Updated 2026-07-02
From the first fast to the Eid table, the season runs on connection — and half the family is usually a time zone away. These greetings travel by link and arrive with your voice in them.
Twenty-eight options below: Ramadan wishes, Eid al-Fitr celebrations, and lines for colleagues who want to say it right.
💡 Tap Send as a card next to any message to wrap it in a little gift they unwrap on their phone — free, no app, no signup.
Ramadan Kareem! May this month bring you peace, patience, and the sweetest iftars.
Send as a card →Wishing you a blessed Ramadan — may your fasts be easy and your prayers be answered.
Send as a card →Ramadan Mubarak! May the month soften hearts, steady spirits, and fill your home with light.
Send as a card →May every fast strengthen you and every night bring you closer to what you seek. Ramadan Kareem.
Send as a card →Ramadan Mubarak to you and your family — may the month be gentle and generous with you all.
Send as a card →Wishing you clarity, mercy, and beautiful suhoors this Ramadan.
Send as a card →Ramadan Kareem! Thinking of you through the holy month — may it bring exactly what your heart needs.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! May the feast be joyful, the family be gathered, and the blessings continue all year.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak to you and yours! Wishing you a celebration as warm as the month was meaningful.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! May your table be full, your heart be light, and your kids find all the eidi.
Send as a card →After a month of patience, a day of joy — Eid Mubarak, my friend!
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! Sending love, sweets, and every good wish to your whole family.
Send as a card →May Allah accept your fasts and prayers, and may Eid bring your family together in joy. Eid Mubarak!
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! New clothes, old recipes, full hearts — enjoy every minute.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak from far away — the table's missing us but the dua covers the distance.
Send as a card →Ramadan Kareem, Mama. Fasting in different cities, breaking bread in the same heart.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! Wish I were there for the morning chaos and the first bite. Video call after prayers — promise.
Send as a card →Sending Eid hugs across the miles — squeeze the little ones for me and save my share of the sweets.
Send as a card →Different time zones, same moon. Ramadan Mubarak, family.
Send as a card →Ramadan Mubarak! Wishing you a peaceful month — and easy afternoons through the fasting hours.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak! Enjoy the celebration with your family — you've more than earned the feast.
Send as a card →Happy Eid! Thank you for sharing the season's meaning with us — the office dates tradition is now permanent.
Send as a card →Ramadan Kareem! May the month bring you calm weeks and meaningful evenings.
Send as a card →Eid Mubarak to you and your loved ones — wishing you joy today and blessings all year.
Send as a card →Timing: Ramadan greetings land at the month's start; Eid Mubarak goes out the morning of Eid al-Fitr — after moon-sighting news, when phones light up worldwide.
For colleagues: 'Ramadan Mubarak' or 'Eid Mubarak' plus one warm wish is perfect — sincere and simple beats elaborate and unsure.
Long-distance families run this season on links: a greeting they open like moonrise — crescent, night sky, your words — carries the feeling a plain text can't.
Both are warm and widely used: Kareem wishes a generous month, Mubarak a blessed one. Either is appropriate from anyone, of any faith.
Eid morning is the classic window — after the moon is sighted and Eid is announced. The night before ('Eid Mubarak in advance') works for far-away time zones.
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