Seating Chart MakerOpen the maker

Seating Chart Maker

Drag and drop tables, paste your guest list, auto-seat everyone, and download a print-ready chart — free, in your browser, no signup.

My EventTable 14/8 seatedAMAlex M.JLJamie L.SCSam C.RKRiley K.++++Table 20/8 seated++++++++Table 30/10 seated++++++++++

Drag tables · click a guest, then a seat · drag canvas to pan

Event details (title on your chart)

Guests (4/6 seated · 26 seats)

  • Alex MorganTable 1
  • Jamie LeeTable 1
  • Sam CarterTable 1
  • Riley KimTable 1
  • Dana Fox
  • Chris Wells

Autosaves in your browser · Exports PNG & PDF · start from a template

How to make a seating chart

A good seating chart gets made in four passes: rooms, tables, people, polish. Here is the exact workflow, using the maker above.

  1. 1

    Lay out your tables

    Add round, rectangle, banquet, or head tables from the toolbar, then drag them to match your room. Snap-to-grid keeps rows straight, and each table shows its own seat count.

  2. 2

    Import your guest list

    Paste names one per line, import a CSV from Excel or Google Sheets, or type guests in one at a time. The counter tracks how many are seated versus still waiting.

  3. 3

    Seat everyone

    Click Auto-seat to fill the room instantly, then refine: click a guest, then click their seat — or drag a name straight onto a chair. Swaps happen automatically when a seat is taken.

  4. 4

    Title it and export

    Add your event name, venue, and date so they print at the top, then download a PNG for sharing or a print-ready PDF for the easel by the door.

Why seat people on purpose?

Whether it's a wedding reception, a fundraising gala, or fourth period, the seating chart is quiet logistics that decides how the event feels. Assigned seats end the awkward scramble for chairs, keep couples and families together, split up the two people who shouldn't share a table, and make sure guests of honor can actually see the action. Venues and caterers ask for one because meal service runs table by table — and teachers keep one because learning goes better when the back row isn't self-selected.

The tool on this page handles the general case — any mix of tables, rows, and arcs. If your event fits a pattern, the dedicated pages go deeper: weddings, classrooms, banquets, band rooms, and corporate events — each opens the same editor preloaded with a sensible starting layout.

How many seats fit at each table?

The most common planning question has a boring, reliable answer. Standard rentals seat the following comfortably:

TableSizeSeats comfortablyMax
Round60" (5 ft)810
Round72" (6 ft)1012
Banquet (rectangle)6 ft68
Banquet (rectangle)8 ft810
Sweetheart48"22

Leave roughly 54–60 inches between table edges so chairs can pull out back-to-back and servers can pass. If you're working from a floor plan, sketch the room's fixed features first — dance floor, stage, buffet, doors — then drop tables into what's left. The canvas above pans and zooms, so you can work at ballroom scale.

What this maker includes

Prefer to start from a layout instead of a blank room? The template gallery has classic receptions, classroom rows and pods, gala banquets, concert band arcs, and more — one click loads any of them into the editor.

Frequently asked questions

Is this seating chart maker really free?

Yes. Adding tables, importing guests, seating everyone, and downloading PNG or PDF exports is completely free with no signup. Free exports carry a small footer watermark; a one-time Pro upgrade removes it and unlocks 3× hi-res downloads.

How do I import my guest list?

Click “Paste list” in the Guests panel and paste names one per line, or use “Import CSV” to load a spreadsheet export. If a row has several columns, we read the first column as the guest name. You can also add guests one at a time.

Can it auto-assign guests to seats?

Yes — the Auto-seat button fills every empty seat with your unseated guests in order, table by table. You can then drag or tap-to-move individuals to fine-tune the layout.

What table shapes are supported?

Round tables (2–16 seats), rectangle and banquet tables, head tables with seats on one side, sweetheart tables, straight rows of chairs, and curved arcs of chairs for band and choir setups.

Does my chart save automatically?

Yes. Your chart autosaves to your browser's local storage as you edit, so you can close the tab and come back later on the same device. Nothing is uploaded to a server.

Can I print the seating chart?

Download the print-ready PDF — it's formatted for letter paper in landscape or portrait depending on your layout's shape, and prints cleanly for easels, entrance displays, or a venue coordinator's binder.

Does it work on a phone or tablet?

Yes. The editor stacks vertically on small screens and uses tap-to-seat: tap a guest, then tap a seat. For long editing sessions a laptop is more comfortable, but exports work everywhere.

How many guests and tables can I add?

Up to 400 guests per import and as many tables as your venue needs. The canvas pans and zooms, so large ballroom layouts with 30+ tables stay manageable.

Seating charts for every event