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Paying For A Funeral
15 Answers
Hello
I've never been in a situation to arrange a funeral before and it will be upon us soon.
How do you pay for a funeral if the only assets a person has is their house. The house will be sold and will go on sale soon but what if it doesn't sell quickly?
We have no means to get a loan and no way of paying for a funeral besides the sale of the house. There is a life insurance but again I don't know how quickly the insurance company will pay out.
Do funeral directors offer a payment scheme?
Any advice appreciated as I want to make this as easy as possible for family when the time comes.
Thank you
GF
I've never been in a situation to arrange a funeral before and it will be upon us soon.
How do you pay for a funeral if the only assets a person has is their house. The house will be sold and will go on sale soon but what if it doesn't sell quickly?
We have no means to get a loan and no way of paying for a funeral besides the sale of the house. There is a life insurance but again I don't know how quickly the insurance company will pay out.
Do funeral directors offer a payment scheme?
Any advice appreciated as I want to make this as easy as possible for family when the time comes.
Thank you
GF
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You can apply for a funeral grant from the Government. This will have to be paid back once the house is sold. The local' Job Centre Plus 'will help you make the application. Funeral directors will give credit and monthly payments but like all credit it has interest to pay as well. The Funeral grant is interest free you just repay the amount you get.
I have arranged (other than dad) several funerals for elderly people where their assets were the house and not much else, and in every case the undertaker has been willing to wait for said property to be sold before payment is taken..with no added interest..once the time is here select a local undertaker and explain the circs...I have never had any problems with any undertaker ..
I echo EDDIE.....no need for a solicitor to arrange funeral..executor of the will can close any accounts and place house on market with estate agent..clearly conveyancing will then need to be done by solicitor..but they are also happy to wait until such time as assets are realised...the only snag is if probate is required...then it is unavoidable ..
I'm not sure if Murraymints is suggesting that if an application for a grant of probate is required, then one has to employ a solicitor.
That's just untrue, plenty of executors do DIY.
Obviously most executors elect to use a conveyancer to help them in transacting the house sale, but that ought to be the extent of the need for their £100 per hour services charge (plus VAT at the prevailing rate).
That's just untrue, plenty of executors do DIY.
Obviously most executors elect to use a conveyancer to help them in transacting the house sale, but that ought to be the extent of the need for their £100 per hour services charge (plus VAT at the prevailing rate).