A promotion, a new home, an exam passed, a life changed. Whatever the achievement, the right words should feel as good as the moment itself.
I've watched you work for this for longer than you probably realise I noticed. This isn't luck — it's everything you put in. So proud of you, genuinely.
You worked incredibly hard for this and you absolutely deserve it. The rest of us just need to act like we're not slightly jealous. Congratulations.
A well-deserved achievement — this speaks to the dedication and care you bring to everything you do. Congratulations, and best wishes for what's ahead.
You did it! Genuinely so chuffed for you — you absolutely deserve this. Drinks on me to celebrate properly.
The work you put in quietly, over years — this is what it looks like from the outside. A moment worth every step it took to reach it.
Please accept my warmest congratulations on this well-earned achievement. It is a reflection of your dedication and the high standards you consistently set.
A congratulations card should feel like it was written for this person, for this achievement — not like it could have gone to anyone.
WhatToWrite.co generates congratulations messages for every kind of win: a promotion, a new home, a driving test passed, a degree finished, a business launched. Tell us the relationship, pick a tone, and add a detail or two about what they've achieved — and we'll write something that sounds like you meant it.
Most congratulations cards fail because they're interchangeable. "Well done! You should be so proud" could go in any card for any person for any achievement. The better version names what the person did, acknowledges how hard they worked, and says something that could only be said about them. That's what this generator is built to help you write.
For a job or promotion message, acknowledge the change and the excitement that comes with it. Reference the effort they put in — even if you don't know all the details, acknowledging the work matters. Express genuine enthusiasm for what's ahead rather than simply praising what's behind them.
Personal milestones — a new home, a first child, a creative achievement — deserve messages that celebrate the person as much as the event. Focus on how this fits into the larger story of who they are, not just what they've done.
Name the achievement specifically. Say what it means — for them, their future, or the people who love them. Close with something forward-looking. The best congratulations messages celebrate the person, not just the event.
Avoid "well done" or "so proud of you" in isolation. Instead, reference something specific — the effort they put in, a detail about the achievement, or something you know about them. "I've watched you work for this for two years" lands completely differently to "congratulations on your achievement."
Acknowledge the change and the excitement that comes with it. Reference the work they put in to get there, and express genuine enthusiasm for what's ahead. Keep it warm — even for a colleague, a personal touch matters more than formal polish.
Two to four sentences is usually plenty. For a milestone occasion — a major promotion, a long-worked-for achievement — a slightly longer message can feel more proportionate. The most important thing is specificity, not length.