Many couples default to spreadsheets for their seating plan. But is a dedicated tool actually better? We compare both approaches honestly.
The most common tool for wedding seating plans is still a spreadsheet. Google Sheets, Excel, even pen and paper. But dedicated seating plan tools have come a long way. Here is an honest comparison.
Spreadsheets are familiar, free, and flexible. You can list guests in rows, assign table numbers in columns, and add notes as needed. For simple weddings under 80 guests with few constraints, a spreadsheet might be all you need.
The problems start when complexity grows. Spreadsheets cannot visualize your table layout. They cannot warn you when you accidentally seat rivals at the same table. They cannot automatically balance tables by age or group. Every change requires manual updates across multiple cells.
Seating plan apps solve the visualization problem. You see your actual table layout with guests placed on it. You can drag and drop between tables, set constraints (who together, who apart), and see the impact of changes instantly.
The best apps also automate the hard parts: suggesting initial arrangements based on relationships, flagging conflicts, balancing table demographics. They turn hours of manual work into minutes.
We tried the spreadsheet approach for our own wedding and hit a wall at 150 guests. Three hours of manual shuffling later, we still were not happy with the result. hasslfree automates the arrangement, visualizes the layout, and handles changes in seconds. It is the tool we wish we had.