Funerals are expensive, so the more you know about them, the more money in your pocket!
Hope this helps somebody, TRACK
10 facts funeral directors don’t want you to know
By Ellen Goodstein • Bankrate.com
Most Americans avoid planning their funerals and instead leave the decisions to their loved ones. But making arrangements immediately after a death can be unnecessarily expensive because it’s such an emotional time.
“The unsuspecting consumer is setting himself up to be vulnerable to excessive spending on items and services that he doesn’t need or want,” declares Joshua Slocum, executive director of the Vermont-based Funeral Consumers Alliance, a not-for-profit consumer information and advocacy group.
FCA fields calls from angry and confused consumers everyday.
“I just spoke with a woman who had asked for a very modest service for a loved one,” says Slocum. “She paid $7,000 for funeral services when what she really wanted should have cost her around $1,500. She was sold embalming, which she didn’t need, and the markup on the casket was excessive.
“She said to me, ‘We did everything we could to cut costs, and this is the best we could do.’
“It’s a crying shame,” says Slocum.
Costs add up quickly
According to AARP, funeral and burial costs can easily reach as much as $10,000. The average cost of a traditional adult funeral in 1999 was $5,020 without any extras. Burial costs can add an extra $2,000 or more. Flowers, obituary notices, burial liners or vaults, limousines, acknowledgement cards — they all add up to a major expenditure.
“Funeral services are one of the largest purchases consumers will make, right up there with a car and a house,” explains Brenda Mack, a public affairs specialist with the Federal Trade Commission.
It’s important to take your time when deciding on the funeral service. Don’t let yourself be pressured into buying goods or services you don’t want, and then end up having to spend years paying off the funeral, says Mack.
Become an informed consumer.
Here are a few examples of what some funeral directors would rather you not know.
1. Shopping around for funeral services can save you thousands of dollars.
“Consumers need to apply the same level of savvy to funeral purchases as they would to anything else,” advises Slocum.
Don’t assume a funeral will cost the same just about anywhere. It’s not so.
“By federal law, funeral providers have to give consumers a general price list of all goods and services without the consumer having to ask for it,” notes Mack.
“As soon as a person tells a funeral director, ‘I want to talk about your services,’ the consumer must be handed a written list of all goods and services offered by the funeral home and what they cost.”
Typically included would be costs for the initial conference, consultations, paperwork and overhead. This fee, called a “nondeclinable fee,” is added to the total cost of the funeral. There is wide variation in pricing of the nondeclinable fee, cautions FCA’s Slocum.
The general price list should also include cost of transportation of the body, care of the body (including embalming), and use of the funeral home for viewing, wake, visitation and funeral or memorial ceremony. Alternative arrangements such as cremation and optional services such as flowers, placing an obituary and obtaining a death certificate should also be listed on the general price list.
Use the price list and shop among funeral providers to find the most reasonably priced service, advises Mack.
The AARP recommends obtaining price lists by phone or in person from at least three funeral homes before making a selection.
2. Funeral directors are not clergy.
Funeral directors are business people. They are not ministers, but people often treat them as quasi-clergy, notes Slocum. “This is a mistake. Consumers tend to trust them implicitly and believe everything they say. Remember, funeral homes are in business to make money.”
Check out the funeral home before you arrange services through them, advises Diana Evans, bureau chief of funeral and cemetery services for the Florida Department of Financial Services.
“You want to be sure you go to somebody who is licensed and has a good reputation in the community. Ask for recommendations from your friends or your rabbi or priest. Even go to a funeral and see how professionally they conduct their business,” she says.
Call and speak with a funeral director before visiting, suggests David Walkinshaw, a spokesman for the National Funeral Director’s Association and operator of Saville and Gannon Funeral Home in Arlington, Mass.
“Usually within a few minutes of talking to a funeral director, you can get a feel for who they are. You can hear professionalism. Make sure you’re comfortable and, if not, call somebody else.”
3. Embalming is rarely required when the person will be buried within 24 to 48 hours.
The United States and Canada are the only countries in the world that routinely embalm their dead. Embalming is not a matter of protecting the public health, as some unscrupulous morticians would have you believe, says Slocum. The Centers for Disease Control has consistently shown that embalming does not serve any public health purpose.
“Refrigeration is almost always a legal alternative,” urges Slocum, who says it’s just as good if not better than embalming.
Funeral directors routinely refuse to have a public viewing without embalming, but it is not a legal requirement except in Minnesota.
Know your rights, advises Slocum. If the funeral home insists, ask for a private viewing without embalming.



ThanksTrack. As always you are on Track 8-}
I actually worked in a funeral home for 3 months and I can say because of the prices I saw people pay for a funeral I will most certainly be using a pre-arranged system for an immediate cremation. This was the cheapest course and then the family can have a small affair at home or local venue and then scatter me wherever I choose at their convenience. Burial I know is something some people want but to be honest – why? You can have beautiful urns and the choice is mind blowing from motorcycles and cowboy shaped to garden seats with inserts to traditional urns. My family and I spread my Father’s ashes in his two favorite places – we can visit him anytime within our minds without travelling to those particular sites.
There’s also a psychological component to cremation. We had each of our two sons cremated. I don’t know how I could have gotten through the funerals with a coffin sitting there. It’s hard to relate emotionally to a box of ashes.
We did have the ashes buried. They share a grave plot, but it takes up very little space in the cemetery.
I worked for a Family Owned Mortuary in Southern California for two years. They have been in business for 112 years now, and for good reason. I have only worked for two companies in my life that I felt were ‘the cream of the crop’ in their industry. Disneyland was the first and the mortuary was the second.
Everything this article says is true, absolutely. The only thing I have a small problem with is not embalming for a viewing. Even if it is immediate and for family only, I am here to tell you that a body that is not cosmetized is not easy to look at in the best of circumstances. Most people don’t know that embalming fluid comes in colors now. It puts back pigment in the skin that looks very natural. Makeup is still necessary but it doesn’t have to look like wax unless there was physical trauma to the head or hands. Our mortuary NEVER sold embalming to anyone who was having a cremation or closed casket. We made very little on our merchandise. We charged exactly what the newspaper charged us for the obituary. Our consultations were ALWAYS FREE with NO pressure. Our average funeral cost under $4,000 with some as low at under $2,000. We cremated babies under one year old for $100 or free. Since you can only cremate one body at a time, our costs far exceeded $100.
There is a large company called SCI who has bought up family owned mortuaries all across the country but have not changed their names. They are controlled by their accountants in Texas who are all about making big profits. Yes, all mortuaries are in business to make money, but not all of them are out to gouge people. Beware of mortuaries who are not family owned. They are ruthless and play on vulnerable people’s emotions. It’s sickening.
I just wanted to make it clear that in an industry full of vultures, there are still some doves who nurture and serve families with kindess.
This sounds exactly like the place I worked for – it is family owned into the third generation and they never charged for babies at all. Obits were at cost as well. As you say it is very important to look at who actually owes the funeral home prior to engaging them.
O.K. Ladies type in this with google-10 things the funeral director does not want you to know. There always more then one way to get information…TRACK
And never leave jewlery, on that person! FINE FANCEy BELT BUCKELS ETC.
AND SHOES.SOME FAMILY MEMBER ,MAY TREASURE THEM.OR NEED THEM.
LETS NOT, FORGET OUR NEEDY PEOPLE CAN USE THEM.