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Wedding Trivia Questions Printable
"How well do you know the couple?" is the reception's favorite question. Here's how to build couple trivia questions that are funny without being embarrassing, fair to guests who just met one of you, and printable in your wedding's own style.
Try it: preview personalized questions
Type two first names and see how the question pool adapts. This demo runs entirely on this page — names are never sent anywhere.
Your sample questions will appear here.
What makes wedding trivia work
The best couple trivia has a specific shape: every guest should be able to guess, and only the couple can confirm. "Where did they meet?" invites theories from the whole table; grandma bets on "through friends", the college roommate knows the truth, and the reveal gets a reaction either way. That's the engine of the game — informed guessing, then the couple's live verdict. Trivia fails when questions require insider knowledge to even attempt ("What's the name of their first landlord?") or when the answer might embarrass someone. Our 80-question pool sticks to the story guests actually want: how you met, who made the first move, who's the better cook, who would win a trivia night about the other partner.
Multiple choice or written answers?
Multiple choice is the host's format. Five questions read from the microphone between courses, four options each, tables shouting letters — fast, loud, done in ten minutes. The generator prints the options under each question with your partners' actual names in them: "Who said 'I love you' first? — Olivia / James / Both at the same time / It's a friendly debate."
Written answers suit a quieter dinner: each table gets a sheet, fills in their best guesses over the main course, and sheets are swapped for scoring at dessert. Choose 10 questions for a between-courses round, 15 for a table game, or 20 if trivia is your headline act.
Add the questions only your friends can answer
The default pool is safe by design — which also means it can't know your inside jokes. The generator accepts up to five custom questions with your own answers: the name of the restaurant where the proposal actually happened, what the first road trip broke down in, which of you cried at which film. Custom questions print first on the sheet, and your answers land on the host's answer key automatically. Two or three custom questions are enough to make the round unmistakably yours.
The answer key (don't skip this)
Trivia without a prepared answer key turns into "wait, let me ask them" every question. The pack prints a dedicated answer key page: custom answers pre-filled, default questions with a line for the couple to complete before printing day. Give it to the host, keep it away from the tables, and agree on a scoring rule in advance — one point per correct answer, and the couple's word is final, even when it's historically dubious.
Running the round on the night
- Between courses beats after dinner. Guests are seated, glasses are full, dessert is leverage.
- Five questions per round. Two short rounds keep the room brighter than one long one.
- Let the couple adjudicate live. The disagreements ("we did NOT meet in October") are the best part.
- Crown a winner. The pack's champion certificate exists for this exact moment.
Beyond trivia: the couple-guessing family
If your crowd loves this format, the pack has two siblings: Would the Couple Rather? — twelve either/or dilemmas guests vote on before the couple reveals live — and How Well Do You Know the Couple?, a gentler write-in sheet for tables. All three inherit your chosen theme, print on A4 or US Letter, and sit naturally beside your table games and bingo cards.
Frequently asked questions
Who should host wedding trivia?
Anyone confident on a microphone who is not in the couple: a maid of honor, a witty uncle, the DJ or MC. The host holds the answer key, reads questions between courses, and keeps rounds to five questions so dinner never stalls.
Should wedding trivia be multiple choice or written answers?
Multiple choice plays faster and works read-aloud by a host; written answers suit tables puzzling together during dinner. The generator prints either format, plus the host's answer key on a separate page.
What trivia questions should you avoid at a wedding?
Avoid exes, money, family disagreements, and anything the couple hasn't announced themselves. Good trivia celebrates the couple's story — how they met, who said "I love you" first, who controls the playlist.
Print yours tonight
Ten to twenty questions, your custom additions, your theme, and a ready answer key — generated in your browser in minutes.