Funeral Songs: 30 Meaningful Choices for Any Service

Choosing music for a funeral is one of the most personal decisions you'll make. Here are 30 songs — from classic hymns to uplifting pop — to help you find what fits.

May 3, 2026·10 min read
Funeral Songs: 30 Meaningful Choices for Any Service

Choosing music for a funeral might be the most personal part of the whole service. A single song can carry a lifetime — a shared taste, a running joke, a love story, a faith. Getting it right matters, and there is no single correct answer.

This guide covers 30 songs organised into four sections: traditional hymns, timeless favourites, contemporary choices, and uplifting songs for services that feel more like a celebration of life. Each entry includes a brief note on why families tend to choose it, so you can find what actually fits your loved one — not just what's popular.

The right funeral song is the one that sounds like the person you're saying goodbye to.

Traditional Hymns

Hymns remain the most chosen music at UK funerals, even in services that aren't strictly religious. They offer communal comfort — something familiar the congregation can hold onto together.

1. Abide with Me

Possibly the best-known funeral hymn in Britain. Henry Francis Lyte wrote it knowing he was dying, which gives the words a raw honesty that still resonates. The line "where is death's sting? where, grave, thy victory?" isn't triumphant — it's questioning, and that's why it lasts.

2. Amazing Grace

Written by a former slave trader turned abolitionist, Amazing Grace carries a message of profound change and forgiveness. It works beautifully as a congregational hymn, a solo, or played on solo bagpipes. Few songs quiet a room like this one.

3. The Lord is My Shepherd (Psalm 23)

The most familiar of the psalms, and one of the most requested pieces at UK funerals. Whether sung to the Crimond melody or spoken as a reading, the imagery of still waters and green pastures offers genuine comfort when grief is raw.

4. How Great Thou Art

A hymn with Swedish roots that became a global favourite. It's particularly popular at services for people of deep faith, and the soaring chorus gives the congregation something to hold onto collectively. Carl Boberg's original words were written after he witnessed a thunderstorm — the awe in it shows.

5. In Christ Alone

Written in 2001 by Keith Getty and Stuart Townend, this is a modern hymn that has quickly become a funeral staple. The theology is direct, the melody genuinely beautiful, and it doesn't feel as though it's trying too hard to be moving — it simply is.

6. Guide Me, O Thou Great Redeemer (Cwm Rhondda)

Better known in Wales as the hymn that resonates through rugby grounds, this one carries enormous cultural weight across the UK. Sung by a full congregation, it can feel as though the room itself is holding you up.

Timeless Favourites

These songs span several decades, but they've all earned their place because they say something true about love and loss — and because they tend to mean something specific to the families who choose them.

7. My Way — Frank Sinatra

Consistently the most played funeral song in the UK, according to data from tens of thousands of services. It's a defiant statement of a life lived on one's own terms. If the person you've lost had that quality, this song speaks it plainly.

8. Wind Beneath My Wings — Bette Midler

Chosen most often by those saying farewell to a quiet, steady presence — a parent, a lifelong partner, someone whose support was constant but unassuming. The lyric captures that perfectly: the person who made the flying possible, rarely seen.

9. Somewhere Over the Rainbow — Eva Cassidy

Eva Cassidy's version, recorded before her own early death at 33, carries an extra layer of meaning. It's hopeful and aching at the same time, and works for almost any kind of service — religious or secular, young or old.

10. Time to Say Goodbye — Andrea Bocelli & Sarah Brightman

The title says everything. This works beautifully as a recessional — music for the moment of departure. The grandeur of it matches the magnitude of what's happening, without tipping into the overwrought.

11. You'll Never Walk Alone — Gerry & the Peacemakers

Beyond its associations with football, this is a song about holding onto someone's hand even when the road is dark. For families, that message lands deeply. At services for sports fans, it takes on an even more personal layer.

12. Angels — Robbie Williams

One of the most enduringly popular choices at UK funerals for the past 25 years. The imagery of angels watching over the living, and of love continuing after death, gives it a gentle resonance that works across faiths — and none.

13. We'll Meet Again — Vera Lynn

Associated with wartime Britain, this song has never quite left our collective grief. It's particularly resonant at services for older generations who lived through the Second World War. The promise of reunion is simple and unambiguous.

14. Tears in Heaven — Eric Clapton

Clapton wrote this after the death of his young son, which means every line carries genuine grief. It's often chosen for services where the loss is a parent's — though its quiet melody makes it fitting for many kinds of farewell.

Contemporary Choices

These songs come from more recent decades, and they've become funeral staples because they address loss directly — without euphemism, and often with surprising specificity.

15. Fix You — Coldplay

The opening piano line alone can unmoor a room. "Fix You" is about the helplessness of watching someone you love suffer and the promise to stay regardless. It's particularly chosen for losses after long illness, and for younger people whose lives were hard at the end.

