Compare 24 Australian funeral directors.

AFDA member directory, transparent pricing, cremation vs burial cost — without the salespeople.

24 directors 2 Australian cities Sourced from AFDA member directory Updated 1 June 2026

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24 funeral directors across Australia

Independent directory, no paid placements. Updated June 2026.

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How much does a funeral cost in Australia in 2026?

A standard funeral in Australia in 2026 costs $7,500-$13,000 for traditional service with burial, $5,500-$9,500 for traditional service with cremation, and $1,800-$4,500 for direct cremation (no service). Costs vary by city: Sydney and Melbourne are highest, regional areas typically 20-30% cheaper. Cost includes funeral director services ($3,500-$5,500), coffin/casket ($800-$8,000), cemetery fees ($1,500-$8,000 for burial, $400-$1,200 for cremation), service venue ($500-$2,500), flowers, notices, and disbursements. Prepaid funerals lock in 2026 prices for future use.

Based on analysis of 24 providers across 6 service categories.

Key takeaways

  • 24+ funeral director profiled across Australia.
  • Typical pricing in Australia: $1,800-$7,500.
  • Independent ranking. No paid placements. No email capture.
  • Updated June 2026.
  • Every provider cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register.

About this funeral director comparison

Compare Funeral Directors is an independent Australian comparison service dedicated to helping consumers and businesses find, compare, and contact funeral director across every state and territory. We track 24 named providers across 6 service categories, pulling information from public sources, industry-body directories, and provider websites.

Our ranking methodology uses a transparent weighted score updated quarterly: 40% aggregated public reviews, 25% price transparency and itemised quoting, 20% service coverage and geographic availability, 10% credentials and registration with the relevant Australian industry body, and 5% complaint history logged with state fair trading offices and industry ombudsmen. We do not accept payment to rank providers. Where referral fees apply, they are disclosed in our footer and do not influence position.

Every funeral director on our platform is cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register – whether that is AHPRA, ASIC, the Tax Practitioners Board, the Clean Energy Council, OMARA, or another. We also check Australian Business Register (ABR) records and review Fair Trading complaint data where published. We do not independently audit clinical, technical or service quality. Always verify a provider's current registration directly with the relevant regulator before engaging them.

For funeral director specifically, consumers typically compare providers on: pricing (including both headline rates and hidden fees), geographic coverage, specialisation relative to the specific need, wait times and availability, communication quality, and credentials.

If you are a funeral director provider interested in being listed or featured, contact us via the form below. Inclusion in our directory is free and does not require payment; featured placement in our rankings is earned through performance metrics, not fees.

Fact checks

Common funeral director myths, independently checked

We check the most common misconceptions we hear from Australian consumers.

False

"You must use a funeral director to hold a funeral in Australia."

In all Australian states you can legally hold a family-led or direct disposal funeral without a director. Rules exist around death registration, certification, and transport but licensed directors are not legally required.

Source: homefuneralnetwork.org.au

Mostly True

"Cremation is always cheaper than burial."

Direct cremation: $1,200-$3,500. Simple burial: $8,000-$12,000 (includes plot, monument). Full-service funerals: $7,000-$15,000 either way. Direct cremation is the cheapest but traditional cremation with service is comparable to burial.

Source: www.choice.com.au

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a funeral cost in Australia?

Traditional funeral with burial: $9,000-$18,000. Traditional with cremation: $5,500-$13,000. Direct cremation (no service): $1,800-$4,500. Costs vary significantly by location (Sydney highest), coffin choice ($800-$8,000), cemetery plot fees ($1,500-$25,000), and service venue. Get itemised quotes from 2-3 funeral directors before deciding — costs can be negotiated, especially for non-traditional services. Funeral bonds and prepaid plans lock in current prices.

What's included in a funeral director's service fee?

Standard inclusions: collection of deceased, preparation/embalming if required, refrigeration, paperwork (death registration, cremation permits, etc.), liaison with cemetery/crematorium, organisation of service venue, hearse, viewing arrangements, professional staff on day of service, coordination with celebrant or clergy. NOT included (separate costs): coffin/casket, cemetery plot or cremation fees, flowers, newspaper notices, catering, celebrant fees, transportation for family. Always request itemised quotes.

Can I have a funeral without a funeral director?

Legally yes in Australia, though logistically challenging. Some families do this for cultural reasons or significant cost savings. Requirements: collect/transport the deceased, arrange refrigeration (mandatory in most states), obtain death certificate, lodge with Births Deaths and Marriages, arrange cremation/burial, comply with public health regulations. Costs reduce to ~$1,500-$3,500 (mostly cremation/burial fees). Better suited to small intimate gatherings, often religious or alternative communities. The Natural Death Centre (naturaldeath.org.au) provides guidance.

What is a prepaid funeral and is it worth it?

Prepaid funerals lock in today's prices for a future funeral, paid upfront ($5,000-$15,000) or via instalments. Funds held in trust under Australian regulation. Benefits: protection against inflation (funeral costs rise 4-7% annually), assets-test exempt for Centrelink (up to $15,500), removes financial burden from family, ensures your wishes are followed. Choose a long-established provider with strong financial backing. Compare against funeral bonds (more flexibility on provider but no service guarantee) and life insurance (separate from funeral pricing).

How do I find an affordable funeral director?

Get itemised quotes from 3+ providers including: large national chains (Simplicity Funerals, Bare Cremation), local family-run businesses, and budget operators. Direct cremation (Bare Cremation) is the lowest cost at $1,995-$4,495. For full services, ask about: package deals (often save 20%), off-peak service times (lower venue fees), simpler coffins (the most marked-up item), reducing optional extras (limousines, premium flowers). Centrelink may help cover funeral costs for low-income families ($800-$2,500 funeral assistance).

How do I plan a funeral when grieving?

You don't have to do it alone. Steps: 1) Contact a funeral director (24/7 services available) — they handle the immediate practical needs. 2) Take time before making decisions — most cremation/burial decisions can wait 24-48 hours. 3) Bring a family member or friend to all meetings — they'll catch details you miss. 4) Don't feel pressured to spend more "to honour" your loved one — meaningful funerals don't require expensive coffins. 5) Get all costs in writing before agreeing. 6) Use grief counselling support (most funeral directors include 12-month bereavement support).

Can the deceased be transported between states?

Yes, but with regulatory requirements. Interstate transport requires: certified copy of death certificate, transit permit (issued by state authorities), zinc-lined coffin (in some cases), Coronavirus protocols where applicable, professional transport (most family vehicles aren't legally compliant). Cost: $1,500-$5,000 for road transport, $3,000-$8,000 for air transport. Funeral directors in your origin state arrange this. International repatriation: $8,000-$25,000 plus embassy paperwork (10-21 days typically).

What are eco-friendly funeral options in Australia?

Growing demand for sustainable funerals. Options: biodegradable coffins (cardboard, willow, bamboo) $400-$1,500, natural burial (no embalming, biodegradable shroud or coffin in dedicated natural cemetery) $4,500-$8,500, cremation with biodegradable urn for tree planting $300-$1,500, aquamation (water-based cremation, lower emissions than fire) $2,500-$4,500 — currently available in NSW, VIC, QLD. Natural burial cemeteries: Lismore Memorial Gardens (NSW), Greener Funerals network. Total cost typically similar to traditional, with much lower environmental impact.

Sources

Trusted Australian authorities

We reference these authorities for facts, statistics, and to verify provider credentials. Linking to external sources does not imply endorsement.