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A 25th Wedding Anniversary Toast

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A 25th Wedding Anniversary Toast

The Occasion

This is for whoever stands up at a 25th anniversary celebration — a son or daughter, a best friend, a sibling, the best man grown gray, or one half of the couple toasting the other. The vibe is tender, a little funny, and built to make the whole table go quiet and then a little misty.

It fits a backyard dinner, a restaurant's private room, or a hall with the good tablecloths out. Plan for ~4 minutes (~520 words spoken); this page runs ~880 words with the coaching.

The Speech

If everyone could find a glass — I promise I'll be quicker than [the wedding itself / their first dance / the time we waited for [name] to finish a story].

Twenty-five years. A quarter of a century. When [name] and [name] said "I do," [reference the year — gas was cheaper, the phones were dumber, we all had more hair]. And here they still are. Not just still married — still choosing each other, which is the harder and rarer thing.

I've had a front-row seat to a lot of it. I've seen them through [a big chapter — the move, the kids, the year that tested everything, the slow ordinary Tuesdays]. And what I've learned watching them is that a marriage isn't the wedding photo.

It's the ten thousand small moments after. It's [him/her] making the coffee the way [she/he] likes it without being asked, twenty-five years running.

They're not perfect, and they'd be the first to laugh at that. [Optional teasing line — an inside joke about how they bicker over the thermostat, the GPS, the right way to load a dishwasher]. But underneath every one of those little arguments is a person who would, without a second's thought, do absolutely anything for the other.

We've all seen it. That's the real thing. That's what twenty-five years looks like up close.

[Name], [name] — thank you for showing the rest of us what it actually means to stay. Not just to fall in love, but to keep choosing it, on the good days and the hard ones and the deeply boring ones in between.

So please, everyone, raise your glass. To [name] and [name] — twenty-five years of love, patience, and [inside joke]. May the next twenty-five be even sweeter. We love you both.

Make It Yours

Delivery Notes

Ask for glasses up front so nobody's scrambling at the toast. Slow down — this one wants to breathe. The line to land is "Not just to fall in love, but to keep choosing it" — pause before it and look directly at the couple.

When you say their names in the final raise, find their eyes and hold them; that's the moment people reach for tissues. If you feel your throat tighten, stop, breathe, smile — the crack in your voice is the most honest part of the night. Lift your glass only on the last "We love you both," and the room will rise with you.

Variations

2-minute short version (pure heart, no tease):

Glasses up, everyone. Twenty-five years ago [name] and [name] said "I do" — and the rare, beautiful thing is they're still choosing each other every single day. I've watched them through [big chapter], and what stays with me is the small stuff — [tiny true habit] for twenty-five years running.

That's what love actually looks like. To [name] and [name] — to the next twenty-five. We love you.

Funnier version (lead with the roast, land tender):

Twenty-five years married, which in [name]'s case means twenty-five years of being right about the thermostat and zero years of admitting it. [beat for laugh] But here's the truth under the jokes...

Then drop straight into the gratitude lines. The laugh buys you the silence you need for the sincere turn.

Bottom Line

Use this when you want to honor not the wedding but the marriage — the staying, not just the starting. The one thing that makes it land: name one tiny, true daily habit between them. That detail proves you really see their love, and it's what the couple will remember long after the cake is gone.

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