What to write in a wedding card
Wedding cards are surprisingly hard. Too generic and you sound like the inside of a card-shop verse; too clever and you risk overshadowing the day. The right note is warm, specific, and short enough to leave room on the page for the next person.
WhatToWrite's wedding message generator helps you find that note in seconds. Pick the tone — heartfelt, poetic, casual, or formal — choose your relationship to the couple, and add anything specific (a shared memory, an inside joke, a wish for the year ahead). We'll write you something you can sign your name to and mean it.
Pick a tone and we'll write you something specific.
A few wedding messages, by tone
Wishing you both a marriage as warm and steady as the love that brought you here — full of small daily kindnesses and the kind of laughter that fills a room.
May the years ahead be measured not in milestones but in mornings: ordinary ones, beside the person you chose.
Marriage is mostly figuring out who put the dishes in wrong. Wishing you a lifetime of cheerfully losing that argument.
Please accept our warmest congratulations on your wedding. We wish you a long and happy life together.
So happy for you both — yesterday was perfect, and you two are great together. Here's to whatever comes next.
Congratulations on your wedding. Wishing you both every happiness in the years ahead.
How to write a wedding card that actually means something
Write to the couple, not just one of them. Even if you only know one half well, the card belongs on a shelf both of them will see — "to you both" or "to you and Sam" sits better than something addressed only to your friend.
Skip the marriage advice. Whoever they are, they're not looking for it on their wedding day. Wishes for the future, gratitude for being included, a memory of the bride or groom that the other half might enjoy hearing — all of these land better than a paragraph on "the secret to a happy marriage."
Length depends on the card. A signed group card wants one warm line. A card you've bought yourself has room for two or three sentences. A speech is a different thing entirely — different rules, different length, different stakes.