# The Groom's Thank-You Notes: Who to Thank, What to Write, and When

> His half of the thank-you notes — how to divide the list together, the real three-month deadline, gift-acknowledgment wording, and ready templates for groomsmen, parents, and every gift-giver.

*Published 2026-06-24 · By Nathaniel Cross*

In short
Thank-you notes are a shared duty, not a job to hand off — etiquette is explicit that both your names belong on every card. The groom's natural share is his side of the family and friends, his groomsmen and best man, and any vendors or helpers he managed. The real deadline is **three months** (the "you have a year" rule is a myth, per Emily Post and The Knot), every gift-giver and even gift-less attendees get a handwritten note, and monetary gifts are acknowledged by their *use*, never their amount. A simple four-part formula — greet, name the gift, make it personal, thank again — turns the whole stack into a weekend's gentle work.

Somewhere in the quiet week after the wedding, a box of cards arrives at the desk, and a fair question follows: how much of this is his to do? The reassuring answer is that the groom owns a real, definable share of the thank-you notes — and that with a little structure, his half is far smaller and far easier than the dreaded image of a hundred blank cards suggests. This is his side of the job, written so you can hand it to him with confidence.

## Whose job is the groom's thank-you notes — and how do you split the list?

Etiquette has never made thank-you notes one person's responsibility. [The Knot](https://www.theknot.com/content/wedding-thank-you-notes-events) recommends dividing the list between the two of you, and the most natural division is the one that almost writes itself: each of you takes mainly your own family and friends, and you halve any guests you share. What is non-negotiable is that *both* of your names appear on every single card — in the body or the sign-off — no matter who held the pen.

For the groom specifically, his column of the list is clear and ownable:

- His side of the family and his closest friends.

- His **groomsmen, best man, and ushers** — the men who invested real time and money in the wedding party.

- Anyone he personally recruited or whose help he managed — a friend who ran the music, a vendor he booked, the host of an event on his side.

One small consistency rule prevents an awkward result: decide in advance who signs each card and hold a single voice across the whole batch. A pile in which some notes say "I" and others say "we" reads as inconsistent; pick "we" and both names, and write every note that way.

## Who actually has to get a thank-you note?

The list is broader than most grooms expect, and getting it right is most of the etiquette. The Emily Post Institute and The Knot agree on the full roster.

  Who gets a thank-you note — and how soon

      Recipient
      Note required?
      Timing

    Anyone who gave a gift (engagement, shower, or wedding)Yes — a separate note per giftWithin 3 months; sooner is better
    Group-gift contributorsYes — an individual note to each personWithin 3 months
    Guests who attended but gave no giftYes — thank them for being thereWithin 3 months
    Parents & anyone who contributed financiallyYesFirst couple of weeks
    Wedding party (groomsmen, best man, ushers)Yes — warm and personalFirst couple of weeks
    Shower or party hostsYes — a small gift may accompany itWithin 2 weeks of the event
    VendorsRecommendedWithin 2 weeks (or a week of returning home)

A few points trip grooms up. Each gift earns its own note, so a relative who gave at the engagement party, the shower, and the wedding receives three separate cards. Cash, a check, a contribution to a honeymoon or home fund, and a charitable donation are all acknowledged — you confirm the gift arrived without ever naming the amount. And the medium matters: for wedding gifts, the note is handwritten, full stop. No text, no email, no post on the wedding website.

## When are the groom's thank-you notes actually due?

This is the single most-asked question, and the answer corrects a myth: you do **not** have a year. [Emily Post](https://emilypost.com/advice/wedding-thank-yous) sets the standard at three months from the wedding or from receiving the gift, and The Knot, while noting the old "up to a year" idea, urges couples to send well inside that window and sooner where they can.

Within the three months, faster tiers apply. Gifts that arrive before the wedding — shower gifts especially — should be acknowledged as they come in, while the moment is fresh. Vendors are thanked within about two weeks, or within a week of returning from the honeymoon. Parents and the wedding party come first, in the opening fortnight. The reason for the urgency is human, not procedural: a note that arrives late lets the giver quietly wonder whether their gift was forgotten, which is precisely the small hurt the note exists to prevent.

The pace trick every etiquette writer recommends is to write in batches. Five to fifteen notes an evening clears even a long list painlessly; the same hundred-and-thirty notes attempted in one weekend become the chore everyone fears. A man who writes his share ten at a time, on a couple of quiet evenings, is done before he has noticed the work.

## What should the groom actually write — the four-part formula?

A blank card is intimidating; a formula is not. Etiquette writers at The Knot and [Hallmark](https://ideas.hallmark.com/articles/card-ideas/wedding-thank-you-messages-what-to-write-in-a-wedding-thank-you-note/) converge on the same four beats, and following them turns each note into a two-minute task:

- **Greet by name** and acknowledge their presence or effort.

- **Name the specific gift** — or, for money, name the *use*.

- **Make it personal** — how you will use it, what it meant, a shared memory.

- **Thank them again** and sign both names.

A few templates the groom can adapt:

**For a registry gift:** "Dear Aunt Carol — thank you so much for the cast-iron set. We have already broken it in on a Sunday roast and thought of you the whole time. It meant the world to have you with us. With love, James & Priya."

**For a cash or fund gift:** never the amount, always the use — "Your generous gift is going straight toward our honeymoon in Portugal, and we will raise a glass to you from a vineyard there. Thank you for being part of our day." For a charitable donation, name the specific charity in the note.

**For a groomsman:** "Thank you for standing beside me — and for keeping the whole morning calm when I needed it. Having you there meant more than I can put on a card." Pair it with his groomsmen gift if you are giving one.

**For parents:** thank the support, not a "gift" — "Thank you for everything, seen and unseen, that made the day what it was. We felt it all."

For the broader picture of what a groom owns across the whole wedding, see the [Groom's Role hub](https://groomatlas.com/grooms-role), which maps his traditional and modern duties from the marriage license to the toast. The thank-you notes are simply the last of those duties — the quiet, gracious close to the work, and one of the few that a guest will remember receiving for years.

## Sources

1. [Wedding Thank Yous](https://emilypost.com/advice/wedding-thank-yous)
2. [The Wedding Thank-You Card Etiquette You NEED to Know](https://www.theknot.com/content/wedding-thank-you-notes-events)
3. [Wondering About the Timeline for Wedding Thank-You Notes? Read This](https://www.theknot.com/content/canthank-you-notes-ever-be-overdue)
4. [15 Wedding Thank-You Card Wording Examples (Plus a Free Template)](https://www.theknot.com/content/a-complete-guide-to-sending-thank-you-notes)
5. [Wedding Thank-You Messages: What to Write in a Wedding Thank-You Note](https://ideas.hallmark.com/articles/card-ideas/wedding-thank-you-messages-what-to-write-in-a-wedding-thank-you-note/)
6. [Wedding Thank-You Notes: A Small Thing That's a Big Deal](https://www.herecomestheguide.com/wedding-ideas/wedding-thank-you-note-etiquette)

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Source: https://groomatlas.com/grooms-role/groom-thank-you-notes-guide
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
