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Buying and selling burial plots can become quite a lucrative source of income for those who don't shy away from the uncomfortable subject of death. There are a growing number of cemeteries and local authorities that are running out of burial space. As a result, the demand is growing.
How to Transfer Ownership of a Burial Plot Step 1 – Get the Deed From the Cemetery. Step 2 – Review the State and Local Laws. Step 3 – Prove You Are the Current Owner. Step 4 – Fill Out the Cemetery Plot Deed Transfer Form. Step 5 – Complete the Transfer and Get the New Deed.
You may not sell the final resting place through a broker and may not sell to a funeral director. A cemetery does not have to buy graves back from lot owners. Different rules can apply when a final resting place is owned by more than one person.
Is It Possible To Sell A Cemetery Plot? Yes, selling a cemetery plot is possible, and this applies even to crypts and even wall spaces in outdoor tombs and mausoleums. In many cases, you may even stand to profit from selling a cemetery plot, which may, however, come with a waiting period of as much as 15 months.
Several factors determine ground burial prices, such as plot location, headstone material (marble or granite), garden setting, indoor or outdoor interment, etc. Mausoleum prices also depend on location, either inside the structure or outside in a garden setting.
Yes, Cemetery Plots Are Real Estate. The cemetery company owns the land, as it holds the deed to the cemetery.
In the U.S., a purchased cemetery plot belongs to you forever. In some instances, however, if a cemetery is considered “abandoned,” the state can reclaim the land and discontinue interments.
No. Cemetery property is owned by the cemetery corporation. The real property is not sold. The lot “owner” receives three privileges: the right of burial, the right to memorialize and the right to vote at lot owner meetings.
Often, a cemetery will issue a ``deed'' at the sale of a grave space or lot of graves. This deed is NOT an issuance of any real estate. It is, in fact, a promissory note which prevents the cemetery from using that, particular space to bury anyone else.