- An RSVP confirms intent to attend; registration usually collects structured attendee information.
- Small social gatherings can often use RSVP. Workshops and classes usually need registration.
- HereNow should keep both flows low-friction and never require attendee account signup before registering.
Direct answer
An RSVP is a lightweight yes-or-no attendance signal. Registration is a more structured signup flow that can collect attendee details, custom answers, approval status, tickets, or capacity rules.

For Learn pages, this slot could become a diagram, product screenshot, or simple visual comparison between RSVP and registration.
RSVP vs registration
| Question | RSVP | Registration |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Casual or simple gatherings | Workshops, classes, ticketed events |
| Data collected | Usually name and email | Name, email, questions, tickets, status |
| Capacity control | Basic headcount | Capacity, waitlist, approval, ticket tiers |
| Attendee friction | Lowest | Still low, but more structured |
Use RSVP when
- The event is casual and free
- You only need a headcount
- You want the fastest possible signup path
Use registration when
- You need custom attendee information
- The event has limited capacity
- You may add approval, waitlist, reminders, or tickets

Video embed slot
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FAQ
Should attendees need an account before registering?
No. For HereNow, attendee signup should remain zero-friction. Account creation can be offered after registration, not required before it.
Can an RSVP page become a registration page later?
Yes. A host can start simple, then add custom questions, capacity rules, or ticket settings as the event becomes more structured.