‘Feliz Día de los Veteranos’ is the plain Spanish greeting, and “gracias por su servicio” adds heartfelt respect.
Veterans Day is a day for respect, gratitude, and careful words. If you’re writing to a veteran, speaking to a neighbor, or posting a short note, Spanish gives you a few clean options that sound natural.
This article gives you the standard greeting, how to say it out loud, and several short add-ons you can mix in without sounding stiff. You’ll see choices for formal “you,” friendly “you,” and group messages, plus card-ready lines you can copy.
When This Greeting Works And When Another Line Fits Better
In the United States, “Veterans Day” refers to November 11 and honors people who served in the armed forces. In Spanish, you can translate the holiday name and still keep the intent clear.
Use the greeting when you’re recognizing service in a respectful way. If your message is tied to a specific branch, a deployment, or a memorial event, pair the greeting with a sentence that matches that setting.
- Good fit: cards, short texts, school notes, workplace messages, quick in-person hellos.
- Better with an extra line: speeches, letters, awards, or when you know the person well and want a warmer message.
- Skip jokes: humor can land wrong on a day meant for honor.
How To Say ‘Happy Veterans Day’ In Spanish On A Card
The most direct Spanish version is: Feliz Día de los Veteranos. It maps cleanly to the English meaning and reads well on a card.
If you want a slightly more formal feel, you can write: Feliz Día de los Veteranos a todos when you’re speaking to a group, or Feliz Día de los Veteranos, señor/señora when you’re addressing one person with respect.
Spanish style often uses capital letters only at the start of a sentence, yet many cards use title-style caps for design. Either way is fine if your tone stays respectful.
Quick Pronunciation So You Feel Confident Saying It
Spanish pronunciation is steady once you lock in the rhythm. Here’s a simple guide that keeps you close to native sounds, even if you’re new to Spanish.
- Feliz → feh-LEES (stress on the last syllable)
- Día → DEE-ah (two beats; the accent mark shows stress)
- de los → deh lohs (light, quick)
- Veteranos → beh-teh-RAH-nohs (stress on “RA”)
Say the whole line with a smooth pace: feh-LEES DEE-ah deh lohs beh-teh-RAH-nohs.
Spelling And Accent Marks That Matter
Día carries an accent mark because the stress falls on the “i.” If you can type it, use it. If your device makes it hard, “Dia” is still understood in casual contexts, yet “Día” looks polished on print.
Veteranos has no accent mark. It follows standard stress rules: the next-to-last syllable is stressed when a word ends in a vowel, “n,” or “s.”
Saying Happy Veterans Day In Spanish With The Right Level Of Formality
Spanish gives you two main ways to say “you”: tú (friendly) and usted (formal). Your add-on line is where this choice shows up.
If you’re greeting someone older, someone you don’t know well, or a veteran at a ceremony, lean formal. If you’re speaking to a friend or family member, friendly wording can feel warmer.
Formal Add-Ons Using “Usted”
These lines keep a respectful distance while still sounding kind.
- Gracias por su servicio. (Thank you for your service.)
- Le agradezco su servicio. (I thank you for your service.)
- Que tenga un buen Día de los Veteranos. (Have a good Veterans Day.)
Friendly Add-Ons Using “Tú”
These lines fit close relationships and casual notes.
- Gracias por tu servicio.
- Te agradezco tu servicio.
- Que tengas un buen Día de los Veteranos.
One Detail That Keeps Your Message Smooth
In Spanish, “que tenga/que tengas” is a polite wish. It’s a clean way to extend the greeting without writing a long sentence.
Common Phrases You’ll See And What Each One Signals
Spanish has more than one way to express gratitude. Some lines sound formal, some sound personal, and some feel suited to a group message. Pick the one that matches your relationship and the setting.
Before you choose, think about two things: Are you writing to one person or many? Are you speaking face-to-face, sending a text, or writing a card that may be read aloud?
Veterano, Militar, Y Servicio: Picking The Right Word
In Spanish, veterano is the usual word for a veteran. You may also hear exmilitar for someone no longer on active duty, and militar as a broad term for a service member.
If you’re speaking to a person who is still serving, swap the holiday name and keep the gratitude line: Gracias por su servicio still works. If you’re writing to a mix of people, you can say Gracias a quienes han servido, which includes veterans and active-duty members without splitting hairs.
