30 Eid Mubarak wishes to send to family and friends.
Eid Mubarak wishes that look great on custom cards and shareable designs.
Start with Eid Mubarak wishes that fit how you’ll send them.
Eid Mubarak wishes show up in a few different ways during the holiday. You might need one for a family card, a quick message for relatives overseas, or something more put-together for a photo post in your group chat after prayers. That changes how you want to express your greetings. A short line can work in a text and fall flat on a printed card, especially when you want it to feel more thoughtful and personalized.
Eid Mubarak wishes customized for the recipients.
Eid usually isn’t quiet or slow. You’re getting dressed, replying in family threads, helping with food, and figuring out who’s arriving when. Most greetings get sent somewhere in the middle of that. That’s why a lot of them end up sounding interchangeable. A plain “Happy Eid” text works for some, but not for everyone. If you’re sending it to family or friends, you don’t see much, it’s better when it feels a bit more personal. With Adobe Express, you can quickly turn a basic Eid wish into something that feels more authentic.
Eid Mubarak templates are useful when you need a starting point. One of the quickest ways to personalize it is image masking. Replace the stock artwork with a clear photo of your family. You can also use a snapshot of the dessert table, then crop it into one of the shapes already built into the template. These changes make the design more closely tied to your actual celebrations than adding extra icons or decorative text (though if you’re into that, it could work as well).
For a community potluck or a neighborhood Eid gathering, designing greetings on flyers makes more sense. People are looking for the basics first. Keep the Eid greeting upfront. Put the time, place, RSVP, and what to bring below, grouped for easy reading. Use the rule of thirds to keep the flyer open, not cramped. If there's a detail like a pavilion number, place it right with the address – don’t hide it in tiny print.
And if an Eid greeting needs more space than a card gives you, design a poster. It works better when it’s going on a wall, a table display, or even a social post that needs to catch the eye fast. The color choice matters here. Use a dark green base, keep the gold muted, and add terracotta only in small touches, such as a border or corner detail. That color mix is usually associated with Eid Mubarak celebrations. It also prints more cleanly than layouts packed with bright colors fighting each other.
Add this greeting to a custom card maker. Leave enough room around the Eid Mubarak wish and shift the text slightly off-center so the layout doesn’t feel too flat. To make the card more personal, use the remove background feature on a photo from your family’s Eid setup. Place the greeting behind the text in a faint layer so it supports the message instead of competing with it.
Use a letter template for this so you’ll have room for more context. Pair a serif header with a simple sans-serif body to make the greeting stand out. If you want more “texture,” add a geometric pattern and lower the opacity until it sits behind the text.
Design this greeting on a welcome poster, but ensure people can read the greeting from a few steps away. Use large type, strong contrast, and a simple layout. Deep navy on warm cream works well for that. If you’re posting the same design online, resize the image and make a square version of the same file.
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Family Eid Mubarak wishes recognize the real, loud, imperfect ways a home celebrates together.
A lot of family Eid memories come from the parts nobody plans that carefully. Your older sister is still in the kitchen baking a date bundt cake, while another cousin is asking where their shoes went. An abundance of food is always on the counter, along with envelopes on the table. Capturing that energy in your family Eid Mubarak wishes requires more than a stock image. Go for the real setting – your own photos, color choices, and the bits and pieces of the celebration that your family would instantly recognize.
If you’re pressed for time while juggling side dishes, you can use an AI card generator in Adobe Express. Skip generic prompts. Describe your family’s real Eid scene, like “a long table with homemade desserts and sunlight streaming in.” This way, the image generator can mirror your surroundings and create a visual connection to them.
If you want to give your cousins a public shoutout, a quick social media post is your best bet. Forget the polished, centered group shot. Go for an off-center, slightly on the left photo of everyone having a good time. Use a bold, eye-catching color block on the right to design your family Eid Mubarak wish.
