A Wedding Speech for the Father of the Groom

A Wedding Speech for the Father of the Groom
The Occasion
This is delivered by the father of the groom at the wedding reception, usually after the best man and often just before or after the father of the bride. The room is full — both families now becoming one, old friends, a few people meeting for the first time. The tone is proud and tender, with room for one good laugh.
It is for your son, for the partner he chose, and for the family welcoming them. Aim for about ~3 minutes (~450 words spoken).
The Speech
Open by steadying the room, then speak straight to your son.
Good evening, everyone. For those who don't know me, I'm [Name] — [the groom]'s father. I've been told I get about three minutes, which is roughly two minutes and forty-five seconds more than I usually get to talk in our house.
Let them laugh, then turn warm.
[Son], I have watched you grow from a boy who [a specific memory — left muddy cleats by the back door, took apart the toaster to see how it worked] into the man standing here tonight. And I want you to know — your mother and I are not just proud of what you've done. We're proud of who you are.
Now bring in their partner. This is the heart of it.
[Partner's name], the first time you came to dinner, I watched my son across the table. He kept glancing at you to make sure you were laughing at the right parts of his stories. That's when I knew. He wasn't trying to impress you — he just wanted you to be happy. And you have made him happier than I have ever seen him.
Offer the one piece of real advice — short, honest, earned.
Here's the only marriage advice I'll give you both, and it took me [number] years to learn it: love isn't the big speeches. It's the small, boring, daily choosing of each other — on the ordinary Tuesdays, when no one is watching and nothing is easy. Choose each other on those days, and the good days take care of themselves.
Then welcome the new family in.
To [Partner's family], thank you for raising someone our son is lucky to spend his life beside. We don't think of this as gaining an in-law. We think of it as our family getting bigger — and better.
Close on the toast.
So if you'll all stand and raise your glasses. To [Son] and [Partner's name] — may your love be loud on the good days, steady on the hard ones, and stubborn enough to last a lifetime. We love you both. Cheers.
Make It Yours
- Swap the memory. That one specific childhood detail is what makes the room feel your son, not a stranger. Pick something only your family would know.
- Name the moment you knew their partner was right. A dinner, a phone call, the way your son talked about them — the more particular, the better.
- Prompts to spark specifics:
- What is one small thing your son does that proves the kind of man he is?
- When did you first see he was happier because of his partner?
- What is the most honest piece of advice your own marriage taught you?
Delivery Notes
- Pace yourself. Nerves make you rush. Speak slower than feels natural and breathe at the line breaks.
- Pause after the laugh line — let it land before you turn serious. Don't talk over the room.
- Find your son's eyes for the proud lines, then his partner's eyes for their passage. The whole room follows where you look.
- If your voice cracks, let it. Take a breath, smile, keep going. Nobody minds a father getting emotional at his son's wedding — it's the point.
- Use notes, don't memorize. A single card with your opening line, the three key beats, and the toast keeps you safe if emotion hits.
Variations
A 30-second short version, if the schedule is tight:
[Son], I'm so proud of the man you've become. [Partner's name], you make him happier than I've ever seen him, and our family is bigger and better for having you in it. Everyone, raise a glass — to [Son] and [Partner's name]. We love you both. Cheers.
For a longer or more formal version, add a brief thank-you to the venue and out-of-town guests near the top, and a short paragraph honoring anyone who couldn't be there. For tone: keep it lighter by leaning into one more affectionate joke about your son before the toast; keep it more solemn by trimming the humor and dwelling longer on the advice and the welcome to the new family.
FAQ
How long should a father-of-the-groom speech be? Two to four minutes is ideal — roughly 350 to 550 spoken words. Long enough to be heartfelt, short enough that the room is still with you at the toast.
Should the father of the groom or the father of the bride speak first? Traditionally the father of the bride opens the toasts, but order is flexible. Confirm with the couple and the MC beforehand so you're not caught off guard.
Is it okay to include a joke? Yes — one warm, affectionate joke early lands beautifully. Avoid anything embarrassing, anything about exes, or any inside joke the room won't understand.
What if I get too emotional to finish? Pause, breathe, take a sip of water, and keep going. A father tearing up is moving, not awkward. Notes in hand mean you can always find your place again.
Do I have to give marriage advice? You don't have to, but one honest, hard-won line often becomes the most memorable part. Keep it to a single thought rather than a list.
Bottom Line
A father-of-the-groom speech works when it is specific and true: one real memory, one genuine reason their partner is right for your son, and one toast you mean with your whole chest. Say it slowly, look them in the eye, and let the love do the rest.
