How to Write a Eulogy for Your Brother
A brother eulogy is a particular kind of writing (you knew him longer than almost anyone in the room, and the people who raised you both may be in the front row hearing it. This guide is built for the speaking side as much as the writing) what holds up read aloud, and how to get through the few minutes at the front of the room.
Writing a eulogy for your brother
Sibling grief is often the overlooked grief in the room. The focus tends to gather around parents, around a spouse, around children. The brother left behind, or the sister speaking for him, is sometimes the last person anyone thinks to check on. And yet you are the one holding the childhood: the version of him before partners, before careers, before he was the adult version of himself. The eulogist for a brother carries something specific: the family historian who has just lost their oldest witness.
If you were close, the difficulty is mostly speaking through it without losing your voice. If your relationship was complicated: many brothers are, distant for years, reconciled late, never quite reconciled at all. The difficulty is also choosing what is true and what can be said in public. Both versions are normal. A eulogy does not have to flatten him into a simpler brother than he was. It only has to be honest in the parts you choose to say aloud.
It does not have to be perfect. The people in the room are not grading you. They will be grateful that the person who knew him the longest stood up and spoke for him.
What makes a good brother eulogy
The room will already hear the parents' version of him, the partner's version, the friends' version, the colleague's version. Yours is the only one that holds the childhood. That is what to anchor on. A moment from before adulthood, or the way he changed across the decades from the boy you grew up with into the man people will remember today. Three to five minutes is usually right. Four hundred to seven hundred words. Anything longer and the room loses the thread; anything shorter often feels like you were not quite ready.
Specificity is what carries a eulogy. "He was always funny" lands nowhere; the exact joke he made at every family dinner, the impression he did of one specific uncle, the noise he made when he was about to lose an argument, those land in the chest. The room does not need to be told what kind of brother he was. They need to be shown.
Give the room the brother-side that only you have. The childhood truth no one else can speak to, the way he was with your parents, the way he grew up and the way he never quite did. Other people will speak to the friend, the partner, the colleague. You are the one who holds the brother. That is what the eulogy is for.
Memory prompts for a brother eulogy
Pick the ones that come back as a scene rather than a sentence. Eulogies need moments you can see, not summaries.
- How he was as the small boy you grew up with, before anyone in the room knew the adult version of him.
- What only siblings know, a hiding place, an obsession, a fear, a fight no parent ever heard about.
- How he treated your parents as a child, as a teenager, as an adult, what changed, what never did.
- The thing he was always going to do, and whether he ever did it.
- His humour, especially the kind only family laughed at, the impressions, the running joke, the verdict he gave on every aunt.
- How he aged into being like or different from your father, what he picked up, what he refused to pick up.
- A fight that mattered, and whether you came back from it, and what that looked like.
- Something he kept from your parents that you knew, and that can still be said aloud now.
- What he was like alone with you, away from everyone else.
- What he passes on through you, without anyone noticing.
Structure for delivery
A eulogy is written to be heard, not read. Build it for the room.
- Aim for three to five minutes, about four hundred to seven hundred words. Time it; do not guess.
- Open with a single specific image or moment, not "we are gathered here today" or "where do I even begin". Put the room in a scene with him immediately.
- Build the middle from two or three stories that show who he was, not what he did. Stories beat lists when read aloud.
- Address your parents at some point if they are there, a sentence, a gesture, a glance. The eulogy is to the room, but a brother eulogy is partly for them.
- Use short sentences. Long sentences fall apart when your voice catches.
- Read it aloud as you write it. Anything that sounds wrong out loud needs to be cut or simplified.
- Close briefly, a final tribute, a line addressed to him directly, or a charge to those listening. Do not trail off.
- Print it large (sixteen point or bigger, double-spaced, on numbered pages) so you can find your place if you look up.
If a blank page is too much
If staring at a blank page is the part you cannot do, you do not have to start there. Cherished Book's AI generates a respectful first draft from a few questions about your brother: you shape it into something that sounds like you, cut what is not yours, and read only what you choose to read. The AI never publishes anything; it just gives you something to push against so the writing is not the hardest part of the day.
Preparing to deliver it
The writing is half of it. The other half is getting through the reading.
- Read it aloud at least three times before the day, once to yourself, once to one person, once standing up.
- Time yourself every time. Under five minutes is the goal.
- Mark pauses, breaths, and the lines you know will catch you. A short note in pencil before a hard sentence will slow you down at the right moment.
- Bring a printed backup. Do not trust your phone, screens lock, batteries die, hands shake.
- Designate another sibling or a cousin as a back-up reader who can step in and finish if you cannot. Tell them in advance. Cousins know enough of the family voice to make it work.
- Stand somewhere stable. Use the lectern if there is one. Put both feet flat and your weight evenly on them.
- Look up at your parents at the start and at the close. Read the middle to the page if you need to. A glass of water within reach, a pause is fine.
Last reviewed June 2026.
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