When you’re unsure which term fits, stick with the plain holiday greeting plus thanks. It stays respectful and avoids guessing details you may not know.
| Spanish Line | Best Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Feliz Día de los Veteranos | Any greeting | Direct and widely understood |
| Gracias por su servicio | Formal thanks | Use with usted; good for ceremonies |
| Gracias por tu servicio | Personal thanks | Use with tú; fits friends and family |
| Le agradezco su servicio | Written notes | Sounds respectful and a bit more formal |
| Te agradezco tu servicio | Warm texts | Feels personal without being gushy |
| Honor y gratitud en este día | Cards, speeches | A general line that stays dignified |
| Reconocemos su sacrificio | Group statements | Works for org posts and announcements |
| Con respeto, le damos las gracias | Letters | Good closing line before your name |
Short Messages You Can Copy For Texts, Cards, And Class Notes
Once you have the base greeting, you can build a message in two lines: greeting + gratitude. Keep it short so it reads clean on a phone screen or a small card.
Three Text-Length Options
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Gracias por su servicio.
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Le agradezco todo lo que ha hecho.
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Con respeto, gracias por servir.
Three Card-Length Options
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Gracias por su servicio y por cuidar de los demás.
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Hoy reconocemos su entrega con gratitud.
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos. Con respeto y aprecio, le damos las gracias.
Notes For Schools And Teachers
If you’re helping a student write a line, keep vocabulary simple and tone respectful. A good pattern is “Feliz Día…” plus “Gracias…” plus the person’s name.
If the note is going to a group of parents or guardians, choose a group phrasing like “a todos los veteranos” and keep the verb forms formal.
Choices For Groups, Announcements, And Public Messages
Group messages are common for workplaces, clubs, and school boards. In Spanish, plural forms help you speak to a whole group without sounding like you’re pointing at one person.
These lines can stand alone, or you can pair them with a short sentence about the event you’re hosting.
| Situation | Spanish Wording | Why It Fits |
|---|---|---|
| Poster headline | Feliz Día de los Veteranos | Short and clear |
| Group thank-you | Gracias a todos los veteranos por su servicio | Speaks to many people at once |
| School morning message | Hoy damos gracias a nuestros veteranos | Simple words for all ages |
| Event opening line | Con respeto, honramos a los veteranos en este día | Formal tone for ceremonies |
| Social post caption | Honor y gratitud para quienes han servido | Works without naming a holiday |
| Company email subject | Día de los Veteranos: gracias por su servicio | Reads well as a subject line |
| Moment of silence note | Guardamos un momento de silencio con respeto | Signals seriousness |
Grammar Tips That Prevent Awkward Mistakes
Small grammar choices can change the feel of your message. These tips keep your Spanish clean without turning your note into a grammar lesson.
Choosing “Su” Vs “Tu”
Su matches usted and shows formality. Tu matches tú and feels personal. If you mix them, the sentence sounds off, so pick one track and stay on it.
Using “Le” And “Te”
Le is a formal object pronoun that pairs with usted. Te pairs with tú. That’s why “Le agradezco” sounds formal and “Te agradezco” sounds friendly.
Plural Forms For Groups
If you want to address a group directly, you can say Gracias por su servicio and keep it general, or you can name the group: Gracias a todos los veteranos.
If you’re writing to people you know well, you may see plural forms like Gracias por su servicio, chicos. Keep group terms respectful, and skip slang in public messages.
Pronunciation Mini-Practice You Can Do In One Minute
If you want to say the greeting out loud, a short practice routine helps. Read each chunk once, pause, then say the full line.
- Say Feliz three times, keeping the “z” soft.
- Say Día three times, making it two beats.
- Say Veteranos three times, stressing “RA.”
- Say the full greeting twice at a steady pace.
If your tongue trips on “ve-te-,” slow down and tap the syllables with your finger. Speed comes later.
A Simple Checklist Before You Send Your Message
Use this checklist as a final pass. It keeps your note clean, respectful, and easy to read.
- Start with Feliz Día de los Veteranos.
- Add one gratitude line that matches your formality choice.
- Keep it to two or three sentences for a text or card.
- Check accent marks if you can type them.
- Read it once out loud to catch awkward rhythm.
Ready-To-Use Message Builder
Pick one line from each box and combine them. You’ll get a message that feels intentional without being long.
Box 1: Greeting
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos.
- Feliz Día de los Veteranos a todos.
- Que tenga un buen Día de los Veteranos.
Box 2: Gratitude
- Gracias por su servicio.
- Le agradezco su servicio.
- Con respeto, le damos las gracias.
Box 3: Optional Warm Finish
- Le envío mis mejores deseos.
- Con aprecio, gracias de nuevo.
- Que pase un día tranquilo.
Mixing the lines above gives you dozens of solid combinations. If you stick to one formality track (usted or tú), your Spanish will read smoothly for you.