A Wedding Speech for a Same-Sex Wedding

A Wedding Speech for a Same-Sex Wedding
The Occasion
This is a toast given at the wedding reception of two people marrying the love of their life — delivered by a best friend, sibling, parent, or chosen-family member who has watched this couple build something true. The room is warm, a little teary, ready to laugh. The tone is celebratory and proud, with a quiet undercurrent of how far this couple, and this moment, had to travel to get here. ~3 minutes (~480 words spoken).
The Speech
Lift your glass, find the couple's eyes, and let the room settle before you begin.
Good evening, everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [Name], and I've had the enormous luck of being [their role] to [Partner A] for [number] years now. Which means I've earned the right to embarrass them at least a little tonight.
Let the laugh land. Then soften.
I want to tell you about the first time I saw [Partner A] talk about [Partner B]. It was [a specific memory — the coffee shop, the late-night phone call, the text they wouldn't stop smiling at]. And I remember thinking: oh.
This is the one. Because I'd never seen them light up like that. Not for a job, not for a city, not for anyone.
Just for [Partner B].
Slow down here. This is the heart of it.
Here's what I've learned watching the two of you. Love isn't loud. It's [Partner A] saving the last bite for [Partner B] without a word.
It's [Partner B] learning [a hobby or detail that matters to Partner A] just to share the thing they love. It's two people who decided, on purpose and out loud, in front of everyone they care about, that they choose each other.
Let your voice carry the next part with pride.
And let's be honest — there were people, maybe whole stretches of history, who said a love like this shouldn't get a day like this. So look around. This room, this music, these vows — this is the answer. You didn't just fall in love. You built a life brave enough to stand in the light.
Turn fully toward the couple.
[Partner A] and [Partner B], may your home be the kind people don't want to leave. May you argue kindly and forgive quickly. May you keep choosing each other on the ordinary Tuesdays, not just the days with cake.
Raise your glass higher.
So everyone, on your feet if you're able. To two of my favorite people. To the family they've chosen and the one they're becoming. To love that waited, and love that won.
To [Partner A] and [Partner B] — cheers.
Hold the toast. Let them have the moment.

👉 Quick Call with Kory White, Fractional CRO · See Kory on LinkedIn · CRO Syndicate
Make It Yours
- Swap the relationship line. Replace "[their role]" with how you actually know them — college roommate, little sister, the friend who set them up.
- Anchor it in one true story. The "first time I saw them light up" beat is the soul of this speech. Use a real moment, not a category.
- Prompts to spark specifics: What is one tiny, unglamorous thing they do for each other? What did you notice about them as a couple that surprised you? When did you realize they were permanent?
- Decide how political to go. The "history said no, this room says yes" passage can be a quiet single line or a fuller, prouder moment — match it to the couple and the crowd.
Delivery Notes
Speak slower than feels natural; nerves rush you. Pause hard after the laugh line and again before "oh. This is the one." Make eye contact with the couple during the vows-style blessing — not your notes.
If you tear up, breathe, smile, and keep going; nobody minds a teary toast, they mind a rushed one. Hold cards with the bullet beats, not a full script — you want to look up and mean it. End by lifting the glass clearly so the room knows exactly when to drink.
Variations
A 30-second version when you only have a moment:
To [Partner A] and [Partner B] — I've watched you become braver, softer, and more yourselves because of each other. The world took its time getting here; you didn't waste a second once you found this. To a love that waited and won. Cheers.
For a longer, more formal version, add a second story from the other partner's side so both are honored equally, and close with a line thanking both families by name. Lean solemn for an intimate dinner — slower, fewer jokes, more vow-like blessings. Lean light for a rowdy dance-floor crowd — open with two embarrassing jokes, keep the proud line short and punchy, and get them dancing fast.
FAQ
How long should a wedding toast be? Aim for two to three minutes — roughly 350 to 500 spoken words. Long enough to tell one real story, short enough that nobody checks their phone.
Should I address that it's a same-sex wedding directly? Only if it feels true to the couple and the room. The "love that waited and won" line lets you honor the significance with pride without turning the toast into a lecture. When in doubt, ask the couple beforehand.
What if I get emotional and start to cry? Pause, breathe, and smile. A few tears make a toast more moving, not less. Keep your beats on a card so you can find your place after a breath.
Can both partners' friends give a toast? Absolutely, and it's lovely when they do. Coordinate so you're not telling the same story, and try to honor both partners equally rather than centering only the one you know best.
Is it okay to include a joke? Yes — one warm, affectionate joke early on relaxes everyone. Skip anything about exes, past breakups, or anything you wouldn't say to their grandmother.
Bottom Line
A great wedding toast does one thing: it tells the room a true story about why these two belong together. Ground it in a single real memory, speak it slowly and proudly, and let the love in the room carry the rest. This is a day a lot of people waited a long time for — say what's in your heart and raise your glass like you mean it.
