Kelly Osbourne Denies Parents’ Alleged “Suicide Agreement”
Kelly Osbourne has strongly countered her mother Sharon’s assertion that her parents had a “suicide agreement” prior to Sharon’s recent passing at 76.
Earlier this month, the former “Fashion Police” star dismissed rumors of this supposed pact, despite having previously mentioned it.
In a video on her Instagram story dated July 11, Kelly stated, “Stop posting or talking about how my parents think they have a suicide agreement.”
Sharon first brought up this topic regarding her husband, Black Sabbath’s Ozzy Osbourne, back in 2007. She claimed that the couple, married since 1982, had come to a mutual decision to travel to Switzerland if they were to face a debilitating illness.
According to Sharon, “Ozzy and I have absolutely made the same decision. We believe in 100% euthanasia, so if there is a brain-affecting disease, we’ve planned to go to the Assisted Suicide Flat in Switzerland.”
“If Ozzy or I ever got Alzheimer’s, that’s it — we’ll be off,” Sharon recalled during her time on “The Talk.”
Kelly has shared that she witnessed her father’s suffering during his passing in July 2002 and doesn’t want him to endure anything similar again.
Sharon reiterated this agreement in her 2007 memoir, “Survivor: My Story – Next Chapter.” Most recently, in 2023, on “The Osbournes” podcast, she argued that the agreement still stands.
However, Kelly has insisted that any notion of a decision to end their lives is unfounded. She took issue with an AI-generated video that appeared to show her father claiming he would “die.”
“This is social media doing this. It should be my dad, but it’s AI,” she commented online. “It sounds like him, but it’s not real. It starts with, ‘I don’t need a doctor to say I’m going to die. I’m going to die.’
Kelly expressed frustration, questioning, “What is wrong with people? Why invest time in making these videos?”
She further emphasized, “He won’t die. Yes, he has Parkinson’s disease, and his mobility is not what it once was, but he won’t die.”
Ozzy was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2020, a condition that impacts the nervous system and affects movement, often causing tremors and stiffness. There are currently no known treatments.
In addition to this diagnosis, he has faced multiple surgeries over the past few years, including a serious spinal cord injury in 2019.

