Funeral Facts

Your options: defined.

This page outlines standard and not-so-common options for funeral, memorial, and celebration of life services, options for final places of rest, and more. With our tools, personal support, and network of resources, we are here to support you throughout this phase of life, no matter where you are in the process. Contact us anytime.

Disclaimer: Our goal is to educate. We are not providing legal advice, and this information pertains only to Massachusetts.

When a Death Occurs

Wrapping up Affairs

Working with a Funeral Home

Planning a Service

Final Disposition Options

Additional Considerations

Disclaimer: Our goal is to educate. We are not providing legal advice. These are only the laws in Massachusetts.

You do not need to use a Funeral Director.

Caring for your own dead can be immensely rewarding and help ease the pain of grief. It is also emotionally demanding, and, because of the widespread misunderstanding of the law in Massachusetts, it can be difficult. The law clearly permits persons to care for their own dead.

-Funeral Consumer Alliance of Eastern Massachusetts

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The FTC protects consumers' rights through the Funeral Rule.

Under the FTC’s Funeral Rule, consumers have the right to get a general price list from a funeral provider when they ask about funeral arrangements. They also have the right to choose the funeral goods and services they want (with some exceptions), and funeral providers must state this right on the general price list. If state or local law requires purchase of any particular item, the funeral provider must disclose it on the price list, with a reference to the specific law. The funeral provider may not refuse, or charge a fee, to handle a casket bought elsewhere, and a provider offering cremations must make alternative containers available.

-Federal Trade Commission’s Funeral Rule

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There are natural burial options in Massachusetts.

Caring for your own dead can be immensely rewarding and help ease the pain of grief. It is also emotionally demanding, and, because of the widespread misunderstanding of the law in Massachusetts, it can be difficult. The law clearly permits persons to care for their own dead.

-Funeral Consumer Alliance of Eastern Massachusetts

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Embalming became popular during the Civil War.

Under the FTC’s Funeral Rule, consumers have the right to get a general price list from a funeral provider when they ask about funeral arrangements. They also have the right to choose the funeral goods and services they want (with some exceptions), and funeral providers must state this right on the general price list. If state or local law requires purchase of any particular item, the funeral provider must disclose it on the price list, with a reference to the specific law. The funeral provider may not refuse, or charge a fee, to handle a casket bought elsewhere, and a provider offering cremations must make alternative containers available.

-Federal Trade Commission’s Funeral Rule

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Death Certificates are public records.

Death certificates are public record, and can be requested by anyone at the city or town clerks office.

-Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

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A set order exists for who is considered Next of Kin.

Degrees of kinship are used to identify heirs at law in the “next of kin” category ONLY if there are no members in the first four groups of heirs: (1) surviving spouse, (2) children and their descendants, (3) parents, and (4) brothers/sisters and their descendants.

-Massachusetts Degrees of Kinship Chart

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