertaining like extra glassware, serving pieces, and barware since youll host more as a married couple.