There is no right or wrong choice between burial and cremation. The decision usually comes down to personal wishes, religious or cultural beliefs, cost, and what will bring your family comfort. Cremation is generally more affordable and flexible, while burial offers a permanent place to visit. If your loved one left no instructions, choose the option that feels most fitting and brings you peace.
Deciding between burial and cremation is one of the most personal choices a family can make, and it often arrives at an already difficult time. What matters most is finding the choice that feels right for your loved one and your family. This gentle guide walks through the practical and emotional considerations, from cost and beliefs to the kind of place you may wish to visit in years to come. It is general information rather than religious or legal advice, and our team at Keith Logue & Sons is here to talk it through with you whenever you are ready.
Start With Your Loved One’s Wishes
If your loved one left instructions, in a will, a prepaid funeral plan or simply a conversation, those wishes are the natural starting point. Knowing what they wanted can lift a great weight from a family. If nothing was recorded, think about what they valued and what would feel most fitting. Many families find peace in choosing what they believe their loved one would have wanted.
Burial vs Cremation: A Quick Comparison
Both options can be deeply meaningful, and both can be accompanied by a full service, a simple gathering or no formal service at all. Here is how they compare at a glance:
| Consideration | Burial | Cremation |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Generally higher (plot, interment, memorial) | Generally lower and more flexible |
| A place to visit | A permanent grave or memorial | Ashes can be kept, interred or scattered |
| Flexibility | Service held before burial | Service before or after, and ashes used in many ways |
| Memorial | Headstone or plaque at the grave | Memorial keepsakes, plaques or scattering |
Which Costs More: Burial or Cremation?
Cremation is usually the more affordable choice, as it avoids the cost of a burial plot, interment fees and a grave memorial. Burial costs more because of these added expenses, though many families feel the permanent resting place is worth it. Whatever you choose, an itemised quote helps you plan with confidence. Our guide to how much a funeral costs explains the full picture.
Religious and Cultural Beliefs
Faith and culture often guide this decision. Some traditions call for burial, others for cremation, and some have specific rituals and timeframes that a funeral director should honour. If religious or cultural practices are important to your family, our guide to multicultural and religious funerals may help, and our team will work respectfully within your traditions.
Environmental Considerations
Many families today also weigh up the environmental impact. Cremation uses energy, while traditional burial uses land and materials. There are gentler options for both, including eco-friendly coffins and natural burial. If this matters to you, ask your funeral director about the choices available.
A Place to Remember
One of the most important questions is where you would like to go to remember your loved one. A burial provides a permanent grave to visit. With cremation, families have many choices: keeping the ashes, interring them in a memorial garden, scattering them in a meaningful place, or dividing them among loved ones in keepsakes. There is no wrong way to create a place of remembrance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I be buried or cremated?
There is no right or wrong answer: it comes down to your personal feelings, your beliefs and your budget. For many people, instinct plays a big part too. Some cannot imagine being buried, while others feel more at peace with that than with the thought of cremation, and that feeling is a perfectly valid guide. If you are still unsure, it can help to weigh up cost, how you feel about each option, whether you would like a permanent place for loved ones to visit, and any cultural or religious traditions that matter to you. Recording your wishes, even informally, spares your family from having to make the choice on your behalf.
Is cremation cheaper than burial?
Usually, yes. With no plot to buy, no interment fee and no grave memorial, cremation works out cheaper for most families. The size of the difference depends on the type of service and the choices you make.
Can you still have a funeral service with cremation?
Absolutely. You can hold a full service before the cremation, a memorial afterwards, or both. Cremation offers a great deal of flexibility in how and when you say goodbye.
What happens to the ashes after cremation?
The ashes are returned to the family, who may keep them, inter them, scatter them or place them in keepsakes. There are some rules about scattering in public places, which your funeral director can explain.
What if our family cannot agree?
This is common, and it helps to talk openly and return to what your loved one would have wanted. A caring funeral director can gently guide the conversation and help you reach a decision together.
We’re Here to Help You Decide
Choosing between burial and cremation is deeply personal, and there is no need to decide alone. Keith Logue & Sons has guided Coffs Harbour and Mid North Coast families through this decision for generations, always with patience and care. If you would like to talk it through or plan ahead, our team is here. You are welcome to call us any time on (02) 6652 1999 or send an online enquiry whenever you are ready.
This article was written by the team at Keith Logue & Sons, a fourth-generation, family-owned funeral home that has cared for families across Coffs Harbour and the Mid North Coast for over five decades.
[REFERENCES]
- Cemeteries & Crematoria NSW, https://www.cemeteries.nsw.gov.au/
- Moneysmart, Paying for your funeral, https://moneysmart.gov.au/manage-your-money-in-retirement/paying-for-your-funeral














