Memorial AI

When the words won't come,
we'll help you find them.

Multilingual grief support, tradition-aware service planning, and heartfelt tributes — shaped by the details only you know. Built for the hardest moments, not the easy ones.

What we can help with

Four ways we walk alongside you.

Whether grief is fresh or you're picking up the pieces a year later, whether you're planning the service yourself or the funeral home is — there's a place to start.

Why Memorial AI

Built differently on purpose.

Most AI writers are trained to be useful. Ours is trained to be careful.

What we won't say

We don't say 'they're in a better place'.

Our AI is trained on grief literature, not platitudes. It never minimizes, never rushes, never offers what you didn't ask for. When someone's in real distress, we surface the 988 hotline before anything else.

Words like them

Tributes that sound like the person you loved.

Every obituary, eulogy, poem, and service plan is shaped by the details you share — hobbies, quirks, family, stories, values. Generic memorial templates are easy. Capturing one specific life is the work.

Anyone, anywhere

Multilingual support across nine traditions.

Grief Support speaks English, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese. Service outlines cover Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh, Bahá'í, Indigenous, and Secular ceremonies — with the reminder to always consult your clergy.

Your path from here

From the first hard moment, step by step.

There's no wrong order, and no one is checking your timeline.

01

Start with a conversation

If words feel impossible, open Grief Support. Multilingual, crisis-aware, never saved. Pick a starter prompt, or say whatever first comes to mind.

Open Grief Support
02

Tell us about them

Add their name, dates, the things they loved, the way they made people feel. Quick-pick chips help when you're not sure what to write.

Create a Profile
03

Find the right words

Generate an obituary, eulogy, memorial poem, or service plan from their profile. Adjust the style, tone, and length until it sounds like them.

Write a Tribute
04

Carry the memory forward

Build keepsakes that last — a video tribute script, a memory book outline, a time capsule for the children. A public memorial page if the family wants one.

Explore Keepsakes
Common questions

Things people ask before they begin.

Do I need to sign up to use Memorial AI?+
Yes for most tools. Public memorial pages and the Traditions guide are open to everyone. Grief Support, arrangement management, and tribute writing all require a free account — that lets us keep your work private and tied to your profiles.
Is the grief companion a replacement for therapy?+
No. The grief companion is an AI trained for compassionate listening, not a licensed therapist. If you're in crisis or having thoughts of harming yourself, we surface crisis hotlines — 988 in the US, Samaritans in the UK, Línea de la Vida in Mexico, and others — the moment we detect distress. Always reach out to a real professional when you need one.
Which traditions and languages are supported?+
Service outlines cover nine traditions: Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh, Bahá'í, Indigenous, and Secular. Grief Support speaks English, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese. Anniversary remembrance posts can be written in any of the three. We add more by user request, not speculation.
Is the AI content respectful and editable?+
Always. Every piece is grief-aware and avoids common clichés ('they're in a better place,' 'time will heal'). All output is fully editable — adjust tone, length, style, or specific phrases. We treat the AI as a compassionate starting point, not a final word.
How is privacy handled?+
Grief Support conversations are not saved server-side, even though the page now requires sign-in. Memorial pages have three visibility tiers (public, unlisted-link, private) — families control discoverability. Tributes log a salted IP hash for moderation but never expose personal info. Account data is encrypted and never sold.
Wherever you are

You're not alone in this.

If you need to talk, start with Grief Support. If you're planning a service, start with Arrangements. If you just want to read about traditions, start there. There's no wrong first step.