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Eulogy Writing AI

Struggling with what to say at a funeral?
This tool helps you write a heartfelt eulogy in minutes — not hours.

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No login required. Private and respectful.

Why This Exists

Writing a eulogy is hard. Especially when your heart is broken.

This free, compassionate assistant walks you through it — gently asking who you're remembering, how you were connected, and what mattered most. In just minutes, you’ll receive a complete eulogy you can read aloud with confidence and grace.

Real Lines from Real Eulogies

“John was an old-school man — the kind they simply don’t make anymore. Solid, steady, and full of quiet strength.”

“When I held her hand, I felt love in its purest form. Though her time here was brief, her impact is forever.”

“He taught us, without trying, that being dependable is one of the greatest things a person can be.”

Each eulogy is handcrafted from your story — no AI fluff, just human dignity.

Begin in Seconds

You don’t have to do this alone. Let us help you find the words.

Start Writing with Eulogy Writing AI

Prefer a book in your hands? View the companion guide

Eulogy Writing FAQs

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A eulogy expresses love, respect, and gratitude. Share stories, qualities, and the meaning they brought to others. Keep it warm, specific, and human.

Introduction (who you are), Body (stories and qualities that define them), Conclusion (a short farewell or closing thought).

Opening & introduction, brief life summary, personal memories that reveal character, and a closing reflection with thanks or a blessing.

A balanced, story-led tribute. For example: “My father taught me that kindness doesn’t need an audience. He lived quietly, helped others freely, and loved us deeply — and that’s how I’ll remember him.”

1) Gather memories 2) Choose tone 3) Outline 4) Draft naturally 5) Add vivid stories 6) Edit 7) Practise aloud.

Close family or friends (spouse, child, sibling, lifelong friend). A celebrant or minister can present it on the family’s behalf.

Aim for 5–7 minutes — around 600–900 words at a calm, heartfelt pace.

Typically 600–1,000 words. Depth and clarity matter more than length.

Breathe slowly, pause if needed, anchor your eyes on friendly faces, and read from a printed copy. Tears are human — not mistakes.

Avoid criticism, private disputes, or risky humour. Keep the focus on love, gratitude, and remembrance.

Speaking too long, reading too fast, relying on clichés, centring yourself instead of them, and not pausing to breathe.

Simple and genuine works best: “Thank you for being here today to honour my mother’s life.”

End with hope, love, or gratitude: “We were lucky to love you — and we’ll keep your light with us always.”