Share the real details
Add your names, one memory, what you love most, and the promises you actually want to make.
Free AI wedding vows writer
Use this wedding vows generator to turn your love story, favorite memory, and real promises into personal vows you can edit, practice, and export as printable vow cards.
How it works
The flow follows how personal vows are actually written: gather the details, shape the draft, then make it easy to read at the ceremony.
Add your names, one memory, what you love most, and the promises you actually want to make.
Get a ceremony-ready first draft that speaks directly to your partner and stays easy to read aloud.
After you edit the wording, choose a card template and font for printable vow cards.
Wedding vows generator
Answer a few simple questions, then turn your story into vows you can edit, practice, and carry as clean printable vow cards.
Step 1
Examples by style
Use these examples as a flexible wedding vows template, not a script to copy word for word. Pick the style closest to your ceremony, then replace the sample line with your own memory, promise, and voice.
Quick writing rule
Short wedding vows still need one vivid detail.
A good short draft can be one memory, two promises, and one closing line. Longer personalized wedding vows can add a second story, but they should still stay easy to read from wedding vow cards.
Romantic
Romantic vows work best when the emotion is tied to a real detail. Instead of saying everything at once, choose one image from your relationship and let it carry the promise.
Sample promise
Try this line: I promise to keep choosing the quiet mornings, the big plans, and the ordinary days with you.
Use when the ceremony tone is tender, expressive, and openly emotional.
Heartfelt
Heartfelt vows should sound honest before they sound polished. Name what your partner has changed in your life, then make a promise that feels specific enough to keep.
Sample promise
Try this line: You have taught me how steady love can feel, and I promise to give that steadiness back to you.
Use when you want personal vows with warmth, gratitude, and a clear emotional center.
Modern
Modern or non religious wedding vows can be direct, conversational, and still ceremony-ready. Keep the structure simple: one memory, one truth, and a few promises for married life.
Sample promise
Try this line: I promise to be your teammate, your calm place, and the person who keeps showing up.
Use when you want vows that feel natural out loud instead of formal or scripted.
Funny
Funny vows need kindness underneath the joke. A light detail can make the room smile, but the point should always return to why you love your partner and what you promise next.
Sample promise
Try this line: I promise to laugh with you, listen first, and only pretend to be right when it truly matters.
Use when humor is part of your relationship and the joke will still feel loving at the altar.
Traditional
Traditional vows usually feel more composed, but they do not have to be generic. Use classic promise language, then add one personal detail so the words still belong to your relationship.
Sample promise
Try this line: I promise to honor you, stand beside you, and build a life of patience, trust, and joy.
Use when the ceremony is formal, family-centered, or built around classic vow language.
For every couple
Whether you want short wedding vows, funny but sincere wedding vows, or a more traditional promise, start from real details and make the final wording yours.
Personal vows
The best vows usually start with one true detail: how you met, a favorite memory, a habit you love, or a promise that feels concrete enough to keep.
Personal details
One memory can carry the whole promise
Start with something only the two of you lived, then build the vows around it.
Ceremony tone
Use romantic, heartfelt, modern, funny but sincere, or traditional direction to shape the draft, then edit the final wording until it sounds natural out loud.
Natural voice
Romantic, modern, funny, or traditional
Choose the tone that fits the ceremony while keeping the final words sounding like you.
Printable vows
After the words feel right, choose a card style and font so your printable vow cards are readable, steady, and ready for the ceremony.
Ceremony-ready
Printable cards for the altar
Use cards when you want something calmer and more intentional than reading from a phone.
FAQ
An AI wedding vows generator turns your story, memories, tone, and promises into a first draft you can edit. The goal is not to replace your voice. It is to help you start with vows that already feel personal enough to shape into your own.
Start with one real memory, name what you love about your partner, make a few specific promises, and end with a line about the life you want to build together. Concrete details usually feel more meaningful than a long list of generic compliments.
Most wedding vows work well at about 60 to 90 seconds when read aloud. Short vows can be closer to 30 seconds, while longer personal vows can run two to three minutes if the ceremony timeline allows it.
Yes. Gentle humor can make vows feel more like you, as long as it stays kind, specific, and respectful of your partner. Avoid private jokes that embarrass them or leave the room behind.
Yes. Choose Traditional for a more classic structure or Modern for a conversational, non religious style. You can also edit the result to match your ceremony, culture, and relationship.
Yes. The form uses names and partner language rather than assuming gender roles, so the vows can work for any couple.
Wedding vow cards are readable cards made from your final vows. They are useful when you want something steadier than a phone screen during the ceremony.
Your details are used to create the draft and are not shown in a public gallery. Avoid adding highly sensitive private information that you would not want included in the final ceremony text.