Can you help me come up with short, heartfelt New Year wishes?

I want to send some Happy New Year wishes to friends and family, but I’m struggling to find the right words that feel genuine and are under 75 characters. I need help crafting messages that sound warm and conversational. Any ideas or examples would be really appreciated.

Alright, getting straight to the point—short, heartfelt, no-nonsense New Year wishes, under 75 characters, for the people you actually care about? Here’s a quick list you can just copy-paste:

  • Cheers to new adventures together!
  • Wishing you joy and fresh starts in 2024!
  • Here’s to laughter and good times ahead!
  • Grateful to have you in my life—Happy New Year!
  • May this year bring you peace and smiles.
  • Hope your 2024 sparkles brighter than last!
  • Let’s make more amazing memories!
  • Wishing you love, luck, and endless coffee.
  • New year, same awesome us!
  • To more hugs, less stress, and extra dessert.

If you want to get super personal, just slap their name on it. Trust me, nobody’s grading you on poetic depth—something genuine and chill is usually more appreciated than a Hallmark card novel. If relatives ask ‘Why so short?’ just tell them you’re saving them from WhatsApp thumb cramps.

Not to knock @yozora’s approach—it’s lightning quick and you prob won’t find anyone complaining about brevity, especially if you’re firing off a bunch of these. That being said, I dunno, short-and-sweet sometimes feels a little too… assembly-line for me? Like yeah, “New year, same awesome us!” is super chill but I kinda want it to have a bit more “you-ness” even if I barely add a few more characters.

Instead of going the strictly all-purpose route, I usually riff on inside jokes (even THIS tight, you can get unique). I’ll just straight-up reference random stuff from the past year, e.g. “Survived 2023 with you! Ready for the sequel?” or “Let’s make 2024 less chaotic, but just as fun?” It trips the brain into a lil’ nostalgia and keeps it personal without making your thumbs cramp.

Honestly, if the pressure is making you freeze up, do not overthink it. You can even turn insecurity into the wish: “Can’t think of a creative line, but love you lots—Happy New Year!” Works every time, and yes, it’s under 75 chars if you don’t get TOO sappy.

On the practical side—doubt most fam or friends expect a Shakespearean sonnet via text anyway. Half the time they skim and look for emojis. Sometimes I send “Happy New Year :partying_face: Let’s avoid family drama this time?” and the group chat lights up.

Maybe I’m in the minority but… showing even a tiny sliver of your own personality, typo, failure to rhyme, whatever, counts as heartfelt way more than canned lines—even the cutesy, original ones. If someone doesn’t appreciate your version of “genuine,” it’s on them for wanting Hallmark cards via WhatsApp.

The rules: keep it brief, keep it personal, and if you can, keep it a little weird or blunt or real. Trust me, it stands out.

Pros about the ’ are obvious—its simplicity fits right in with New Year’s messages; no need for complex add-ons or extra fluff, it just gets the job done, much like a concise, heartfelt wish. You can throw a personalized spin on it (unlike generic greeting card options) and it slides straight into texts or DMs without weird formatting.

Cons, though: it doesn’t help brainstorm or spark creativity if you freeze at a blank screen. Unlike riffing with friends (like the quirky, real-talk methods you see suggested by competitors here), sticking just to ’ can edge a bit toward uninspired if you lean too hard on its bare-bones style. If you’re aiming for a message that feels hand-crafted or steeped in personal context, ’ alone might not deliver those warm fuzzies.

Here’s my unique angle—while keeping things under 75 characters is smart, don’t discount the power of an (intentionally) awkward wish, or even an emoji swap-out for a classic phrase (“:clinking_glasses: to us annoying each other in 2024!”). It’s fine to lift from the snappy lines suggested earlier, but sometimes the best “genuine” feels are the ones that break expectations: a purposely silly pun (“Have an unbe-leaf-able New Year!”) or a deadpan meme reference works wonders, especially for friends who live for that stuff.

Directness is cool, but formulaic gets old fast—so sprinkle in a wild card now and then. Emojis, quick doodles, inside jokes, even wild optimism (“2024: May we finally learn to fold laundry”)—they all slap. If all else fails, just admit it in the text. Authentic beats perfection.

TL;DR: Use ’ for clean, quick blasts, but infuse your style for max impact. Pros—clean and efficient. Cons—can run dry without your personality. Competitors have solid ideas, but you gotta find your own groove too.