What to Write in a Get Well Soon Card
You bought the card. You opened it up. And now you're staring at the blank space inside, pen in hand, and your mind is completely empty. "Get well soon" feels too generic. "Hope you feel better" feels hollow. But you don't want to write a novel, either.
The truth is, when someone is sick or recovering, they don't need a Hallmark masterpiece. They need to know you thought of them enough to say something real.
For General Illness (Cold, Flu, Feeling Rough)
For Surgery or Hospital Stay
Send a digital get well card ✨
Can't visit in person? Send a free affirmation card straight to their phone. No sign-up needed.
Send a Free Card Now ✨For a Serious or Long-Term Illness
These situations require extra care with your words. Don't minimize, don't make promises, and don't try to find the bright side. Just be honest and present.
For a Coworker
For a Child
Funny Get Well Messages
Humor is medicine — but only use it if you know them well enough to know they'd appreciate it.
Send an anonymous, beautifully designed digital affirmation card straight to their phone.
What NOT to Write
- "At least it's not [something worse]." — Comparing illnesses never helps.
- "You'll be fine." — You don't know that. And they don't need false certainty.
- "I know exactly how you feel." — Unless you've had the same condition, you likely don't.
- "Have you tried [unsolicited health advice]?" — They have a doctor. Be a friend.
The Best Get Well Card Is the One You Send
Don't overthink it. The person on the other end isn't grading your card. They're lying in bed, probably bored and uncomfortable, and a message that says "I'm thinking of you" will make their whole day. Send the card. Write the thing. It matters more than you think.