6 Experts Urge Dinner Guests to RSVP Promptly and Arrive 5 to 10 Minutes Late
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 7
6 Experts Urge Dinner Guests to RSVP Promptly and Arrive 5 to 10 Minutes Late
2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 7
Summary
Six New York-linked experts said good dinner-party guests should first commit intentionally, then honor the RSVP rather than cancel casually or ask who else is coming.
5 to 10 minutes late was the preferred arrival window for intimate dinners, they said, while showing up early can disrupt hosts still preparing.
Gifts should reflect the host’s tastes and create no pressure to serve them that night; bottles, olive oil or even ice were favored over imposing dishes or overly personal flowers.
The advice comes as the article says U.S. socializing has been declining, framing guest etiquette as a skill that may need more deliberate practice.