Create Eid Mubarak (عيد مبارك) in 11 authentic Arabic calligraphy styles — Thuluth, Kufic, Diwani, Naskh, and more. Perfect for greeting cards, WhatsApp status, Instagram Story sticker text, and Eid decorations. Free PNG, SVG, and JPG download.
Eid Mubarak (عيد مبارك) is the universal Islamic greeting exchanged at both Eid al-Fitr (marking the end of Ramadan) and Eid al-Adha (marking the completion of Hajj). Rendering it in different Arabic calligraphy traditions gives your greeting a different emotional register — Thuluth carries ceremonial festivity perfect for family cards, Diwani adds courtly warmth for elegant invitations, Kufic gives a bold modern look for social posts and sticker text, and Naskh keeps it clean and readable for wide sharing. Try each style in the free Eid Mubarak calligraphy generator above and download the version that best fits your greeting card, sticker, or Eid decoration.
Thuluth is the most historically celebrated style for Eid Mubarak calligraphy — used in Islamic manuscripts and mosque decorations since the 11th century. Its long curving letters give the two-word greeting a sense of ceremonial festivity suitable for framed family gifts, Eid dinner invitations, and mosque signage. Select "Thuluth (Scheherazade)" in the generator above.
Diwani produces flowing, ornate Eid Mubarak calligraphy originally developed by Ottoman court scribes. Its decorative interlocking curves are perfect for elegant greeting cards, wedding-day Eid gifts, and premium print keepsakes. Choose "Diwani (Aref Ruqaa)" in the font dropdown.
Kufic gives Eid Mubarak bold, angular geometric weight — perfect for modern social media posts, minimalist wall decorations, and clean sticker text on WhatsApp status and Instagram Stories. Its clean lines work exceptionally well overlaid on lantern, crescent, or henna photos. Select "Kufi (Reem Kufi)" in the generator.
Naskh offers a clean, highly legible Eid Mubarak calligraphy — the same style used in modern Quran printings. It is the safest choice when clarity matters more than decoration, such as WhatsApp messages, community bulletins, and educational Eid materials. Choose "Naskh (Amiri)" in the font selector above.
Eid Mubarak in Arabic is written عيد مبارك, composed of two words: Eid (عيد), meaning "festival" or "recurring celebration," and Mubarak (مبارك), meaning "blessed." Together they form the greeting "Blessed Festival" — a warm wish exchanged between Muslims on both major Islamic holidays.
The two holidays where Eid Mubarak is spoken are Eid al-Fitr (عيد الفطر, "Festival of Breaking Fast") — celebrated on the first day of Shawwal to mark the end of Ramadan — and Eid al-Adha (عيد الأضحى, "Festival of Sacrifice") — celebrated during the Hajj pilgrimage in Dhul Hijjah. In both contexts, "Eid Mubarak" is the universal greeting, meaning you can use it for either occasion without further qualification.
You may also encounter Eid Saeed (عيد سعيد, "Happy Eid"), Eid Karim (عيد كريم, "Generous Eid"), and Kul 'am wa antum bikhair (كل عام وأنتم بخير, "May every year find you well") — all acceptable Eid greetings in Arabic. Eid Mubarak, however, remains the most widely used and understood across all Arabic-speaking regions.
Eid Mubarak (عيد مبارك) literally means "Blessed Festival" — a greeting that acknowledges Eid as a divinely blessed day and expresses hope that the recipient shares in that blessing. It is not a wish for material celebration alone; it is a spiritual acknowledgment that Eid is a gift from Allah after the discipline of Ramadan or the piety of Hajj.
The Arabic root of Eid is ʿ-W-D (ع-و-د), meaning "to return" — because Eid returns yearly on the same lunar dates. The Arabic root of Mubarak is B-R-K (ب-ر-ك), meaning "blessing" — the same root as the Arabic word for blessings themselves (barakat) and appears in phrases like "Allah yubarik" (may Allah bless).
In practice, "Eid Mubarak" is used the same way English speakers use "Merry Christmas" or "Happy New Year." It is spoken between family, friends, colleagues, neighbors, and strangers throughout the three days of Eid. Common responses include "Eid Mubarak to you too," "Wa antum min al-a'idin" (وأنتم من العائدين, "May you be among the returners"), or simply "Kul 'am wa antum bikhair."



This section covers how to turn the Eid Mubarak Arabic text you generate above into a shareable sticker — for WhatsApp, Instagram Story, or Telegram. Note: this tool creates the sticker text source (the Arabic calligraphy PNG). Turning that source into a platform sticker takes one extra step per platform:
Instagram Story (easiest) — Download the transparent PNG above. Open Instagram Story, tap the sticker icon, choose "Add Photo," pick the Eid Mubarak PNG, then drag and resize onto your background photo. Works for any lantern, mosque, or festive photo.
WhatsApp Sticker — Download the transparent PNG. Install "Sticker Maker for WhatsApp" (free, iOS + Android), tap "Create," import the PNG, and it converts to WhatsApp's .webp sticker format. Send directly to any chat.
Telegram Sticker Pack — Download the white-background PNG (or transparent). Open Telegram, message @stickers bot, use command /newpack, upload your PNG. It becomes a shareable sticker pack.
Recommended style combos: Kufic + solid color background works best for WhatsApp (bold and readable at small size); Diwani + gold on parchment for Instagram Story overlays (romantic and festive); Thuluth + high-resolution transparent PNG for Telegram sticker packs (traditional and premium). All downloads are free — no watermark, no sign-up, no account.
Eid Mubarak is pronounced "EED moo-BAA-rak" — two words with the stress on the first syllable of each. Eid is a single syllable rhyming with "seed" — a long "ee" sound followed by a soft "d." Mubarak is three syllables: moo-BAA-rak, with the middle syllable held slightly longer than the others.
The k at the end of Mubarak is a sharp, clean consonant (Arabic ك), not the softer English "k" in words like "back." Say it crisply. In casual speech across Arabic-speaking regions, some speakers shorten it to "EED moo-BAR-ak" — both are accepted. Related greetings you may hear alongside: Eid al-Fitr Mubarak ("EED al-FIT-r moo-BAA-rak") and Eid al-Adha Mubarak ("EED al-AHD-ha moo-BAA-rak").
Hand-picked Eid Mubarak designs across styles, colors, and use cases — from formal Eid dinner invitations to WhatsApp sticker text and Instagram Story overlays. Designs refresh on each visit.



















