A Wedding Speech for a Groomsman

A Wedding Speech for a Groomsman
The Occasion
This is the toast a groomsman gives at a wedding reception, usually after the best man, often during dinner or just before the cake. You're a close friend or brother of the groom, standing with a glass in hand while a hundred faces turn toward you. The tone is warm, a little funny, and unmistakably affectionate.
It's for the couple, but it's also for the room full of people who love them. ~3 minutes (~480 words spoken).
The Speech
Take a breath, find the groom's eyes for a second, then begin.
Good evening, everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [Name], and I've had the honor of standing up here with [Groom] today as one of his groomsmen. Which mostly meant making sure he ate breakfast and didn't lose the rings.
Let the laugh land. Then get to the heart of it.
I've known [Groom] since [where you met — college, the old neighborhood, that first awful job], and in all that time I've watched him be a lot of things. A loyal friend. A terrible cook. The guy who shows up at 2 a.m. When you need him and never once mentions it again. But I have never seen him the way he is when [Partner] walks into a room.
Slow down here. This is the line they'll remember.
Something in him settles. He stands a little taller and talks a little softer. [Partner], you didn't just win him over — you brought out the best version of a man I already thought was pretty great.
Turn to the partner now.
[Partner], on behalf of all of us who've loved [Groom] for years: thank you. Thank you for seeing in him what we always saw, and for loving the parts of him that take a little patience. You two have something rare. You laugh at the same things. You argue and then you forgive. You make each other braver.
Bring it back to a shared memory — make it specific.
I'll never forget [a specific memory — the road trip, the night he called you, the way he talked about their first date]. That was the moment I knew. He wasn't just happy. He was home.
Now lift the glass and bring the room with you.
So I'd ask everyone to raise a glass. Here's to [Groom] and [Partner] — to long mornings, easy silences, and a love that only gets richer with the years. May your home always be loud with laughter and full of the people who love you.
Final beat, looking right at them.
To the happy couple. Cheers.

👉 Quick Call with Kory White, Fractional CRO · See Kory on LinkedIn · CRO Syndicate
Make It Yours
- Swap the origin story. Replace "[where you met]" with the real place and year — specifics earn trust and laughs.
- Pick ONE true memory. One vivid moment beats three vague ones. Choose the story only you can tell.
- Match the humor to the room. Keep the joke affectionate, never embarrassing. A wedding is not a roast.
- Prompts to spark specifics: *What's the most "him" thing the groom has ever done? When did you first notice the partner changed him for the better? What do you secretly hope for their future?*
Delivery Notes
Speak slower than feels natural — nerves speed you up. Pause after each laugh line so it can breathe, and pause again before the heartfelt turn so the shift in tone registers. Make eye contact with the couple on the emotional lines and with the room on the toast.
If your voice catches, that's fine — let it. Honest emotion is the whole point, and the guests will love you for it. Hold note cards low and glance, don't read; you want connection, not recitation.
Memorize your first line and your last line cold so you can start strong and finish clean.
Variations
The 30-second version (when time is tight or you're sharing the floor):
I'm [Name], one of [Groom]'s groomsmen and longtime friend. I've watched this guy grow into someone steady, kind, and ridiculously happy — and that's all because of [Partner]. To the two of you: a lifetime of laughter and love. Cheers.
For a longer or more formal version, add a second memory and a brief word of welcome to both families joining today. For a lighter tone, lean into one well-chosen inside joke before the warm turn. For a more solemn, heartfelt tone, drop the opening joke entirely and open straight from the heart with what the groom has meant to you.
FAQ
How long should a groomsman speech be? Aim for two to three minutes — around 350 to 500 spoken words. Long enough to mean something, short enough to keep the room with you.
Should a groomsman speak before or after the best man? Usually after. The best man typically anchors the toasts, so coordinate the order with the couple or the planner beforehand so no one repeats stories.
Is it okay to be funny? Yes, as long as the humor is warm and the punchline is never the couple's expense. End on sincerity so the laugh becomes a lump in the throat.
What if I get emotional and choke up? Pause, breathe, and keep going. A genuine pause is more moving than a polished delivery. No one has ever judged a wedding speaker for caring too much.
Can I use notes? Absolutely. Hold a small card low, glance at it for cues, and look up for the important lines. Memorize only your opening and your toast.
Bottom Line
A great groomsman speech isn't about being the funniest person in the room — it's about being the most honest. Tell one true story, say what the couple means to you, and raise your glass with a full heart. Specific beats clever every single time.