And if you’re hosting the whole family, set up a physical or digital banner to mark out the celebration. A balanced color-block wins here. Use a calm, neutral shade to fill most of the space, layering in a festive color for a splash of tradition. Finish it with a hint of something bright – gold or turquoise – around your Eid Mubarak greeting.
This is a good line to add to an Eid invitation. Use the text effects feature to apply a subtle ‘gold foil’ texture to the word “blessing" to make it pop. To avoid the hectic morning of Eid, add a digital map link or a pinned location directly to your design if the family is gathering at a new venue.
This wish works great on a lived-in photo collage. Use the grid feature to mix candid photos of the kitchen prep with a central image of the family in their new clothes. Add a single filter across all the photos, like a warm, vintage look, to make disparate images from different devices look like a cohesive set.
Print this message on small banners to hang over the dessert table or the gift station. Leave a 2-inch “safe zone” at the top of your layout so you can punch holes for ribbons without cutting through the text.
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How to turn Eid Mubarak wishes into shareable designs with Adobe Express.
Eid al-Adha Mubarak wishes acknowledging the resilience and dedication of those in your life.
A lot of Eid al-Adha celebration shows up in work before it shows up in greetings. The kitchen starts early. People are carrying food, checking the timing, dividing the meat, dropping off portions, coming back, then heading out again. Someone is always waiting on one more thing. The same kind of patience is needed when choosing Eid al-Adha Mubarak wishes. These messages reflect the full day, not just the polished part. Sharing these wishes digitally requires a medium that captures the day's movement and energy.
One way to do so – and in a lighthearted way – is to add animated characters in your family group chat. Inject your personality into your wishes with zero design skills or high-production-high-cost video. Create a stylized character holding a traditional dessert plate and set its animation path to “float” gently behind your message. You can even animate your voice for the full effect.
If you want a more immersive look, create an Instagram Reels documenting the vibe from the morning bustle to the evening feast. Beat-match your transition to get a before-and-after effect. This can be applied to food, venue, or outfit transitions. You can use these Eid card ideas to find layout inspirations to overlay onto your video clips as semi-transparent stickers.
Add this greeting to your TikTok video. Use the green screen effect to overlay the text over a time-lapse of your family gathering. Use timed text so the phrase “prayers be answered” appears exactly on a shot of everyone sitting down to eat.
Use a video editor to stitch together short clips of your “day in the life” during Eid. Adjust the speed of each video to give each moment a time to shine. Use a sans-serif font to write this message so the devotion remains the focal point.
This is a great Facebook post to greet extended relatives and friends. Use color masking to make the text pop against a busy holiday photo. This makes the message accessible, especially for older family members who might be viewing the post outdoors.
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Personalizing your Eid Mubarak wishes through DIY projects.
Sending a quick text is efficient, but it lacks the staying power of a physical memento. You and your family can touch, display, or keep these tangible reminders of your Eid celebration. It will consume your time, but being a “maker” – and not just a “sender” – can definitely bring joy to your loved ones. Whether you’re prepping for a large gathering or sending packages to relatives abroad, here are cool DIY projects that will make you forget store-bought cards exist.
- Custom seed package greetings. Ditch the flat card, instead use a flyer template to make a small seed packet that can hold herb seeds like coriander or mint. Add a tear-off strip at the bottom, and use the upper part to write your wishes. This gives the greeting a second use instead of ending as just another card.
- The Eid al-Fitr currency sleeve. Make custom currency sleeves for Eidi instead of the generic red envelopes. Size them to the bill so they fit snugly. For the border, use a repeating dessert photo of a dessert your family loves, like sheer khurma. You can also play around with specific graphics like dates, nuts, and cookies. To add a bit of a surprise, generate a code and add it on the inner flap that opens an Eid morning playlist when scanned.
- Interactive placement wishes. For a community potluck, create A3 posters that double as disposable placemats. Keep the middle clear for the plate, then use the outer edges for short conversation prompts or gratitude notes people can read while they eat. You can also add a pale yellow line or message that only becomes fully visible when shot on a smartphone.
