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A Father of the Bride Wedding Toast

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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A Father of the Bride Wedding Toast

A Father of the Bride Wedding Toast

The Occasion

This is the toast you give standing at your daughter's wedding, glass in hand, the whole room watching you a little nervously because everyone knows this is the speech that can make grown adults cry into their napkins. The vibe is warm and proud with a thread of gentle humor — you want to honor your daughter, welcome the person she married, and land one line that the room remembers forever.

Give it after dinner, before dessert, when people are settled and the wine has loosened the room. This runs ~4 minutes (~620 words spoken), which is the sweet spot: long enough to mean something, short enough that no one checks their watch.

The Speech

Good evening, everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [name], and I'm the lucky one who gets to call myself the father of the bride.

I've been a father for [number] years now, and I've given a lot of advice in that time. Most of it ignored — as it should have been. But tonight I only have one job, and it's the easiest one I've ever had: to stand up here and tell you the truth about my daughter.

[daughter's name], when you were small, you used to [specific childhood memory — "fall asleep in the car before we even left the driveway" / "correct my grammar at the dinner table" / "insist on wearing your superhero cape to church"]. And I remember thinking, this one is going to do exactly what she wants in this life.

I was right. You always have. And watching you grow into the person you are now — [one true word about her: "stubborn in the best way," "kind to a fault," "braver than I ever was"] — has been the great privilege of my life.

Then [partner's name] came along.

Now, I'll be honest. No one was ever going to be good enough for my daughter. That's the rule.

I wrote it. But [partner's name], you got close — and then you did the one thing that mattered most. You made her happy.

Not the loud kind of happy. The quiet kind. The kind I see when she [specific observation — "talks about you," "laughs at something only the two of you understand," "looks at you across a room"].

That's the kind a father can trust.

So [partner's name], welcome to this family. Fair warning: we [inside family detail — "argue about board games like it's a blood sport," "show up uninvited," "never let a story go untold"]. You'll fit right in.

[daughter's name] and [partner's name] — here's the only advice I'll give you tonight. Marriage isn't about finding someone you can live with. It's about finding the person you can't picture living without. You've found that. Hold onto it. Choose each other on the ordinary days, not just the ones with cake.

Now, if everyone would raise a glass.

To my daughter, who will always be my little girl — and to the partner she chose. May your life together be long, may your laughter be loud, and may you never go to bed angry, unless it's really, really worth it.

To [daughter's name] and [partner's name].

Make It Yours

Delivery Notes

Walk to the front before you start talking — don't speak while you're still moving. Plant your feet, find your daughter's eyes, and breathe once before the first word. When you say her name for the first time, look right at her; that's the moment the room goes quiet.

Pause after "Then [partner's name] came along" — let it hang. Speed up slightly through the welcome-to-the-family joke; that's the laugh, and laughs need a little pace. Then slow all the way down for the advice and the toast — half your normal speed, like every word costs something.

If your voice cracks, let it. Nobody has ever been mad at a father for getting choked up at his daughter's wedding; it's the whole point. Hold your glass at waist height until the final "To [daughter's name] and [partner's name]," then raise it and look at them, not at the crowd.

If your hands shake, hold the glass with both. If you lose your place, look at your daughter and find it again.

Variations

2-minute short version (for a big wedding or a nervous speaker — cut to the bone):

I'm [name], father of the bride. For [number] years my job was to take care of [daughter's name]. Tonight someone else takes over, and I couldn't have picked better myself.

[daughter's name], you've always been [one true word] — and [partner's name], you make her happy in the quiet, everyday way that lasts. So welcome to the family. Everyone, raise a glass: to the two of you, long life and loud laughter.

To [daughter's name] and [partner's name].

Funnier, looser version — open with a roast before the heart. Swap the opening for:

They told me to keep this short, which is the first time anyone in this family has ever wanted me to talk less. I've prepared eleven pages. Don't worry — [partner's name], I'll only read the parts about you.

Then land three quick jokes about the cost of the wedding, your daughter's teenage years, or how long it took the couple to get engaged — before you pivot, hard, into the sincere ending above. The contrast makes the heartfelt part hit twice as hard.

Bottom Line

Use this when you want to honor your daughter, welcome her partner, and keep the room with you the whole way. The thing that makes it land is the one specific childhood memory — fill that bracket with something real and the entire toast comes alive.

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