A hearth circle as a symbol of welcome, witness, oath, grief, and return.
A hearth circle as a symbol of welcome, witness, oath, grief, and return.

An honest thing first: we have far less detailed historical instruction for these ceremonies than most people expect. The sagas describe weddings and funerals happening, but rarely give us a script. So modern Heathens have built most of these rites as a living community, drawing on what fragments survive and on genuine human need. That is not a failure of authenticity — it is how a living religion works. What matters is that a rite means something true, not that it copies a lost original nobody actually recorded.

Nearly all of these can be built from the same two ceremonies covered in Core Practices: a blót (an offering) and a sumbel (a round of toasts and oaths). A milestone is often just one of those, held with intention around a moment that matters.

The milestones

A note on doing these well. For a major public rite — a wedding, a funeral — many people want experienced help. Inclusive Heathen organizations such as The Troth publish detailed, well-sourced ritual resources and can point you to clergy. This site gives you the shape and the portable version; for the big moments, it's fine to lean on people who do this often.
On sources. Ausa vatni, oath-taking, and land-wight relationships are grounded in the medieval sources; coming-of-age and wedding ceremonies are largely modern reconstructions built to meet real needs, and this page says so where that's the case. No single historical "Viking wedding" or "Viking funeral" script survives. See Sources & Ethics.