# Suit or Tuxedo? How to Choose by Your Wedding's Exact Formality Level

> The choice is already made for you — by the dress-code line on the invitation and the hour the ceremony begins. Here is how to read both and dress him correctly.

*Published 2026-06-24 · By Julian Prescott*

The groom keeps framing it as a matter of taste &mdash; suit or tuxedo, as if it were his to invent from scratch. It is not. The choice has, in fact, already been made for him by two pieces of information you both already hold: the **dress-code line on the invitation** and the **hour the ceremony begins**. Read those two cues correctly and the decision resolves itself, calmly, every time. This guide gives you the framework to do exactly that, then layers in the lapel and fabric details that separate a tuxedo from a suit and one tuxedo from another.

**The short version:** *Black tie* means a tuxedo, full stop. *Black-tie optional* means a tux is preferred but a perfectly fitted dark suit is honorable. *Formal* leans suit, tux welcome. *Semi-formal / cocktail* means a dark suit and the tux is now too much. *Casual or daytime* means a lighter suit. And a tuxedo is evening wear &mdash; traditionally not worn before 6 p.m.

## What actually makes a tuxedo a tuxedo (and not just a black suit)?

Before mapping the dress codes, settle the definition, because the most common mistake is assuming a black suit will pass for a tux. It will not. The defining difference is **the lapel facing and the trim** &mdash; not the color. A tuxedo's lapels are faced in silk, either glossy **satin** or ribbed, matte **grosgrain**; its buttons are covered in that same silk; and its trousers carry a matching silk braid down the outer seam. A suit's lapels are cut from the same cloth as the jacket, its buttons are horn or plastic, and its trousers are plain. As [The Black Tux](https://theblacktux.com/blogs/style/black-suit-vs-tuxedo) puts it, the lapel facing is the single biggest tell. So a black suit, however sharp on him, is categorically not a tuxedo &mdash; a distinction that matters most at the one dress code that demands the real thing.

## How do you map each wedding dress code to a suit or a tux?

Here is the translation, from most formal to least. Find the line printed on the invitation and read across.

Dress codeTuxedoSuitThe correct read

Black tieRequiredNot appropriateTuxedo, black bow tie, white dress shirt, polished black shoes. No interpretation.
Black-tie optionalPreferredAcceptableTux is the safe choice; a perfectly fitted dark suit with a black tie is the honorable alternative.
FormalOptionalPreferredA dark, well-cut two- or three-piece suit; a tux is welcome but not required.
Semi-formal / cocktailToo formalRequiredNavy or charcoal suit, pocket square, polished shoes; tie or open collar by the hour.
Casual / daytime / outdoorOverdressedBest choiceLighter fabric &mdash; linen, cotton-blend, tropical wool &mdash; in tan, light grey, or soft blue.

Note the quiet trap in the word *formal*: despite how it sounds, it sits a notch *below* black tie, as [Generation Tux](https://generationtux.com/blog/style-guides/formal-vs-black-tie) explains. At a formal wedding a tuxedo is permitted but not expected, and a beautifully cut dark suit is entirely at home. The dress code that genuinely brooks no substitution is black tie alone.

## Why does the time of day change the answer?

The dress-code line is only half of it. Tradition holds the **tuxedo is evening wear**, and the long-standing convention is that wearing one before roughly **6 p.m. is a misstep**. A formal wedding at two in the afternoon therefore tilts toward a suit even when the couple wants something elevated; at the most formal end of a daytime affair, the historic answer is morning dress rather than a tux. After dark, the logic reverses and the tuxedo comes fully into its own. This is why a single groom may genuinely need to think differently about a 2 p.m. garden ceremony than about an 8 p.m. ballroom reception. When the invitation gives a dress code and a start time, let them work together: the dress code sets the ceiling, the hour sets whether a tux is appropriate at all.

## How should he choose the lapel and fabric once a tuxedo is the answer?

When black tie is settled and a tuxedo it is, two refinements remain &mdash; lapel style and lapel finish &mdash; and getting them right is what makes him look considered rather than merely dressed.

**Lapel style.** Choose **peak** or **shawl** for a wedding. The peak lapel points upward toward the shoulder, broadens the frame, and is the most formal and commanding. The shawl lapel is rounded and unbroken, sleek and refined &mdash; a favorite for evening and winter ceremonies. The **notch** lapel, cut where the collar meets the lapel, is the least formal and reads better on a suit than on a true tuxedo; reserve it for semi-formal or modern weddings, per [Winslow's lapel guide](https://www.winslowstyle.com/tuxedo-lapels-guide/).

**Lapel finish.** **Satin** is glossy and catches light, photographing brilliantly under artificial evening lighting &mdash; the classic, instantly recognizable finish. **Grosgrain** is ribbed and matte, quieter, and considered by many tailoring authorities the more sophisticated of the two precisely because it does not announce itself; it sings on made-to-measure. SuitSupply's [black-tie tailoring](https://suitsupply.com/en-us/men/black-tie-collection) runs peak or shawl lapels with silk facings and hand-finished detailing as standard &mdash; a useful benchmark for what off-the-rack formality should look like. For color, black is the tradition; **midnight blue** is the accepted modern alternative and often photographs as a deeper, richer black under evening light.

## Should he buy or rent &mdash; and how far ahead?

A practical closing question, and one you will likely be weighing together. A tuxedo leaves the closet rarely, so for a single black-tie wedding, renting from [Generation Tux](https://generationtux.com/blog/wedding-planning/tux-or-suit-for-wedding) or The Black Tux is the sensible, cost-conscious route &mdash; just book the fitting three to six months ahead so alterations have room to be done properly. A good navy or charcoal suit is the opposite case: from SuitSupply, Indochino, or Brooks Brothers, it re-wears across formal, semi-formal, and cocktail weddings and the working years beyond them, which makes it worth owning outright. The clean rule: rent the rare formality, buy the suit he will reach for again. Read the invitation, read the clock, and the rest follows &mdash; and he will look exactly right in the photographs you keep for decades.

## Sources

1. [Tuxedo vs. Suit: What You Need to Know Before You Shop](https://www.theknot.com/content/tuxedo-vs-suit)
2. [Your Guide to Choosing a Tuxedo or Suit for a Wedding](https://generationtux.com/blog/wedding-planning/tux-or-suit-for-wedding)
3. [Tuxedo Styles Decoded: Satin or No Satin, Peak or Shawl?](https://theblacktux.com/blogs/resources/tuxedo-styles-decoded-satin-or-no-satin-peak-or-shawl)
4. [Tuxedo / Black Tie Collection](https://suitsupply.com/en-us/men/black-tie-collection)
5. [Black Tie vs. Formal Attire: The Complete Guide](https://generationtux.com/blog/style-guides/formal-vs-black-tie)
6. [Tuxedo Lapels Explained: Peak, Shawl, or Notch](https://www.winslowstyle.com/tuxedo-lapels-guide/)

---
Source: https://groomatlas.com/groom-attire/suit-vs-tuxedo-by-wedding-formality
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
