A Toast for a Colleague’s Last Day
A Toast for a Colleague’s Last Day
The Occasion
This is for the moment near the end of someone’s final day — the gathering in the break room, the after-work drinks, or the team lunch where everyone is half-happy for them and half-sad to lose them. The vibe is warm and a little bittersweet, with room for one laugh. It works whether [name] is retiring, moving to a new company, or chasing something entirely different.
Keep it to about ~3 minutes (~480 words spoken), which leaves space for the hugs and the awkward "okay, who's getting the next round" that always follows.
The Speech
Can I borrow everyone for just a minute? Glasses up if you've got one.
So today is [name]'s last day with us. And I have to be honest — I've been putting off writing anything down, because the moment I do, it feels real. After [number of years] years, [name] is moving on to [new role / new chapter], and we are equal parts thrilled for them and not okay about it.
Here's the thing I want everyone to know. Plenty of people are good at their job. [name] was good at the job *and* good to the people doing it.
When I think back, it's not actually the big wins I'll remember first — though there were plenty, like [specific win]. It's the small stuff. The way [name] would [small specific habit — e.g., quietly fix the thing nobody else noticed, or remember exactly how you take your coffee].
The way you always knew that if something went sideways, [name] would be the first one to say "okay, let's figure it out" instead of "whose fault is this."
And yes, we have to talk about [inside joke / running bit]. I won't explain it to the newer folks. Just know it lives on. It's part of the building now.
[name], you made this team better, and you made the hard days lighter. That's a rare thing, and we noticed it every single day, even when we forgot to say so.
So here's to [name] — to everything you gave this place, and to everything that's waiting for you next. Go be brilliant somewhere new. We'll be over here, bragging that we knew you when.
To [name].
Make It Yours
- [name] — say it warmly the first time and land on it hard at the toast itself; that final "To [name]" is the emotional button.
- [number of years] — if it's short ("eight months"), lean into it: "in barely a year, somehow you became the person we all check with." If it's long, let the length speak for itself.
- [new role / new chapter] — name it specifically if you know it ("to lead the design team at a startup," "to finally take that sabbatical"). Specificity reads as care.
- [specific win] — pick ONE real thing: the project they saved, the client they landed, the launch they carried. One concrete win beats three vague ones.
- [small specific habit] — this is the heart of the toast. Choose the tiny, human thing only this person did. It's what makes the room go "oh, yeah, *that*."
- [inside joke / running bit] — keep it clean and inclusive; the goal is the warm laugh of recognition, not an inside reference that excludes half the room.
Delivery Notes
- Open by getting everyone's attention before you start the substance — "glasses up" buys you the two seconds you need.
- Slow down on "after [number of years] years." Let the weight of it sit.
- The line "good at the job *and* good to the people doing it" is your thesis. Pause before it and look at [name] when you say it.
- Expect your voice to wobble around the "made the hard days lighter" line. That's fine — a small catch in the voice is the most honest thing in the room. Don't fight it; just breathe and keep going.
- Hold your glass at chest height through the speech, then raise it fully only on the final "To [name]." The physical lift cues the room to join you.
- If you blank, look at [name] and just say, "We're going to miss you." Everything else is decoration.
Variations
2-minute short version — keep the open, one middle beat, and the toast:
Glasses up. Today's [name]'s last day after [number of years] years. Here's what I'll remember: not just [specific win], but the way [name] always made the hard days lighter and never made anyone feel small. You made this team better. Go be brilliant somewhere new — and don't be a stranger. To [name].
Funnier / lighter tone — swap the middle paragraph for:
Now, legally I can't repeat most of what made [name] a legend around here. But I can confirm the [inside joke] is true, [name] absolutely did [harmless funny moment], and somehow still got promoted. That's not luck. That's talent. Terrifying, wonderful talent.
More formal tone (for a manager or exec sendoff) — open with:
On behalf of the entire team, I want to take a moment to recognize [name], whose contribution over the past [number of years] years has genuinely shaped how this group works.
Bottom Line
Use this when someone good is leaving and the room needs permission to feel it. The thing that makes it land isn't the big win you name — it's the one tiny, true habit only [name] had. Find that detail, and the whole toast lands.