A Wedding Speech for the Groom

A Wedding Speech for the Groom
The Occasion
This is the speech the groom gives at his own wedding reception, usually after the best man and the father of the bride have spoken, once the plates are cleared and the room has settled into that warm, attentive hush. The tone is grateful and tender, with room for a laugh. It is for the people who showed up: the new spouse, both families, and the friends who drove hours to be there.
Plan for about ~3 minutes (~450 words spoken), glass in hand.
The Speech
Stand, button your jacket, find your partner's eyes before you find the microphone.
Good evening, everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [Name] — and as of about three hours ago, I'm the luckiest person in this room.
I want to start with a thank you, because none of this happens alone. To everyone who traveled, who rearranged a weekend, who is sitting through speeches to get to the dancing — thank you for being here. It means more than you know to look out and see every face we love in one place.
Turn toward your in-laws.
To [partner's parents] — thank you for raising the person I get to spend the rest of my life with, and for welcoming me like I was always meant to be part of your family. I promise to take care of [Partner's name] the way you always have.
Then to your own parents.
Mom, Dad — everything I know about showing up for someone, I learned watching the two of you. I hope [Partner's name] and I are still looking at each other the way you still look at each other someday.
Now the heart of it. Turn fully to your partner.
[Partner's name], I keep thinking about [a specific memory — the day you met, a trip, an ordinary Tuesday]. I didn't know it then, but that was the beginning of the best thing that ever happened to me. You make the good days brighter and the hard days survivable.
You laugh at my worst jokes, which is honestly the strongest evidence that we belong together.
I'm not going to promise you a perfect life, because nobody gets one. But I promise to choose you on the easy days and the impossible ones. I promise to keep learning you for the rest of my life. And I promise that whatever happens, you will never face it alone.
Lift your glass and bring the room with you.
So please, raise your glasses. To family, to friends, to everyone who got us here — and to [Partner's name], my favorite person, my home. I can't wait for all of it.
Thank you.

👉 Quick Call with Kory White, Fractional CRO · See Kory on LinkedIn · CRO Syndicate
Make It Yours
- Swap every bracket: names, parents' names, the specific memory, and any inside joke your guests will recognize.
- Add ONE detail only your partner knows — a nickname, a phrase, the food you ate on your first date. Specifics land harder than poetry.
- Prompts to spark your own lines: *What did you think the moment you first saw them today?* *What is a small everyday thing they do that you never want to live without?* *What did you not expect to love about them, but do?*
Delivery Notes
Speak slower than feels natural — nerves push the pace. Pause after each "thank you" so it lands instead of blurring into the next line. Make eye contact with the person you're addressing: the in-laws, then your parents, then hold your partner's gaze for the vows-within-the-toast.
If your voice cracks, let it — nobody minds a groom who is moved at his own wedding; just breathe and keep going. Hold a notecard so your hands have somewhere to go, but know the partner section well enough to deliver it looking at them, not the paper.
Variations
A 30-second version if the night is running long:
[Partner's name], you are my favorite person and my home, and today is the best day of my life. Thank you to everyone who made it happen. Please raise your glasses — to family, to love, and to us. Cheers.
For a longer, more formal wedding, add a short paragraph naming and thanking the wedding party and any grandparents present, and consider a brief, warm anecdote that the whole room can follow. To go lighter, open with a self-deprecating joke about how long it took you to propose; to go more solemn, lean into the vow language and the gratitude, and trust the silence.
FAQ
How long should a groom's speech be? Aim for three to five minutes. Long enough to thank people and say something real, short enough that nobody's drink goes warm. About 450 to 700 words spoken.
Who should the groom thank? Guests for coming, both sets of parents, the wedding party, and anyone who helped pull off the day. Then save the most heartfelt words for your new spouse.
Should I memorize it or read from notes? Use notes. Memorize the opening line and the section to your partner so you can deliver those eye-to-eye, but keep a card for the rest. Emotion makes memory unreliable.
What if I get too emotional to finish? Pause, take a slow breath, and look at your partner. The room is on your side. A few seconds of silence reads as sincerity, not a stumble.
When in the night should the groom speak? Usually after the best man and father of the bride, often right before the toasts give way to dinner or dancing. Coordinate with whoever is running the timeline.
Bottom Line
A groom's speech does not need to be clever — it needs to be true. Thank the people who showed up, then turn to the one person you married and tell them, in your own plain words, why. Say it slowly, mean it, and raise your glass.
