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Eulogy for a grandmother: templates and structure

You're here because you've been asked to speak about your grandmother, and she lived a long life full of people, eras, and small daily rituals. A eulogy for a grandmother can hold all of that without trying to list it. The room wants to hear what she was like, not when. This page gives you a sample eulogy for a grandmother, plus templates that work whether you are a grandchild, an adult child, or someone else who loved her.

Let our AI help you write it

Our AI generator asks you questions about your grandmother and produces a draft you can adapt for the service. It works for obituaries and eulogies. Edit the voice until it sounds like you.

Eulogy templates

Three fill-in templates for the most common eulogy lengths. Each is relationship-agnostic. Swap the placeholders for the specifics of your grandmother.

Short eulogy template (about 2 minutes)

About 160 wordsApproximate speaking time: 2 minutes

For when you want to keep it brief, or when you are one of several speakers. Around 2 minutes.

Good morning. For those of you who don't know me, I'm [YOUR NAME], [NAME]'s [RELATIONSHIP]. When I think about [NAME], the first thing that comes to mind is [SPECIFIC TRAIT OR HABIT]. Anyone who spent time with [HIM/HER/THEM] knows what I mean. It showed up in the small things. [ONE CONCRETE EXAMPLE]. There was a moment, [WHEN OR WHERE], when [SHORT MEMORY THAT CAPTURES WHO THEY WERE]. I think about that often. [NAME] taught me [SOMETHING SPECIFIC YOU LEARNED FROM THEM]. I see it in the way I [WHAT YOU NOW DO BECAUSE OF THEM]. [pause] If [NAME] could see this room today, [HE/SHE/THEY] would be quietly proud. Not because of the words being said. Because of the people saying them. Thank you for being here.

Standard eulogy template (about 4 minutes)

About 360 wordsApproximate speaking time: 4 minutes

The most common length. Long enough to tell a story or two, short enough to hold the room. Around 4 minutes.

Good morning, everyone. For those of you who don't know me, I'm [YOUR NAME]. [NAME] was my [RELATIONSHIP], and I want to tell you about the [HIM/HER/THEM] I knew. If you knew [NAME], you knew [HIS/HER/THEIR] [DEFINING QUALITY, e.g., quiet generosity, dry humor, fierce loyalty]. It was the through line of [HIS/HER/THEIR] life. You could see it in the way [HE/SHE/THEY] [SPECIFIC OBSERVABLE BEHAVIOR]. [pause] Let me tell you about one moment. [SPECIFIC MEMORY, 2-3 SENTENCES, WITH CONCRETE DETAIL]. That was [NAME]. Not performing. Just showing up. Again and again. The thing about [NAME] was that [HE/SHE/THEY] never thought of [HIMSELF/HERSELF/THEMSELVES] as remarkable. [HE/SHE/THEY] would have shrugged off most of what I'm saying right now. But that's part of why we're here. Because the people who make the biggest difference rarely know they're doing it. [NAME] taught me [SPECIFIC LESSON]. Not by saying it. By doing it. Every day, in small ways. I'm still learning from [HIM/HER/THEM]. [speaker note: pause here and look up] To [FAMILY MEMBER 1], [FAMILY MEMBER 2], and the rest of [NAME]'s family: thank you for sharing [HIM/HER/THEM] with us. [HE/SHE/THEY] was yours first, and we know what it cost you to lend [HIM/HER/THEM] to all the other places [HE/SHE/THEY] showed up. To everyone in this room: take a piece of [NAME] home with you. [ONE SPECIFIC LESSON OR HABIT]. Pass it on. That's how someone like [NAME] keeps going. [pause] I'll close with this. [FINAL IMAGE OR LINE, ONE OR TWO SENTENCES]. That's the [NAME] I'll remember. Thank you.

Long eulogy template (about 6-7 minutes)

About 620 wordsApproximate speaking time: 6 minutes

For when you are the primary or only speaker, or when the story really needs the room. Around 6-7 minutes.

Good morning. For those of you who don't know me, I'm [YOUR NAME], and [NAME] was my [RELATIONSHIP]. Thank you for being here. It means more than you know. I want to start with how I think about [NAME]. Not the resume. Not the obituary. The person. [NAME] was [DEFINING QUALITY]. You could see it in the way [HE/SHE/THEY] [OBSERVABLE BEHAVIOR]. It came out everywhere. At the kitchen table. At [HIS/HER/THEIR] work. In how [HE/SHE/THEY] greeted strangers. [ONE OR TWO MORE SENTENCES THAT MAKE THE QUALITY CONCRETE]. [pause] There are stories I could tell you all day. Let me share two. The first one. [DETAILED STORY, 4-5 SENTENCES]. That was [NAME]. Quiet. Steady. Doing the thing that needed doing without making a show of it. The second one. [DETAILED STORY, 4-5 SENTENCES]. I think about that day often. It tells you everything you need to know about [HIM/HER/THEM]. [pause] What did [NAME] mean to the people around [HIM/HER/THEM]? To [HIS/HER/THEIR] family, [HE/SHE/THEY] was [WHAT YOU OBSERVED]. [SPECIFIC EXAMPLE]. The kind of [FATHER/MOTHER/HUSBAND/WIFE/FRIEND] you don't really notice until you watch other people parent or partner or befriend and realize what you had. To [HIS/HER/THEIR] friends, [HE/SHE/THEY] was the person who [SPECIFIC BEHAVIOR FRIENDS WOULD RECOGNIZE]. The one who showed up. The one who remembered. The one who didn't make you ask. To me, [HE/SHE/THEY] was [PERSONAL DESCRIPTION]. [ONE OR TWO SENTENCES THAT GET AT YOUR RELATIONSHIP]. [speaker note: take a breath here] I want to say something about how [NAME] lived. [HE/SHE/THEY] didn't chase anything flashy. [HE/SHE/THEY] just kept showing up for [HIS/HER/THEIR] people. Day after day. That sounds simple. It isn't. Most of us don't manage it. [NAME] taught me [LESSON 1]. And [LESSON 2]. And, maybe most importantly, [LESSON 3]. I'm still working on all three. [pause] A few thank-yous before I close. To [FAMILY MEMBER 1] and [FAMILY MEMBER 2]: you took care of [HIM/HER/THEM] in ways that most people will never know about. Thank you. To the people from [WORK/COMMUNITY/CHURCH]: thank you for being part of [HIS/HER/THEIR] life. [HE/SHE/THEY] talked about you. To everyone here: thank you for showing up. [HE/SHE/THEY] would be quietly amazed by this room. [pause] I'll leave you with this. [FINAL IMAGE OR MEMORY, 2-3 SENTENCES, SPECIFIC AND CONCRETE]. That's what I want to remember. That's what I hope you remember too. [NAME], we love you. Thank you for everything.

