A Toast for a Sibling’s Wedding
A Toast for a Sibling’s Wedding
The Occasion
This is for a brother or sister standing up at the reception to toast their sibling and their new spouse. The vibe is warm and a little funny, with a turn into something real — the kind of toast that earns a laugh, then a lump in the throat. It's built for a glass in hand in front of family and friends who've known the couple a while.
Plan for ~3 minutes (~640 words).
The Speech
Hi everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [name] — [sibling]'s [brother/sister], which means I've had a front-row seat to [his/her/their] whole life, including the parts [he/she/they] is hoping I won't mention tonight. Don't worry. I'll only mention some of them.
Growing up with [sibling] meant [a shared-childhood detail — fighting over the front seat / building forts / one bathroom between us]. [He/She/They] was [a quick, affectionate roast — bossy / the favorite / impossible to beat at anything]. And somewhere along the way, the kid I [fought with / followed around / couldn't get rid of] turned into one of the best people I know.
I don't say that lightly, and I'd never say it to [his/her/their] face on a normal day — so [sibling], enjoy this, it's not happening again.
Here's what I want everyone to understand. I've watched [sibling] [his/her/their] entire life, and I've never seen [him/her/them] the way [he/she/they] is around [partner]. [Partner], you didn't just win over [sibling] — you won over all of us, and that is a much harder crowd.
From the first time you came around, it was obvious. [He/She/They] laughs more. [He/She/They] is softer, somehow, and braver at the same time.
You bring out the version of my [brother/sister] that I always knew was in there. For that alone, you'd have my whole heart.
[Partner], welcome to this family — and fair warning, there's no leaving now. You're stuck with [a family quirk — loud holidays / unsolicited advice / a group chat that never sleeps]. We're loud, we're a lot, and we love hard. You'll fit right in.
[Sibling], I have loved you since before I understood what love was. I have wanted exactly this for you. And watching you find it — watching you find [partner] — has been one of the great joys of my life.
So would everyone please raise a glass. To [sibling] and [partner]: may you keep choosing each other on the easy days and especially the hard ones, may you laugh as much as you make us laugh, and may your life together be even better than today. We love you.
Cheers.
Make It Yours
- [Name] / [sibling] / [partner] — yours, your sibling's, and the new spouse's names; say the couple's names together at the toast so it lands.
- [Brother/sister/they] — match the pronouns; sweep through and make them consistent.
- [Shared-childhood detail] — one specific memory only family would know. Swap-ins: "sharing a wall and zero secrets," "the summer we built a terrible treehouse," "you teaching me to drive and surviving it."
- [Quick roast] — affectionate, never cruel. Swap-ins: "the responsible one, which made me the other one," "competitive about literally everything," "the favorite — we all know it."
- [Family quirk] — the thing the spouse is now signing up for. Swap-ins: "Sunday dinners that run four hours," "a mom who'll text you back faster than your own kid."
Delivery Notes
Start light and let the first joke breathe — wait for the laugh before you keep going. The turn is "Here's what I want everyone to understand"; slow down there and look at your sibling, not the crowd. When you talk to [partner], face them directly.
Get a little quiet on "I have loved you since before I understood what love was" — that line carries the whole toast. Raise your glass clearly on "To [sibling] and [partner]." If your voice cracks, let it; nobody minds a sibling tearing up.
Variations
2-minute short version (~250 words): Open with the quick intro and one roast line. Skip straight to "I've never seen [sibling] the way [he/she/they] is around [partner]," do the welcome-to-the-family beat in one sentence, then close on the toast. Keep "I have loved you since before I understood what love was" — never cut that.
Funnier, longer version: Add a second childhood story after the first roast — a specific disaster you both survived ("the time [he/she/they] convinced me to [bad idea], and somehow I took the blame"). Then add a mock-serious warning to [partner]: "I'm legally obligated to tell you about [funny habit] now, before the vows make it your problem." Keep the sincere turn intact — the more you make them laugh first, the harder the heartfelt close hits.
Bottom Line
Use this when you want laughs and tears in the same three minutes. The one thing that makes it land: one true childhood detail plus one honest line about how the couple changed your sibling — specifics beat sentiment every time.