A Eulogy Writer, When the Blank Page Is Too Heavy
A eulogy writer designed for the people who cannot face the blank page — not because they don't know what to say, but because they're too tired, too grieving, or too close to the loss to start. SpeechDrafter gives you structured drafts you can keep, edit, or use as scaffolding. Most people end up with something that's half ours and half theirs. That's the right way to use it.
- A dedicated eulogy intake with grief-aware prompts — we ask about what they loved, not their résumé.
- Religious / spiritual tone control — none, light, or prominent.
- Two revision rounds on Premium so the draft can get closer to their voice, paragraph by paragraph.
- Delivered instantly — because eulogies are rarely planned on a calm timeline.
What a eulogy needs to do
A eulogy helps the room remember who the person actually was. Not what their LinkedIn said — how they moved through the world, what they loved, what it felt like to be around them. The drafts SpeechDrafter produces are structured around that, not around a chronological summary.
Our eulogy intake asks for key life details, what they'd want the room to feel, any religious or spiritual tone preferences, and the stories you want included. We keep the draft anchored to those specifics instead of filling the middle with generalities.
A structure that works
Every eulogy we draft follows a structure that's been shaped by what actually lands: a grounding sentence about who you were to them, one specific story that captures something essential, what that story reveals about them, what you'll miss (specifically), and a short close that lets the room exhale. We don't summarize. We don't list. We let the story do the work.
A gentle note
You don't have to get this perfect. If you end up using one paragraph of ours and writing the rest yourself, that's a success. If you read one draft aloud and realize exactly what you want to say instead, that's also a success. The drafts are scaffolding. The voice is yours.
Start in one click
Pick your speech type and the right intake flow will load.
Common questions
Is it okay to use AI for a eulogy?
Using a tool to help structure a eulogy is no different from asking a friend who writes for a living to help you. The love in the speech comes from you — the tool is just scaffolding. Many funeral directors and clergy now recommend drafting tools as a way to reduce the weight of writing during grief.
How do I handle religious tone?
The eulogy intake has three options: none, light, or prominent. We adapt the closing, any references to faith, and the overall register to match. You can also specify particular phrasings or passages you want included.
Can I revise the draft?
Yes. Premium gives you two rounds of automated revisions — you send notes like "less about his career, more about the garden," and we re-draft. You can always edit the text yourself too.
How long should a eulogy be?
Three to five minutes for most services. The short length is a kindness — both to the room and to yourself. A tight five minutes says more than a wandering twelve.
Keep exploring
Skip the blank page.
Three to five polished drafts, each built around a different opening strategy. Delivered instantly. No account required.