Rankite
ServicesResultsToolsTeamAboutBlogCareersContactFree SEO Audit
Free tool

Hashtag Generator: Wedding Puns to TikTok Tags in One Click

Pick a platform, enter your names or a topic, and get 15 to 20 ready-to-copy hashtags instantly. Free, no signup, click any tag to copy it.

Home / Tools / Hashtag Generator

Pick a platform, fill in the fields and hit generate.

Built by Rankite, the SEO team behind Swordfish AI's +400% revenue and Zluri's +45% organic growth. See the case studies

A good hashtag does three things: it is memorable, it is unique enough that strangers are not already posting under it, and it is easy to spell after someone hears it once at a reception or reads it once in a caption. The generator above builds tags that pass all three tests. Wedding mode turns your names into pun-based tags like #FinleyTiesTheKnot and #HappilyEverHernandez, while the platform modes mix your keyword into proven patterns for LinkedIn, TikTok, Instagram, Pinterest and X.

Wedding hashtag tips

  • Check that no one else has used it. Search your favorite tag on Instagram before you commit. If another couple already has 200 photos under it, your gallery will be mixed with theirs forever. Pick the next option on the list instead.
  • Put it everywhere guests will look. Print the hashtag on invitations, the welcome sign, table cards and the photo booth frame. Guests cannot use a tag they never saw.
  • Keep it under about 25 characters. Shorter tags get typed correctly more often, especially by relatives posting from the dance floor.
  • Capitalize each word. #JonesSaysIDo2026 is far easier to read than #jonessaysido2026, and CamelCase also lets screen readers pronounce each word for visually impaired guests.

Hashtags in 2026: what still works

Honest answer: hashtags matter less for raw reach than they did five years ago. Instagram now leans heavily on keyword SEO, reading the words in your caption and on-screen text to decide who sees a post, so a handful of relevant tags supports discovery rather than driving it. Platform guidance and social studies point the same direction across networks: on LinkedIn, 3 to 5 niche tags outperform a wall of broad ones; on TikTok, the winning recipe is a mix of one or two broad tags like #fyp with several specific topic tags; on Pinterest and X, tags mainly help users searching a topic or following an event.

Where hashtags still pull real weight is grouping and community: a wedding tag that collects every guest photo in one place, a branded tag your customers post under, or a recurring series tag your followers recognize. Use the generator to find a tag people can actually remember, then pair it with captions written around the words your audience searches. If you are doing this for a business and want to know how your whole online presence stacks up, grab a free SEO audit and we will show you what to fix first.

Related articles

FAQ

Hashtag Generator: questions, answered

How do I make a wedding hashtag?
Combine your last names with a wedding phrase, then capitalize each word: #SmithTiesTheKnot, #FinallyTheFinleys or #JonesSaysIDo2026. Puns on a last name are the most memorable, alliteration is the next best trick, and adding the year keeps it unique. The generator above builds 15+ options from your names in one click.
How do I check if a wedding hashtag is taken?
Search it in the Instagram search bar and on TikTok before you commit. If the tag shows existing posts from another couple, pick a variation: add your wedding year, swap in a different pun, or use first names instead of last names. A clean tag means your gallery contains only your wedding.
How many hashtags should I use on Instagram?
3 to 5 relevant hashtags beat 30 broad ones under current guidance. Instagram has said hashtags now play a small role in reach, and its ranking systems read your caption keywords instead. Choose a few tags that exactly match the post topic rather than stacking generic tags like #love or #instagood.
Do hashtags still work in 2026?
Yes, but for grouping and search more than raw reach. Wedding and event tags still collect every guest photo in one feed, LinkedIn tags still signal topic to its algorithm, and TikTok tags help its system categorize your video. What no longer works is spamming 30 broad tags and expecting viral distribution; platforms now rank content on caption keywords and engagement.
Should hashtags be capitalized?
Yes. Capitalizing each word, known as CamelCase, makes tags dramatically easier to read: compare #HappilyEverHernandez with #happilyeverhernandez. It also improves accessibility, because screen readers can pronounce each word separately for visually impaired users. Capitalization does not change how platforms match the tag, so there is no downside.

More free tools

Let's grow

Ready to own page one?

Get a free, no-obligation SEO audit and a 30-minute strategy session. We'll show you exactly where the growth is hiding.

Book your free audit Explore services
Get in touch

Tell us about your project

Fill out the form and we'll get back to you within one business day. Prefer email? Write to us directly at contact@rankite.com.

Or copy our email and write to us directly: contact@rankite.com