Average Cost of Cremation in Kansas

Quick answer

A direct cremation in Kansas typically costs $845 to $2,400, and a cremation with a memorial service runs about $3,800 to $7,000. Kansas is close to an even burial/cremation split (~48% cremation), and cremation cannot proceed until a coroner's permit to cremate is issued.

⚠️ Educational information only — not legal, tax, or financial advice.

The figures on this page are general estimates. Laws, fees, thresholds, and prices differ by state and change often, and your own situation may change the result. Before you act, confirm the current numbers and rules for Kansas with a licensed professional — an attorney, tax advisor, or licensed agent as appropriate. Reading this page does not create a professional relationship.

What cremation actually costs in Kansas

There are two distinct cremation options in Kansas, and they cost very different amounts. Most of the confusion in cremation pricing comes from comparing the wrong things.

Direct cremation in Kansas

Typical range: $845 to $2400 all-in.

A direct cremation means the body is collected, cremated within a few days under Kansas law, and the cremated remains are returned to the family in a basic urn or temporary container. There is no viewing, no chapel service, and no embalming. The family can hold any memorial they want, in any setting, on their own schedule — and that memorial isn’t part of the cremation bill.

This is the cheapest dignified disposition available in Kansas and is the option that has driven the national cremation rate to over 60% of all dispositions.

Cremation with a memorial service in Kansas

Typical range: $3800 to $7000 all-in.

This is a full funeral-home service ending in cremation rather than burial: a viewing, a chapel or graveside service, and then cremation. It includes the funeral home’s basic services fee, transportation, refrigeration or short-term care, a rental or purchased casket for the viewing, the memorial service venue and staff, and a permanent urn.

The roughly $3,000 to $6,000 spread between direct cremation and full-service cremation is what families pay for the viewing, service, and the funeral home’s chapel and staff time. None of it changes the cremation itself.

Why prices vary so much within Kansas

The Kansas City and Wichita metros sit toward the top of the range, while rural central and western Kansas markets run several hundred dollars less.

Pricing within the same metro can also vary by $1,000 to $3,000 for the same disposition. The FTC Funeral Rule requires every funeral home to provide a written General Price List by phone or in person before you commit to anything. Use it.

How Kansas regulates cremation

Every state imposes some combination of three rules on cremation: a waiting period, a written authorization, and (in most states) a medical examiner or coroner clearance.

The Kansas waiting period

Kansas sets no fixed hourly waiting period, but no body may be cremated until a coroner's permit to cremate has been issued when the death or cause of death occurred in Kansas — the certification process usually takes 24 to 48 hours.

In practice, this means most Kansas cremations happen 24 to 72 hours after death — the family’s timeline is set by the statutory waiting period, the time required to obtain the death certificate, and the crematory’s scheduling.

Who can authorize cremation in Kansas

Authorization follows the priority order in K.S.A. §65-1734: the agent under a health-care power of attorney, then the surviving spouse, then adult children, then parents, then siblings may direct cremation.

If you want absolute certainty about who controls your cremation — particularly if you’re in a blended family or a long-term unmarried relationship — execute a written disposition designation under Kansas law. It overrides the default priority order.

Kansas’s cremation rate

The cremation rate in Kansas is ~48% of all dispositions (CANA 2023 — re-verify against the current CANA Annual Statistics Report). Below the US national average of ~60.6% (CANA 2023); Kansas remains close to an even split between cremation and traditional burial, though cremation continues to gain.

What you can do with the cremated remains in Kansas

The single biggest difference between cremation and burial is that cremation doesn’t require a cemetery. Kansas families have several options:

  • Keep the remains at home in a permanent urn. No cemetery cost.
  • Inurnment in a columbarium niche at a cemetery. Typical cost: $500 to $3,000 in most Kansas markets.
  • Burial of the urn in a small plot or in an existing family plot. Typical cost: $500 to $2,500 for the plot if a new one is needed.
  • Scattering. Cremated remains may be scattered in a cemetery scattering garden, on private land with the owner's consent, or over public land and waterways subject to local rules; remains may also stay in the family's custody. Kansas has no statewide scattering permit for simple cases.
  • Split the remains. A growing number of families divide cremated remains among multiple family members, with some scattered and some kept at home.

