Preplanning your cremation isn’t about dwelling on death — it’s about protecting the people you love from an overwhelming burden at the hardest moment of their lives.
Preplanning — sometimes called preneed planning — means making your final arrangements ahead of time, before they’re needed. It can be as simple as documenting your wishes in writing, or as comprehensive as fully funding a cremation plan with a licensed funeral home.
A preplanned cremation typically involves meeting with or contacting a funeral home, selecting the type of cremation you want (usually direct cremation, which is the simplest and most affordable option), documenting your preferences, and in many cases, locking in today’s price through a prepaid plan.
It doesn’t require a lawyer. It doesn’t have to be complicated. Most families complete the process in a single conversation and feel a genuine sense of relief when it’s done.
People preplan for different reasons. Here are the five most common ones we hear from families.
Cremation prices rise every year. When you prepay at today’s rate, your family pays nothing more — even if costs increase significantly by the time services are needed.
When someone dies unexpectedly, families are asked to make dozens of decisions while grieving. Preplanning removes those decisions — your family simply calls the funeral home you already chose.
Without a plan, your family guesses. With one, there’s no ambiguity. Your preferences — what happens to your remains, memorial wishes, personal details — are documented and honored.
Families disagree about final arrangements more often than most people expect. Preplanning removes the arguments — your plan becomes the final word, and no one has to carry the weight of having decided for you.
Many people describe a quiet, lasting relief after completing a preplan. You’ve taken care of something important. It’s done. You can stop thinking about it.
Direct cremation is the simplest form of cremation: no embalming, no formal viewing, no ceremony at the funeral home. The body is cremated, and the cremated remains are returned to the family. Many families then hold a private memorial service on their own terms and timeline.
Prices vary significantly by provider and region. Here’s a general guide:
| Provider Type | Typical Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CremationMatch verified provider | $895 – $1,500 | Capped at $1,500 as a listing requirement |
| Independent local funeral home | $800 – $2,500 | Wide range; always ask for itemized pricing |
| Online cremation company | $700 – $1,800 | May not have a physical location near you |
| Corporate chain funeral home | $1,500 – $4,000+ | Often higher overhead, upsell pressure |
Prices vary based on local market conditions, the funeral home’s overhead, and what’s included. Always ask for an itemized General Price List — funeral homes are legally required to provide one under the FTC Funeral Rule.
CremationMatch prices are all-inclusive. Every provider listed here has agreed that their price covers local pickup, cold storage, a cremation container, the cremation itself, Social Security notification, and one certified death certificate. The price you see is the final price — no line items, no add-ons.
Searching for cremation services online is genuinely confusing. You’ll find dozens of providers with prices that look similar — until you start asking what’s actually included. Some quotes don’t include transportation. Some add fees for cold storage. Some list a “starting at” price that grows once you add the basics. By the time you’ve compared three or four providers, you’re exhausted and still not sure who to trust.
That’s the problem CremationMatch solves. Every provider here has been vetted before they were listed. They’re independently owned — which means lower overhead and honest pricing, not a corporate chain looking to maximize margin. They’ve agreed to a final all-inclusive price that covers everything. No surprises, no negotiations, no wondering if the price you saw will hold when you call.
Independent funeral homes can afford to charge less because they don’t carry the weight of a national corporation behind them. No investor returns, no acquisition debt, no layers of management to pay for. Just a local business owner, in your community, offering a straightforward service at a fair price.
You find a provider, you see the price, and you know exactly what you’re getting. That’s why families use CremationMatch instead of searching on their own.
Not all funeral homes are equal. Before you sign anything or pay a deposit, ask these questions:
What is your total, all-in price for direct cremation? Get the full number, including death certificates and any transportation fees.
Are you independently owned, or part of a corporate chain? Ownership can affect how your plan is handled long-term.
Where will prepaid funds be held? Reputable funeral homes place prepaid funds in a state-regulated trust or insurance policy.
Is the price guaranteed? Some plans lock in today’s price; others are non-guaranteed. Know which you’re getting.
What happens if I move or change my mind? Understand the cancellation and transfer policy before you commit.
How will my family contact you when the time comes? Make sure there’s a 24-hour number on file.
Planning ahead is one of the most practical, loving things you can do for your family. Writing a will isn’t morbid — neither is this. Most people who complete a preplan feel relieved, not unsettled.
There’s no minimum age. Accidents and serious illness don’t wait for retirement. And the earlier you preplan, the more you benefit from price protection. Many people preplan in their 40s and 50s.
Most preneed plans allow changes or cancellations, often with a full or partial refund depending on state law and how long the plan has been in place. Ask your provider about their specific policy before you sign.
In most states, prepaid funeral funds are held in a regulated trust — separate from the funeral home’s operating accounts. This means the funds are protected even if the business changes hands or closes. Always confirm this with your provider.
When you preplan with a licensed funeral home, your family is not legally obligated to use that provider. However, if you’ve prepaid, transferring funds to another provider involves paperwork and may not cover the full cost elsewhere. The simplest path is choosing a provider you trust from the start.
Every funeral home in our directory is independently owned, price-transparent, and verified to meet our standards. Start your search — it’s free.