A Wedding Speech for a Bridesmaid

A Wedding Speech for a Bridesmaid
The Occasion
This is the toast a bridesmaid stands to give at the reception, glass in hand, usually right after the maid of honor or between courses. The room is full of people who love the couple, half of whom have already cried once today. It's warm, a little nervous, and built on years of friendship rather than formality.
Aim for about ~3 minutes (~480 words spoken) — long enough to mean something, short enough that the food stays warm.
The Speech
Take a breath before you start. Find the bride's eyes first, then turn to the room.
Hi everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [Name], and I've had the very good fortune of being [the bride's] friend since [a specific time — college, summer camp, the apartment with the broken radiator].
Let the laugh land if there is one. Then go warmer.
When [the bride] asked me to be a bridesmaid, I said yes before she finished the sentence. Because here is the thing about her: she is the friend who shows up. The one who answered the phone at 2 a.m. The one who drove three hours for a single bad day of mine and never once made me feel like I owed her for it.
Now bring in the partner — this is the turn the whole speech is building toward.
For a long time, I worried no one would ever be good enough for her. I had a list. It was a demanding list.
And then [she] met [Partner], and one by one every item quietly got crossed off — not because [Partner] was trying to pass a test, but because he simply, obviously, adored her. I watched her become softer and braver at the same time. That's how I knew.
Pause here. Let it sit.
[Partner], you didn't just gain a wife today. You gained the most loyal person I've ever met, and you gained me, which I promise is a mixed blessing.
Then close on the couple together, lifting your glass on the final lines.
What I wish for the two of you is ordinary and enormous. Slow mornings. Inside jokes no one else will ever understand. A love that keeps choosing itself, on the easy days and the hard ones. May you always be each other's 2 a.m. Phone call.
So please, everyone, raise your glasses. To [the bride] and [Partner] — to a lifetime of showing up for each other. Cheers.

👉 Quick Call with Kory White, Fractional CRO · See Kory on LinkedIn · CRO Syndicate
Make It Yours
- Swap the origin story. Replace "the apartment with the broken radiator" with the real place your friendship began — the more specific and oddly mundane, the better it lands.
- Pick ONE story, not five. A single vivid memory beats a highlight reel. Choose the moment that proves who she is.
- Prompts to spark specifics:
- What is the most "her" thing she's ever done for you?
- What changed in her after she met her partner?
- What is a small private joke you can nod to without explaining?
Delivery Notes
Speak slower than feels natural — nerves push the pace. Pause after the line about your "demanding list" and again after "that's how I knew"; those silences do the emotional work. Make eye contact with the bride on the warm lines and with the partner on the line addressed to them.
If your voice cracks, stop, breathe, and smile — the room is with you, not judging you. Keep notes on a single card or your phone; glance, don't read. Memorize the first and last sentences so you can land them looking up.
Variations
A 30-second version for a crowded room or a casual setting:
To [the bride] — the friend who always shows up — and to [Partner], who finally gave her someone to show up for. I've never seen her happier. May you always be each other's 2 a.m. Phone call. Cheers!
For a longer, more formal version, add a second short story that illustrates the couple together (how you watched them care for each other), and a brief thank-you to both families and to anyone who traveled far. For tone: a lighter version leans harder into the gentle teasing and the "mixed blessing" joke; a more solemn version trims the humor and dwells on the loyalty and the wish for the hard days — good for a smaller, more intimate gathering.
FAQ
How long should a bridesmaid speech be? Two to three minutes is the sweet spot — roughly 350 to 500 words. Long enough to tell one real story, short enough that no one checks their watch.
Should a bridesmaid roast the bride? Light, affectionate teasing is wonderful; anything that could embarrass her in front of family is not. The rule of thumb: tease the things she'd laugh at, never the things she'd wince at.
What if I cry during the speech? Crying is allowed and often welcomed — it means it's real. Pause, breathe, take a sip of water, and keep going. The room will love you more for it, not less.
Do I have to mention the groom or partner? Yes. A bridesmaid speech that's only about your friend can feel like it forgot the wedding. Turn toward the partner for at least a few warm lines and welcome them in.
Can I use notes? Absolutely. Keep them brief — bullet points on a card or phone — and memorize just your opening and closing lines so you can deliver those looking up at the couple.
Bottom Line
A great bridesmaid speech isn't a performance; it's a love letter spoken out loud. Tell one true story about who she is, welcome her partner in with genuine warmth, and end on a wish that feels both ordinary and enormous. Say it slowly, mean every word, and let yourself feel it.
