Sikh weddings

A wedding website for the Anand Karaj.

The maiyan, jaggo, the Anand Karaj, langar, and the reception, each with its own day, schedule, and RSVPs.

Last updated June 2026

A Sikh wedding website built for the whole celebration, not just one ceremony. The maiyan, the jaggo, the Anand Karaj at the gurdwara, and the reception each get their own schedule and per-event RSVPs, with the early-morning timing made clear.

Every event, first-class

From the maiyan to the reception.

Name your own events and give each its own day, venue, and running order. Add a head-covering or timing note where it helps your guests.

  • Roka, chunni, maiyan, jaggo, Anand Karaj, reception
  • A schedule for each day and each event
  • Notes for gurdwara timing and head coverings
Your celebration
Fri
Maiyan
At home · 11:00 AM
Fri
Jaggo
Banquet Garden · 8:00 PM
Sat
Anand Karaj
Gurdwara Sahib · 9:30 AM
Sat
Reception
The Grand Ballroom · 7:00 PM

Made clear for guests

A morning gurdwara ceremony, explained.

Guests used to evening weddings are often surprised by an early start and the customs. Each event page can carry the timing, the address, and a short, warm note.

  • Start time and address front and centre
  • A head-covering note for first-time guests
  • A line on langar after the ceremony
Anand Karaj
Saturday, 9:30 AM
Gurdwara Sahib, 482 Maple Ave
Please cover your head inside the darbar hall. Langar is served after the ceremony, around noon.

Made yours

Templates that hold the day with grace.

From the calm of the gurdwara to a bright Punjabi reception, every template is fully editable to match your palette and your story.

  • Fully editable, premium templates
  • Your own palette and type
  • Looks right on every phone
A Sikh wedding ceremony

Built for Sikh weddings

Most builders assume one evening ceremony. A morning Anand Karaj plus a separate reception, with private per-guest events, is where OfficiallyTogether is different.

OfficiallyTogether compared with generic wedding website builders, for Sikh weddings
OfficiallyTogetherGeneric builders
A page for the Anand Karaj and the receptionSome
Several days and events on one siteSome
Timing and head-covering notes per event
Per-guest event visibility
Per-event RSVPs with meal countsSome

Common questions

The Anand Karaj, meaning blissful union, is the Sikh wedding ceremony. It is held at a gurdwara before the Guru Granth Sahib, and the couple walks slowly around it four times while the four Laavan hymns are sung, each round a step in their shared journey. On your site you can give the Anand Karaj its own page with the gurdwara, the time, and a short note for guests who have not attended one before.

Beyond the Anand Karaj there are usually several events over a few days: a roka or kurmai, a chunni ceremony, the maiyan with its turmeric blessing, a jaggo or mehndi night, the Anand Karaj and langar, and an evening reception. Families vary, so on OfficiallyTogether you name your own events and give each its own day.

Gurdwara ceremonies are often in the morning and finish by early afternoon, with langar served after. Because the timing surprises guests used to evening weddings, it helps to put the start time, the address, and a head-covering note clearly on each event, which your site does on its own page.

Langar is the free community meal served in the gurdwara to everyone, seated together as equals. It is worth noting on your site so guests know a meal follows the ceremony and roughly when, especially if your reception is later that evening.

Start free, add your names and dates, then add each event: maiyan, jaggo, the Anand Karaj, and the reception. Give each a venue and time, add a head-covering or timing note where it helps, turn on RSVPs, and share your link. You can publish the same day, with no design skills or credit card needed to start.

Yes. Every event has its own RSVP, so a guest can come to the Anand Karaj and the reception but skip the jaggo, and your counts stay right for each one. You also collect meal choices and counts per event for the caterer.

Yes. Visibility is set per guest and per household. The sangat and close family can see the full program while others see only the Anand Karaj and reception. Everyone gets a private invite link, so nothing is shared by password and no one sees an event they were not invited to.

Yes. Guests scan a QR code and add photos and videos with no app to download, and everything collects in one gallery. You end up with quiet moments from the gurdwara and the joy of the reception together, instead of scattered across phones.

Build a site for your whole celebration.

Free to build, free to share. Add the maiyan, jaggo, the Anand Karaj, and the reception, each with its own schedule and RSVPs, whenever you're ready.

No credit card required.