For most Kansas families choosing cremation, the cemetery cost is optional — and often zero. That’s the biggest single reason cremation costs so much less than burial.

How to get the cheapest dignified cremation in Kansas

A few specific moves consistently save Kansas families thousands of dollars on cremation:

1. Compare 3 direct-cremation providers in your market

Kansas City and Wichita have competitive direct-cremation providers advertising all-in prices under $1,000. Families that skip the viewing can typically arrange a direct cremation for about $850 to $1,500, versus $2,400+ at a full-service home.

2. Use the FTC Funeral Rule

Every Kansas funeral home is required to provide a written General Price List on request, by phone or in person, before you commit to anything. Ask for it.

3. Skip the casket

For direct cremation, you don’t need a casket — only a simple combustible container ($50 to $200). For cremation with a viewing, ask whether the funeral home offers a rental casket: a viewing-only casket with a removable interior. Typical savings: $1,500 to $3,000 versus purchasing a casket outright.

4. Decline embalming where you can

Embalming is not legally required in most US states for cremation, and most Kansas cremations don’t involve embalming. Typical savings: $750 to $1,200.

5. Hold the memorial yourself

A memorial held at home, at a place of worship, or in a public park costs a small fraction of what the funeral home’s chapel service costs. Combined with a direct cremation, this is the path most families take to keep costs under $2,000 total.

6. Check the regulator for complaints

Kansas cremation services are regulated by the Kansas State Board of Mortuary Arts. The regulator publishes complaint records and disciplinary actions, and checking before you commit can flag the small number of providers with consumer-protection issues.

Pre-paying vs paying at the time of need

A common question in Kansas is whether to pre-pay for cremation while you’re still alive. The honest answer is it depends:

  • Pre-need contracts (paid directly to a funeral home) lock in today’s prices but tie you to that provider. If the provider closes, is sold, or you move, recovering the money can be difficult. Kansas requires pre-need funds to be held in a regulated trust or insurance product, but rules vary.
  • Final expense insurance (a small whole-life policy of $5,000 to $25,000) pays cash to a named beneficiary at death, who uses it for any purpose — including a cremation at any provider. More flexible than a pre-need contract.
  • A dedicated savings account (POD bank account naming the family member who will handle arrangements) is the cheapest option and also avoids the Kansas probate process.

For most Kansas families, a POD savings account of $3,000 to $5,000 covers direct cremation and a modest memorial without pre-paying anything. See Do You Actually Need Final Expense Insurance? for the honest decision tree.

The honest takeaway

A direct cremation in Kansas typically costs $845 to $2400, and full-service cremation runs $3800 to $7000. The disposition itself is the same; the price difference is entirely in the optional service.

For most Kansas families choosing cremation, the cheapest dignified path is a direct cremation from a competitive provider in your metro, paired with a memorial the family organizes on its own. That keeps total cost under $2,000 in most markets — versus $10,000 to $20,000+ for a traditional burial with cemetery costs included.

Whatever you choose, shop at least three providers, ask for the written General Price List, and decline the upsells you don’t actually want. Those three moves alone routinely save Kansas families $2,000 to $5,000.

Cremation costs in other states

Compare Kansas with cremation pricing in other major US states:


This page explains cremation costs and rules in Kansas in general terms as of 2026. It is not financial, legal, or funeral planning advice; prices, statutes, and regulator practices change. Always get itemized written quotes from licensed Kansas providers and confirm current rules before relying on this page. Sources: National Funeral Directors Association (NFDA) 2023 General Price List Survey; Cremation Association of North America (CANA) 2023 Annual Statistics Report; Federal Trade Commission Funeral Rule; Kansas State Board of Mortuary Arts; K.S.A. §65-1734 (priority to authorize disposition), K.S.A. §65-2426 (death certificate / coroner's permit to cremate), K.S.A. §65-1713 et seq. (regulation of funeral establishments and crematories).