Office Christmas Party Email Invite Template + Survival Guide
Office Christmas party planning lands on the Office Manager's plate every year, and every year it's too late by mid-November. Here's the email template you can copy-paste right now, plus the 7 things that will go wrong if you've never planned one before.
The email invite (copy + paste)
Customize the [bracketed] bits and send 4-6 weeks before the event:
The 7 things that will trip you up
1. Booking too late
Top venues in major European cities (Berlin, London, Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam, Milan) book out for December dates in JULY. October booking = scraps. November booking = your event is in a basement. Send your RFP by mid-September minimum. See the full Christmas venue guide.
2. Forgetting dietary requirements
Always collect dietary requirements 7-10 days BEFORE the event. Don't wait until the day. Categories to cover:
- Vegetarian (plant + dairy/eggs)
- Vegan (plant only)
- Gluten-free (celiac vs preference)
- Halal / Kosher
- Specific allergies (nuts, shellfish, sesame, etc.)
- Pregnancy considerations (no raw fish/cheese)
Use a Google Form or your HR system. Forward the consolidated list to the venue 5 days before. Detailed dietary guide.
3. Underbudgeting drinks
Venue drinks packages are a trap. "Open bar 6-10pm at โฌ45/person" sounds OK until you realize that's the bar's BEST case revenue and they'll push the cheapest options. Better: open bar for first 90 minutes, then cash bar. Or specific drinks tickets (2 per person, then pay).
Budget rule of thumb for European Christmas parties: โฌ120-180/person fully loaded (venue + 3-course dinner + open bar + service + VAT). Below โฌ120, expect compromises somewhere.
4. Plus-ones policy chaos
Decide BEFORE the invite goes out:
- Plus-ones included? Yes/no. If yes, who pays (company or attendee)?
- Kids welcome? (Usually no, but be explicit.)
- Senior contractors / freelancers invited? (Make a clear decision.)
Mid-event surprises ("can my partner come?") are awkward. State the policy upfront.
5. Speeches that go on too long
Brief speakers (CEO, founders, anyone speaking) on a HARD time limit before the event. "5 minutes max each." Anything over 7 minutes loses the room. The event isn't a town hall, it's a celebration. Year-end event playbook covers speaker briefing in detail.
6. Coat check / weather
European December = wet, cold, possibly snowy. Coat-check capacity matters. 100 attendees with winter coats overwhelm a 30-coat closet. Confirm with the venue. Also: outdoor smoking area (always exists) needs heat lamps if it's below 5ยฐC.
7. The taxi-after-the-bar problem
When the bar closes at midnight, 50 people standing outside trying to find taxis = chaos. Solutions:
- Pre-book a coach back to a central location (โฌ600-900 for 50-seater, often cheaper than 25 individual taxis)
- Negotiate "10pm extended check-in" with a partner hotel for those who're staying over (usually 30-50% of attendees if it's a far venue)
- Have a "designated taxi caller" โ one person responsible for batch-calling Uber/Bolt for groups
Quick checklist for the day
- โ Final headcount sent to venue 48h before
- โ Dietary list sent to venue 5 days before
- โ AV/sound system tested 30 min before guests arrive
- โ Name badges (if used) at entrance
- โ Coat check briefed on capacity
- โ Speaker order + time limits confirmed with hosts
- โ Photographer briefed on key moments to capture
- โ Taxi/coach plan posted at exit
- โ Lost-property contact at the venue (you, probably)
Bottom line
Christmas parties are template-friendly because every year is similar. Save your venue contract, the menu, the dietary spreadsheet, the photographer details โ next year is 60% copy-paste. Easy RFP saves all your past RFPs so you can clone last year's brief, adjust dates, send. 90 minutes of work for the whole event sourcing.