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AI Wedding Speech Generator

AI Wedding Speech Generator — wedding speech writer. Powered by free AI, no signup required.

Your prompt

Free, no signup — describe whatever you need.

10 of 10 turns left this session
Session memory
Your chat stays in this browser tab only. Refresh the page or close the tab and it's gone — we never store conversations.
Conversation
Empty — start by sending a prompt

Start the conversation

Describe what you need on the left, hit Generate, and the response will appear here. Send follow-ups to refine — your chat keeps context for up to 10 turns.

  • Try: bride: ... · parent: ... · best man: ...

About AI Wedding Speech Generator

AI Wedding Speech Generator drafts a full wedding toast that blends warmth, humor, and a clear story arc. Tell it whose wedding it is, your relationship to the couple, and a memory or two, and it returns a 3–5 minute speech you can polish, memorize, or read straight from your phone at the head table.

Who this tool is for

  • Fathers and mothers of the bride or groom who have never written a speech before
  • Officiants writing the personal portion between the ceremonial vows
  • Siblings asked to give a "say a few words" toast at the reception
  • Couples writing thank-you remarks to deliver together before dinner
  • Wedding planners helping clients shape the speech lineup for a tight reception schedule

Real use cases

  • A father of the bride writing a 4-minute speech that opens with a childhood memory and closes with a toast to the groom
  • A long-distance sibling who only has 2 minutes between courses and needs something tight and emotional
  • A second-marriage couple writing a joint speech that thanks blended-family stepchildren by name
  • An officiant friend weaving 3 inside jokes into an otherwise traditional ceremony toast
  • A bride writing a thank-you speech to her mother that will be delivered during the bridesmaids' luncheon

How to use AI Wedding Speech Generator

  • Enter both partners' names, your relationship to them (e.g. "father of the bride," "college roommate of the groom"), and how long you have known each
  • Drop in 2–3 short anecdotes — the more specific the better ("the camping trip where she forgot the tent poles")
  • Pick the tone — Heartfelt, Funny, Balanced, or Traditional — and the target length in minutes
  • Generate the draft, then ask in chat: "give me a stronger opening line" or "add a line about her grandmother who couldn't be here today"
  • Read it out loud once — anything that trips your tongue gets rewritten by the chat in seconds

Tips for better results

  • Story beats list — one well-told memory lands harder than five generic compliments
  • Use the rule of three for laughs: two ordinary lines and a twist on the third gets the room going
  • Aim for 4–5 minutes max. Three minutes that the room remembers beats eight minutes they endure
  • Toast on the last sentence and raise your glass — that physical cue tells guests when to lift theirs

Frequently asked questions

Will it sound like a robot wrote it?

Not if you give it real anecdotes and your relationship details. The output reads like your voice when you feed it your actual stories — generic input gives generic output.

Should I memorize the speech or read it from a card?

Memorize the opening line, the closing toast, and any punchlines. Read the rest from a folded card or your phone — guests would rather you read warmly than panic when you forget a line.

How long should a wedding speech be?

Three to five minutes. Anything longer and the room cools down, dinner gets cold, and the next speaker resents you.

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