Sample eulogy for a grandmother

Sample eulogy for a grandmother (warm, 340 words, about 4 minutes)

Warm~340 wordsAbout 4 minutes spoken
For those of you who don't know me, I'm Emma. Helen was my grandmother. Grandma had a phrase she used whenever any of us did something foolish, which, between her ten grandchildren, was often. She would look at us, sigh once, and say, "Well, you'll know better next time." She never said anything more than that. And she was always right. We always did know better next time. That was Grandma. [pause] She kept a house that smelled like bread on Sundays. There were lemon drops in the green dish on the side table. There was an afghan on the back of every chair. None of the chairs matched. She didn't care. She kept a list, in her handwriting, of every grandchild's birthday and what each of us liked. Mine said, "Emma. Peach jam. Hates raisins." She was the only person in our family who remembered I hate raisins. When my brother Daniel went through a hard year in college, she wrote him a letter every Sunday for ten months. Real letters. With stamps. He still has them. [speaker note: look up here] To my mom and Uncle Tim and Aunt Karen: thank you for sharing her with us all these years. We know what it cost. We saw. To my cousins: keep telling each other the stories. We grew up in her house as much as in our own. That's a thing not many families get. [pause] I'll close with this. I went to see Grandma three weeks ago. She wasn't sure who I was, but she held my hand and said, very softly, "Well, you'll know better next time." I don't know who she was talking to. I'm choosing to believe she was talking to me. Grandma, we love you. Thank you for ten grandchildren's worth of Sundays.

What works here

The repeated phrase "Well, you'll know better next time" gives this eulogy a structural anchor that pays off in the closing. Notice the inventory of small sensory details (lemon drops, the afghan, the green dish) which together build a complete picture without ever using the word "home." The Sunday letters and the personalized birthday list are specific enough to feel like only this grandmother could have done them. The closing line about the visit three weeks ago is honest about her decline and tender without being maudlin.

How to write a eulogy for a grandmother

  1. 1

    Opening: address the room

    Start by acknowledging why everyone is gathered and who you are. A line as plain as "For those of you who don't know me, I'm her daughter" gives the room a place to land. Set the tone in the first thirty seconds. The audience is following your lead.

  2. 2

    Who they were

    Move into character, not resume. What made this person them? A few specific traits, the way they laughed, the thing they always said. Skip the long list of jobs and accolades. You want the room to feel like they are about to remember someone real.

  3. 3

    Stories and memories

    This is the heart of the eulogy. One or two concrete moments told well will do more than ten general descriptions. The Saturday morning coffee. The exact thing they said when you brought home a bad report card. Specific beats universal every time.

  4. 4

    What they meant to others

    Widen the lens. What did this person teach the people in the room? What changes because they were here? Speak to the impact, not the inventory. This is where the family, friends, and neighbors hear themselves in the story.

  5. 5

    Closing: give the room something to hold

    End quietly. A final image, a short line of gratitude, or one sentence about what you want everyone to carry with them. Resist the urge to summarize. The closing should feel like an exhale, not a wrap-up.

Speaking time guidance

Most people read aloud at about 130 words per minute. Add a minute or two for the pauses you will not realize you are taking. Here is how the three template lengths land:

LengthWord countSpeaking time
short~160 wordsAbout 2 minutes
standard~360 wordsAbout 4 minutes
long~620 wordsAbout 6 minutes

Frequently asked questions

How do I write a eulogy for a grandmother I did not know well?

Lean on the people who did know her. Ask your parent, your aunts and uncles, or her closest friends for two or three specific stories. The eulogy can be honest about your relationship without dwelling on it. "I knew her in pieces, but the pieces I had are these" is an honest opening.

My grandmother had dementia at the end. Should I mention it?

You can, but you do not have to. If you choose to, one honest sentence is plenty. Then return to the person she was before. The eulogy is your chance to remind the room of who she was at the height of her life, not at the end of it.

How do I handle a grandmother who lived a very long life?

Pick a decade or a season, not the whole arc. A eulogy that tries to cover ninety years will feel like a Wikipedia entry. Choose two or three specific memories from your own time with her, and let the room infer the rest.

Should I read something my grandmother wrote, like a letter or recipe?

Yes, if you have something short and specific. A line from a letter, a card she wrote on a particular birthday, or even a phrase she always said works beautifully. Keep it under thirty seconds of read-aloud time. Less is more.

Related templates and examples

Related to Grandmother

Writing more than the eulogy? See Obituary template for a grandmother, Grandmother eulogy examples, and Newspaper submission guide.