Best Obituaries: What Makes Great Obituaries and How to Write Them
The best obituaries share a common quality: they tell a specific, honest story about a specific person. They avoid generic phrases and instead anchor the life in real details — the job held for thirty years, the garden maintained with obsessive care, the laugh that carried across a room. Great obituaries do the same thing that great journalism does: they make you feel you know someone you never met. If you are preparing a sample obituary program for a memorial service or writing a notice for publication, understanding what separates the memorable from the forgettable matters. Creative obituaries challenge conventions and find fresh angles. Memorable obituaries endure because the details they chose to include were true and precise.
This guide covers the structural elements that make obituaries work, the tonal choices that define their character, and the practical steps for creating one that does justice to a real life.
What the best obituaries have in common
Specificity over generality
The best obituaries avoid sentences like “She loved her family and will be missed.” Every person who dies is loved and will be missed. The obituary that lasts is the one that says: “She drove three hours each Saturday to bring homemade soup to her sister’s family during the two years of her sister’s illness.” Specificity is the engine of resonance. When reviewing a sample obituary program or drafting from scratch, replace every general statement with a concrete detail.
Voice and tone that match the person
Great obituaries adopt a voice that fits the subject. A retired Marine colonel’s obituary reads differently from a folk musician’s. The best examples — many collected by journalism professors and published in anthologies — let the subject’s character determine the register of the prose. Formal, funny, tender, spare: the right tone is the one that would have made the person recognize themselves.
Elements of a well-structured obituary program
A sample obituary program for a funeral or memorial service typically contains these sections: the full name, birth and death dates and locations, a brief biography (career, community roles, key relationships), a list of survivors and predeceased family members, and service details (date, time, location). Print programs also often include a photograph, a chosen poem or scripture, and order-of-service details.
Keep the program concise. Guests hold it during the service and read it quickly. The full narrative obituary, published in a newspaper or on a funeral home website, carries the longer story. The program serves a different purpose: structure and remembrance at a specific moment.
What makes creative obituaries work
Creative obituaries break from standard format in ways that reflect the person’s actual life. First-person obituaries — written as if the deceased is speaking — work when the subject had a distinctive voice that family members can credibly reproduce. Obituaries structured as numbered lists work for people who thought in organized, categorical ways. Obituaries that open with a scene rather than a birth date work when the person’s life had a defining moment worth beginning with.
The risk with creative obituaries is that the form eclipses the content. Clever structure should serve the story, not replace it. The most creative examples still ground themselves in specific, verifiable facts about how the person actually lived.
Why memorable obituaries endure
Memorable obituaries circulate far beyond their original publication. They get shared on social media, reprinted in anthologies, and read aloud at memorial services years after the person’s death. What makes them circulate is not length or literary quality alone — it is the feeling that a real person has been seen clearly and described honestly. Memorable obituaries often include a detail so specific and so perfectly chosen that it makes readers who never knew the person feel a sense of loss anyway.
The New York Times’s “Overlooked” series has demonstrated this repeatedly, recovering people who were never given major obituaries in their lifetime and writing ones now that demonstrate exactly how specific detail transforms a name into a human being. Reviewing those examples is one of the best ways to study the craft.
Next steps
Before writing, interview at least two or three people who knew the person well and ask them for the most specific story they remember — not the most important, the most specific. That distinction usually produces better material. If you are working from a sample obituary program template, use it as a structural scaffold only and fill it with original language drawn from those interviews. Review your draft against the humanizer checklist: remove any phrase that could apply to anyone, and replace it with something that could apply only to this person.







