Kelly Osbourne Shares Father’s Day Note to Late Ozzy Osbourne

Kelly Osbourne spent Father’s Day 2026 thinking about his late father, Ozzy Osbournewho died last year.
“Dad, I still find myself looking for you in the ordinary moments, the advice I need, the joke I want to tell, the victory I want to see,” Kelly, 41, wrote on Instagram Sunday, June 21. “The pain of missing you is the result of loving you, and I would pay for it forever rather than never being your child!”
He continued, “I will never stop missing you, it is a privilege to spend the rest of my life loving you, until we meet again! 💔.”
Kelly also shared a few throwback family photos on her Instagram stories, including photos of Ozzy cuddling with Kelly’s 3-year-old son, Sidney, and a screenshot of a past text exchange with his father.
“I know whenever I feel sick and sad, all I have to do is watch the video you posted of little Sid taking a bath and it makes me so happy,” Ozzy previously wrote in a text to Kelly. “I wish you two were still here. I love you both so much and all I want is for you both to be happy.”
The Black Sabbath singer added, “And if you need anything from me, you only need to ask. I’ve decided that my fun days are over because I really need my life. I don’t know how I’m going to get back to England without seeing all my family, you all mean the world to me but I’m sure we’ll all work, God bless you both.”
Kelly, who assigned Sidney and Slipknot DJ Sid Wilsonhe quickly wrote back then.

“Dad, I love you more than anything in the world. Sidney and I miss you so much,” Kelly replied. “Do you want to come this weekend to see my house? Only if you feel ready.”
Ozzy, who died in July 2025 at the age of 76 after a battle with Parkinson’s disease, is survived by his wife. Sharon Osbournehis children and grandchildren.
On Osbourne’s first Father’s Day since Ozzy’s death, Kelly and his siblings planned to honor the rocker’s legacy.
“My brother Louis and I are going to do something special for dad this weekend,” Kelly said you are only told Us Weekly on Thursday, June 18, explaining his journey to bereavement. “I’m getting a little better every day. The pain will never go away, and I’ll never be the same person I was before he died. I’m learning new things.”





