Wedding Toast
Answer a few questions and we’ll turn them into a polished toast for the room.
Let’s get the people right first
This helps us get the names, relationship, and opening right.
We’ll use this to shape the voice and perspective of the speech.
See What's Possible
Every speech is different — here are examples across three styles to give you a sense of what you can create.
I've been thinking about what it means to love someone well.
It isn't just the big moments — the declarations, the celebrations, the days that make it into photographs. It's the small ones. The Tuesday evenings. The choosing to be kind when you're tired. The paying attention, day after day, to what the person beside you actually needs.
Alex and Jamie do all of that. I've seen it up close.
I've watched them disagree and come back to each other better for it. I've watched them make each other laugh in the specific way you only can when you really know someone. I've watched them face hard things with a steadiness that speaks to the foundation they've been building — quietly, patiently, for years.
What they have is real. And what they're building, starting today, is going to be something worth witnessing.
To everyone in this room: you're here because you love these two people. That love is part of what holds them. Carry it with you.
Please raise your glasses.
To Alex and Jamie — may your life together
What Makes a Great Wedding Toast
Keep It Under 3 Minutes
A wedding toast is not a speech — it's a toast. One to three minutes is ideal. You're contributing to the evening, not owning it. The constraint forces clarity: what is the one thing you most want to say?
End on the Couple
Whatever you open with — a story, a reflection, a funny observation — your ending belongs to them. A toast that closes with genuine warmth for the couple is what people raise their glasses to. Build toward that.
Say Something Specific
Generic toasts ("may you always be happy") are forgotten immediately. A specific observation about one or both of them — something you've noticed, a quality you admire — gives the toast real weight. You don't need much; one true detail is enough.
Practice the Close
The final line of your toast is the most important. Write it out exactly. Practice it until you can say it clearly and confidently. That line is what the room lifts their glasses to — make it count.
Frequently Asked Questions
A wedding toast is a brief, spoken tribute to the couple at the reception, typically ending with everyone raising their glasses and drinking together. It's shorter than a full speech — usually one to three minutes — and focuses on celebrating the couple and wishing them well.
Ready to write yours?
Create Your Wedding Toast
Answer a few questions about the person and your relationship — the AI handles the rest. Takes about 5 minutes.
