What to write

What to write in a Wedding card

A wedding card is a chance to say something the couple will keep for years. Here's how to write one that speaks to the two of them and rises above a signature in a group card.

Address them as a pair, not just the person you know best. The card is for the marriage, so write to both halves of it - what you see in them together, why their match makes sense, the quality you reckon will carry them. It's a small shift that makes the message feel like it's really about their union.

Then aim for warm and a little forward-looking. A wedding is a beginning, so wish them into the life ahead: the adventures, the ordinary days, the partnership they're committing to. Keep it joyful and genuine, and trust that heartfelt beats clever when two people are this happy.

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How to get it right

Write to both of them

Address the couple as a pair, not just the half you know.

Name what they have

Say what you see in them together that makes you happy for them.

Wish them forward

Look ahead to the life and adventures they're starting today.

Joyful over clever

Heartfelt warmth suits a wedding better than a sharp line.

For the couple

From the outside, you two just make sense - and that's the loveliest thing to watch. Wishing you both a lifetime of it.
Here's to the life you're building and every ordinary, brilliant day it'll be made of. Congratulations to you both.
May you keep choosing each other long after the confetti's swept up. So happy for you both today.
Wishing you a marriage full of laughter, patience, and the quiet kind of joy that lasts. Congratulations.
To two people clearly better together than apart - here's to forever. Congratulations.

For close friends

I've watched this love grow from the start, and toasting it today is the honour of my year. Congratulations, you two.
Couldn't be happier to see my favourite people promise each other forever. Here's to the best of marriages.
You've found the real thing, and everyone can see it. Wishing you both a lifetime as good as today.
So proud and so thrilled for you both. Go and have the marriage you so clearly deserve.
Here's to the team you've always been, now official. Congratulations, with all my love.

Heartfelt and traditional

May your marriage be long, your love deep, and your home always full of laughter. Congratulations to you both.
Wishing you a lifetime of love, patience, and shared adventures. Congratulations on your wedding day.
On this happiest of days, may it be the first of many thousands. With warmest wishes to you both.
Here's to a marriage rich in joy and gentle in the hard parts. Congratulations.
May the love you celebrate today only grow with every year. Heartfelt congratulations.

A little playful

Congratulations on legally being stuck with each other - genuinely couldn't have picked a better pairing.
Marriage: now you have a permanent witness to all your best stories and worst ideas. Congratulations, you two.
Here's to a lifetime of agreeing on the important things and bickering happily about the rest. Congratulations.
You found someone who'll put up with you forever. Frame that. Congratulations to you both.

Questions

What if I can only attend or write to one of the couple?

Address both of them anyway - the card is for the marriage, and welcoming the partner you know less well is a warm, generous touch. It signals you're glad for them both.

Is it appropriate to mention a wedding gift in the card?

Keep it brief and warm - 'we hope you'll enjoy our little gift' is plenty; the heart of the card should be your wishes for the two of them, not the present.

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