How to Use AI to Plan an Event

Someone said yes. To a birthday. An anniversary. A dinner party. A baby shower. A leaving do. A family gathering that somehow became your responsibility.

And now you’re staring at a blank page wondering where to start.

There are too many decisions. The venue. The food. The guest list. The invitations. The timing. The budget. The things you’re forgetting that you don’t even know you’re forgetting.

Most events don’t fall apart because people don’t care. They fall apart because there’s no clear starting point. This is exactly where AI helps.


What this is

A simple way to use AI to plan any event — from a small dinner to a large celebration — without the overwhelm.


Try this

Open ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool and paste this:

“I’m planning an event and I need help getting organised. Here’s what I know so far: Type of event: [birthday / dinner party / shower / celebration / etc.] Who it’s for: [brief description] Approximate number of guests: [number] Budget: [rough amount or “I’m not sure yet”] Date or timeframe: [date or “in about X weeks”] Location: [home / venue / outdoor / not decided yet] Any dietary requirements or preferences: [if known] Anything specific I’m worried about: [optional] Can you help me build a simple planning checklist, think through what decisions need to be made and in what order, suggest ideas for food, theme, or activities that fit this situation, and flag anything I might be forgetting?”

What you’ll actually get back

Here’s a real example.

Someone was planning a 60th birthday party for their mother. Thirty guests. A mix of family and old friends. Home venue. No theme yet. Six weeks away.

What came back: a six-week timeline broken into weekly priorities, a suggested gentle theme celebrating six decades with simple non-cheesy ways to incorporate it, a menu approach that worked for a mixed age group without requiring professional catering, a list of things to confirm in the first week, ideas for making it personal — a memory book, a favourite photo display, a playlist built around the decades of her life — and a reminder to book any hired equipment early.

The party happened. Nothing major was forgotten. The guest of honour cried — in a good way.


Building your planning timeline

“I’m planning [event] in [timeframe]. What should I be doing right now?”

Then ask the same question at four weeks out, two weeks out, the day before, and on the day itself. Each call gives you exactly what’s next — not everything at once.


Getting ideas when you’re stuck

Theme ideas

“I’m planning [event] for [person]. They like [interests / style / preferences]. Can you suggest some simple theme ideas that aren’t over the top?”

Food and menu

“I’m hosting [number] people for [event]. I want to [cook myself / keep it simple / make it feel special]. Some guests are [dietary requirements]. Can you suggest a menu that works?”

Personal touches

“I want to make this feel personal and special without spending a lot of money. The event is for [person] and they [brief description of who they are]. What are some simple ideas that would mean something?”

Writing invitations

“Can you write an invitation for [event] with these details: What: [type of event] Who: [name if appropriate] When: [date and time] Where: [location or address] RSVP: [how and by when] Make it [warm / fun / formal / casual].”

Things people most commonly forget

“What do people most often forget when planning [type of event]?”

Common answers include dietary requirements asked too late, parking and transport for guests, a plan for the first thirty minutes of arrivals, music and who controls it, a designated photographer, and confirmation messages to guests a few days before.


If you’re overwhelmed

“I’m planning [event] and feeling overwhelmed. Here’s everything I’m thinking about: [write it all out — messy is fine] Can you help me organise this and tell me what to focus on first?”

Important note

AI helps you plan and organise. For contracted suppliers or venue agreements — read the small print, confirm bookings in writing, and keep records of what was agreed. AI can help you review those documents too.


What to read next

How to Use AI to Get Organised
How to Use AI to Plan Meals
How to Use AI to Plan a Trip
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