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A Toast for a 25th Anniversary

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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A Toast for a 25th Anniversary

A Toast for a 25th Anniversary

The Occasion

This toast is delivered at a 25th wedding anniversary party — a silver anniversary — usually by a close friend, an adult child, a sibling, or the best man or maid of honor from the original wedding. The setting is warm and a little nostalgic: a dinner, a backyard gathering, or a rented hall with the couple seated at the head table.

The tone is loving and celebratory with a thread of gentle humor, honoring not just the wedding day but the quarter-century of ordinary mornings that came after it. It's for everyone in the room, but especially for the two people who decided, twenty-five years ago, to stay. ~3 minutes (~480 words spoken).

The Speech

Raise your glass with confidence and let the room settle before you begin.

Twenty-five years. When [Name] and [Name] said "I do," gas was cheaper, my hair was thicker, and nobody believed the two of them would survive their first trip to assemble furniture together.

Let the laugh land, then turn earnest.

But here we are. A quarter of a century. That's not a milestone you stumble into. That's ten thousand decisions to choose each other again — on the good days, and especially on the days that tested everything.

I remember [a specific memory — the early apartment, the road trip, the year things were hard]. Most of you weren't there for that part. You see the easy version now — the inside jokes, the way they finish each other's sentences. But the easy version is built on the hard years, and they earned every bit of it.

Pause. Look at the couple directly.

What I've learned watching the two of you is that love isn't a feeling you fall into. It's a thing you build, board by board, season after season. You build it when you're tired. You build it when you disagree about the thermostat. You build it when one of you is scared and the other one quietly holds the line.

[Name], you have loved [Name] through every version of themselves — and there have been a few. [Name], you have made a home that the rest of us never want to leave, the kind with the good coffee and the door that's always open.

Lift your glass higher.

So here's to twenty-five years of patience, partnership, and putting up with each other's worst playlists. To the silver anniversary, and to whatever shines after that. May your next twenty-five be even kinder than the last.

To [Name] and [Name].

Let the room drink, then add one quiet line.

Thank you for showing us how it's done.

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Make It Yours

Delivery Notes

Speak slower than feels natural — joy reads as rushing if you're nervous. Land the opening joke, then let silence do the work before you turn sincere; that shift from funny to heartfelt is the whole engine of this toast. Make eye contact with the couple during the "love isn't a feeling" passage, and with the room during the final raise.

If your voice catches on the personal memory, let it — don't apologize, just breathe and keep going. Use notes for the structure but memorize the first line and the toast itself so you can look up when it matters.

Variations

A 30-second version, if time is tight:

Twenty-five years. That's not luck — that's two people choosing each other, over and over, on the hard days too. [Name] and [Name], you've shown all of us what staying looks like. Here's to your silver anniversary, and to whatever shines after it. Cheers.

For a longer, more formal version (a seated dinner, a vow renewal), add a passage about the original wedding day and a short reading or quote about lasting love, and invite the couple to say a few words. For a lighter, roast-style tone, lean harder into the affectionate teasing — the furniture, the playlists, the thermostat wars — and keep the sincere turn short.

For a solemn tone (a quieter milestone, an older crowd), drop the jokes and center the speech on gratitude and the quiet heroism of an ordinary, faithful marriage.

FAQ

How long should a 25th anniversary toast be? Aim for two to three minutes — roughly 350 to 500 spoken words. Long enough to tell one real story, short enough that the room is still leaning in when you raise your glass.

Who usually gives the anniversary toast? Often an adult child, a longtime friend, a sibling, or the original best man or maid of honor. If several people want to speak, coordinate so you're not repeating the same memory — variety keeps it lively.

Should it be funny or sentimental? Both. The strongest toasts open with warmth and humor to relax the room, then turn sincere for the heart of it. The contrast is what makes the emotional moment land.

What if I get emotional while speaking? That's a feature, not a flaw — it tells the couple this matters to you. Pause, take a breath, and continue. Memorize your final line so you can deliver it even if your voice wavers.

Do I have to memorize the whole thing? No. Keep notes for the structure and your story, but memorize the opening line and the closing toast so you can look up and connect with the couple at the two moments that matter most.

Bottom Line

A great 25th anniversary toast honors the unglamorous work behind a long marriage — the staying, not just the starting. Tell one true story, blend a laugh with real feeling, and end by raising your glass to the next twenty-five. Say it warmly, look them in the eye, and let the room feel how much these two people are loved.

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