- Aromatic lantern tags. Make small hexagonal gift tags you can print, cut, and tie to glass lanterns or olive oil bottles. For the design, try cutting the “Eid” greeting out of the paper or writing it by hand. If you want to add something extra, lightly mist the back of the tag with a bit of oud or rose water.
- Recipe-exchange postcards. Elevate your recipe card into a double-sided postcard. Put a clear photo of your dish on the front, then use the back for the full recipe. You can add a QR code that links to a short clip ASMR of the cooking process, just enough to show the key steps. Include a small notes section so the recipient can add their own tweaks or ingredients before sending it back. This turns a simple greeting into a multi-year culinary conversation.
- Memory-jar labels. If you’re hosting, print a set of clear sticker labels for guests to use on a shared jar to write down a short memory from the day. You can also add a small calendar mark on each label with both the Islamic and Gregorian dates.
What to do with Eid Mubarak wishes after the celebration.
Post-Eid celebration doesn’t have to live only in your camera roll. Beyond sorting the photos in a specific album on your phone, you can preserve the memories in different ways:
- A day-in-review video montage. Use a video editor to stitch together clips of the celebration. It’s great to add the “bloopers” reels here, or the unpolished, chaotic moments. You can use the text overlay feature to date-stamp each clip, creating a chronological documentary of the day.
- A digital guestbook collage. If you’ve received tons of “Eid Mubarak” greetings in group chats, private messages, and social posts, don’t delete them. Create a digital collage to collate the wonderful messages you’ve received. Screenshot the messages and upload them to the tool so you can easily add dates, icons, and other photo effects.
- A shared photo drop. The inevitable “send me the photo, okay” reminder will show up post-Eid. You can easily solve this by creating a digital flyer with a large QR code that links to a shared cloud folder. Invite the entire family to send and share photos from their phones so everyone has copies of the celebration.
How to send Eid Mubarak wishes as a non-Muslim friend.
When you want to send Eid wishes to a Muslim friend, coworker, or neighbor, keep the message simple and genuine. Don’t try to sound ceremonial or prove you know all the right phrasing. A respectful note about peace, family, or a good celebration is often enough.
- If you want to post a social media greeting, avoid generic icons like wine glasses or party poppers. If you want to add graphics or icons, search for specific festive symbols, such as a crescent moon or a cup of tea.
- Customize an Eid Mubarak card template if you want to say something beyond “Happy Eid.” You can add a practical, lived-in message that hopes for your friend’s Eid feast to be rewarding and joyous. You can use muted color palettes, like sage green, to keep the design grounded.
- If you’re invited to an Eid feast, your “wish” can be a physical thing. It can be a printed tag attached to a gift. If you’re bringing in food, add a small ingredient card so the other guests don’t have to guess. Use a clear, legible font, too, so the list is easy to read.
- If you’re part of a diverse group chat, a simple “Eid Mubarak to everyone celebrating” is the most effective greeting. You can add simple text features to elevate it or create your own GIF.
- Don’t expect an immediate reply to your greeting. Many of your friends who are celebrating are either busy or are intentionally stepping away from their phones to focus on prayer and family time.
- Be mindful of what you share online as a guest. This is especially true when gifts are exchanged. You can blur certain parts of your video, especially denominations or brand names. This allows you to share the joy of the tradition while maintaining everyone’s privacy.
Eid Mubarak wishes are easier to make and share with Adobe Express.
Making your own Eid Mubarak wishes does not have to turn into a big design project. You can start with a template, tweak the wording, and swap the colors to get something ready pretty fast. That helps when you need a digital greeting for the same day or a printed card without spending an hour fixing the layout.
Adobe Express makes the steps easy to follow, even if design is not in your wheelhouse. There are plenty of templates to work from, so you are not stuck staring at a blank page or trying to build everything yourself.