A Toast for a Promotion Dinner
A Toast for a Promotion Dinner
The Occasion
A colleague, friend, or family member just earned a promotion, and you're raising a glass at the dinner to mark it. The vibe is celebratory and personal — proud, a little funny, genuinely warm. It works at a restaurant table of eight or a packed private room.
Keep it human: this is about the person, not their new title. This runs ~3 minutes (~520 words), with shorter and longer variations below.
The Speech
Could I get everyone's attention for just a second? Glasses up — or at least within reach.
We're here tonight for [name], who just got promoted to [new role]. And before anybody's food gets cold, I want to say a few words about why this one is so well deserved.
I've known [name] for [number of years] now, and here's the thing about this promotion: it didn't happen by accident. I watched it happen. I watched [name] [specific thing they did — stay late on the hard project, take the call nobody wanted, mentor the new people, fix the thing everyone else gave up on].
The title is new tonight. The work that earned it has been going on for a long time.
Now, I could stand here and list accomplishments, but the people in this room already know what [name] can do. So instead, let me tell you what I actually admire. [Name] is the kind of person who [the real quality — gives credit away and takes the blame, makes everyone around them better, stays calm when it all goes sideways, remembers your name and your kid's name].
That's not on any performance review. But it's the reason we're all genuinely happy tonight, and not just politely clapping.
[Name], a promotion is the company saying out loud what the rest of us already knew. You earned this. You've got the title now — go be exactly the same person who got you here, just with a bigger desk and a better parking spot.
So everyone, please raise your glass. To [name] — to the work, the way you do it, and everything that comes next. Congratulations. Cheers.
Make It Yours
- [name] and [new role] — say both clearly up top so even the people at the far end of the table know exactly who and what we're celebrating.
- [specific thing they did] — this is the heart of the toast. One true, concrete moment beats ten generic compliments. Swap ideas: "rebuilt that whole report over a weekend," "talked the client off the ledge in March," or "trained half the people in this room."
- [the real quality] — name the thing people love them for, not just the thing they're good at. Swap ideas: "celebrates other people's wins louder than their own," "never once made me feel stupid for asking," or "is the first one in and the last one to take credit."
- [number of years] — even "since [name] started" or "since the day we met" works if you can't pin a number.
Delivery Notes
Tap your glass or just raise your voice — don't wait for perfect silence, gather the room as you start. Look at [name] for the personal lines and at the table for the toast itself. The line "go be exactly the same person who got you here" is your laugh-and-warmth beat; pause right after it.
Land "You earned this" slowly and mean it. Save your highest energy for "To [name]" so everyone knows that's their cue to drink. Keep your glass up until people have sipped, then sit.
If your hands shake, hold the glass with both — it steadies you and looks intentional.
Variations
2-minute short version (loud restaurant): "To [name], who just made [new role] — and earned every bit of it. I've watched you [specific thing] for [number of years], and nobody deserves this more. Glasses up. Cheers." Done in thirty seconds, still personal.
Longer / funnier version (close friends or family): Add a gentle ribbing line before the warm turn: "Of course, with [new role] comes great responsibility — and [name], we both know how you feel about responsibility before [their morning coffee / 9 a.m.]." Then pivot hard back to sincerity so the joke lands as affection, not a jab.
Bottom Line
Use this the night someone's hard work finally gets a title to match it. The one thing that makes it land: skip the resume, name one real thing you watched them do, and let "you earned this" be the truest line of the night.