16. Supermarket Flowers — Ed Sheeran

Written about his grandmother's death, this is a song about clearing a hospital room — a deeply specific, domestic grief. Its ordinariness is its power. Families who recognise that experience find it almost unbearably accurate.

17. One More Light — Linkin Park

Chester Bennington wrote this about losing a friend, and its central line — "Who cares if one more light goes out? Well I do" — is a quiet, fierce insistence that every life matters. It's a meaningful choice when the person lost felt underestimated or overlooked.

18. Hallelujah — Jeff Buckley

Leonard Cohen's original is a meditation on faith, love, and imperfection. Jeff Buckley's version slows it into something that sounds like grief itself. Both work; both are devastating in the best possible way.

19. Bridge Over Troubled Water — Simon & Garfunkel

A song about one person carrying another through the hardest moments. Paired with a meaningful funeral poem earlier in the service, it can create a beautiful sense of care running through the whole gathering.

20. The Sound of Silence — Simon & Garfunkel

Distinctly different in mood from Bridge Over Troubled Water — quieter, more interior, more solitary. It suits services that feel contemplative, or where the person lost spent much of their life in their own inner world.

21. Candle in the Wind (1997) — Elton John

Originally written about Marilyn Monroe, rewritten for Princess Diana, and now simply a piece of music that people associate with public grief and private loss alike. The melody is genuinely beautiful, the sentiment clear.

22. Songbird — Eva Cassidy

Fleetwood Mac wrote it, but Eva Cassidy made it something else entirely. Like her Somewhere Over the Rainbow, this version is suffused with a longing that feels entirely genuine. It works particularly well in small, intimate services.

Uplifting Songs for a Celebration of Life

Not every service needs to be solemn. Many families now choose music that reflects the personality of the person they've lost — joyful, irreverent, full of life. If that sounds right for the service you're planning, these deserve serious consideration.

23. Here Comes the Sun — The Beatles

George Harrison wrote this after a particularly grim winter, and that's exactly what it sounds like — relief, warmth, things slowly getting lighter. It's one of the most genuinely hopeful pieces of music in the English language.

24. What a Wonderful World — Louis Armstrong

Short, warm, and grateful for the beauty of being alive. It suits services where the person being remembered had that quality — a capacity to find joy in ordinary things that other people walked past.

25. Three Little Birds — Bob Marley

"Don't worry about a thing, 'cause every little thing is gonna be alright." Simple, honest, and entirely sincere. For someone who lived with that spirit, it's the most fitting of goodbyes.

26. Always Look on the Bright Side of Life — Monty Python

Genuinely funny at funerals when it's the right choice — and families often find themselves half-laughing, half-crying, which is not a bad place to be. It works for people who were irreverent, who would have hated a mournful service, who would have laughed at the end.

27. Mr Blue Sky — Electric Light Orchestra

Gleefully, unapologetically joyful. If the person you've lost turned the volume up every time this came on the radio, playing it at their funeral is a genuine act of love.

28. Dancing Queen — ABBA

ABBA has found an unlikely second life at funerals in recent years, particularly at services for people who loved to dance or who had a lifelong relationship with their music. The joy in it is impossible to resist.

29. Don't Stop Me Now — Queen

For someone who lived at full speed and loved every moment of it, Freddie Mercury's celebration of pure energy is a fitting tribute. It tends to draw smiles even through tears — which is exactly the point.

30. Somewhere Only We Know — Keane

Quieter than the other uplifting choices, and more elegiac — but still ultimately hopeful. The idea of a shared place that belongs only to two people makes it a deeply personal choice for partners, close friends, or siblings.

How to Choose the Right Song

If you're working through this decision and finding it difficult, a few questions tend to help:

  • What did they actually listen to? The most meaningful choices are usually the ones the person genuinely loved — not songs that feel appropriate but meant nothing to them in life.
  • What's the mood of the service? A quiet, reflective gathering calls for different music than a celebration of life. Both are valid. The music should match the tone you're going for.
  • Will the congregation sing? If yes, lean towards hymns or songs with familiar, singable choruses. If not, the full range is open to you.
  • What do you want people to feel walking out? Comforted? Joyful? Moved? The right song can shape the emotional arc of the whole service.

You might also want to look at funeral poems alongside your music choices — a reading and a piece of music can work together to create something more complete than either does alone.

And if you're also responsible for putting the service together, our guide to how to write a meaningful obituary covers how to capture a life in words that will last well beyond the day itself.

After the Service

Music ends when the funeral does. But the memory of a person — their humour, their warmth, the small things that made them them — doesn't have to end there. A memorial page on Memoriance gives family and friends a permanent place to share photographs, stories, and tributes that anyone can return to, whenever they need to. It costs about the same as a bouquet of flowers, and it lasts forever.

Whatever songs you choose for the service, trust your instincts. The right choice is almost always the honest one.

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