Wedding

What to write in a wedding card — 30 examples from heartfelt to funny

· 9 min read

Wedding cards are uniquely difficult. The occasion is enormous. The feelings are real. The blank card is unforgiving. Here are 30 examples to read, adapt, and make your own.

The trouble with wedding cards is that the stakes feel high and the standard phrases have been worn smooth by overuse. "Wishing you a lifetime of happiness" appears in approximately half of all wedding cards ever written. It's not wrong — but it's forgettable. And the people you're writing to will read every card they receive. Yours will sit in a pile with fifty others. The ones they remember are the ones that said something specific and real.

The examples below are organised by tone and relationship. Use them as starting points, not scripts. The best thing you can do is take a phrase that resonates and add one detail — a memory, a quality you love, a genuine wish — that only you could offer.

Heartfelt messages

These work for close friends and family where sincerity is the right register. They avoid cliché by staying grounded and specific.

1
Watching you two together has always made the world feel like a warmer place. Today it officially is. Congratulations — this is the best kind of news.
2
I've never seen you happier than you are when you're with them. That's not a small thing. Wishing you a lifetime of exactly that.
3
Marriage is the decision to keep choosing each other, on easy days and hard ones. You've both already shown me you know how to do that. With so much love today and always.
4
The person you've chosen says everything about who you are. I'm so proud of you both, and so happy to be here for this.
5
I cried, obviously. Happy tears — the best kind. Congratulations to two people who absolutely deserve each other in all the right ways.
6
To two people who have chosen each other with open eyes and full hearts — may you always feel as sure of each other as you do today.
7
Some people just make sense together. You two have always been like that. Today just made it official. Congratulations with all our love.

Warm and romantic messages

For the couple who appreciates language, or when you want to lean into the poetry of the occasion without being saccharine.

8
Here's to the ordinary days — the Tuesday evenings and the Sunday mornings — that turn out to be the ones you'll remember most. May you have so many of them, together.
9
Love at its best is a daily practice. You both seem to understand that. Wishing you the grace to keep showing up for each other, always.
10
May your marriage be full of good food, long conversations, and the particular quiet comfort of someone who knows you completely. Congratulations.
11
You are each other's home now. That is no small thing, and no small gift. With love and congratulations.

Gently funny messages

These work for close friends where warmth and lightness both fit. They have genuine feeling underneath the humour — that's what makes them land.

12
I always knew you'd end up with someone who could keep up with you. Congratulations on finding them. And congratulations to them for saying yes.
13
You've been insufferably happy since you two met. Today I'm officially required to stop complaining about it. Congratulations — you deserve every bit of this.
14
Marriage: the legally binding confirmation of something everyone around you already knew. Welcome to official. We've been waiting.
15
I'm so glad you found each other. Mostly because watching you try to find anyone else was genuinely stressful for all of us. Congratulations.
16
You two are so good together it's almost irritating. Almost. Congratulations — we're all very happy for you, only slightly against our will.

Messages for a colleague or acquaintance

Professional enough to be appropriate, warm enough to feel genuine. These work when you know one half of the couple well but not both.

17
Warmest congratulations on your wedding. I hope it was exactly what you'd hoped for — and that married life treats you as well as you deserve.
18
Congratulations on this wonderful news. Wishing you both every happiness as you start this next chapter together.
19
I'm so pleased to hear you're married — what wonderful news. Wishing you and your partner a long and happy life together.
20
Many congratulations. The office will be insufficiently festive to mark the occasion, so please accept this card as a small acknowledgement of genuinely excellent news.

Messages for a child or sibling getting married

From a parent, sibling, or close family member — where the emotion runs deep and the relationship warrants something more personal.

21
Watching you grow into the person you are today has been the great privilege of my life. Watching you choose this person makes me even prouder. With all my love.
22
I knew when I met them that they were right for you. The way you are together is exactly what I always hoped you'd find. Congratulations, my love.
23
You've always known your own mind. I'm so glad you found someone who respects that. Welcome to the family, officially — though you've felt like part of it for a long time.
24
Big sister / little brother [adjust as needed] — I am so, so proud of you. Today is the beginning of something very good. I know it.

Short one-line messages

Sometimes simple is best — especially when you're writing alongside a longer verbal congratulations, or when you know the couple well enough that brevity feels intentional rather than lazy.

25
Today is the beginning of the best part. Congratulations.
26
Here's to a lifetime of choosing each other.
27
The world is better with you two in it together. Congratulations.
28
So much love to you both — today and every ordinary day after it.
29
Congratulations. This is exactly right.
30
To a love that was obvious to everyone watching long before today.

What to avoid

Don't write: Jokes about divorce, "ball and chain," or "giving up freedom" — even affectionately, these land badly on a day centred on commitment.

Don't write: "Finally!" unless you are extremely close and 100% certain they'll take it as the affection it's meant as.

Don't write: References to previous relationships — their own or anyone else's.

Don't write: Generic filler phrases as the only content: "Wishing you all the best" with nothing more says you didn't really try.

Don't write: Unsolicited relationship advice, however well-intentioned.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the best thing to write in a wedding card?

The best wedding card messages are specific and sincere. Rather than writing "Wishing you a lifetime of happiness" (which could go on any card for any couple), say something that reflects who these two people are — how you know them, what you love about them together, or what you genuinely hope for their marriage. Even one specific, true sentence makes a card memorable.

What should you not write in a wedding card?

Avoid jokes about divorce, references to previous relationships, or anything that trivialises the commitment they're making. Even affectionate teasing about "finally settling down" can land poorly. Also avoid overly generic phrases like "May your love last forever" unless you're pairing them with something more personal — on their own they feel like filler.

How long should a wedding card message be?

Two to five sentences is the sweet spot for most wedding cards. Short enough to feel considered and not padded; long enough to say something real. If you're a close friend or family member, a slightly longer message is appropriate and appreciated. For acquaintances or colleagues, three sentences of genuine warmth is plenty.

Can you be funny in a wedding card?

Yes — but only if funny fits the couple. If you know them well and they'd appreciate it, a warm, gently comic message is wonderful. If you're less sure, a heartfelt message with a light touch is safer than a joke that doesn't quite land on what is, for most people, a very significant day.