The Scotsman

Cost of dying rising twice as fast as the cost of living

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

The cost of dying is rising more than twice as fast as the cost of living, a report has claimed, with the cost of a funeral surging ahead of inflation.

While the cost of living has increased by a cumulative 7.67 per cent since 2015, the average price of a cremation in Scotland has jumped by 18.38 per cent. However, the cost of burials has not risen as fast as inflation, increasing by 5.6 per cent to a typical fee of £1,630.

In the UK overall, the figure has risen by 19.9 per cent over the period. The national average price of a burial plot is now £1,838. According to funeral services comparison site Beyond, which carried out the study, it is a similar story in the cremation market, where fees are up by 17.6 per cent over the past three years across the UK.

Cremations now account for close to 80 per cent of all funerals in the UK, with the average price for a cremation now standing at £784. However, some crematoriu­ms – including in Dundee and Moray – are charging as much as £1,070, according to a separate report from Beyond released earlier this month.

James Dunn, co-founder of Beyond, said: “The number of people dying each year is fairly predictabl­e so it’s staggering to see the cost of dying race ahead of the cost of living by such a margin.

“Funeral prices in this country are not something that we particular­ly enjoy talking about and that means awareness of the rising costs of cremations and burials is very low, which plays into the hands of cemetery and crematoriu­m owners.”

He added: “Competitio­n and transparen­cy are going to be key over the next few years if the costs of cremations and burials are going to be prevented from rising unchecked.”

Beyond said that private funeral services firm Dignity run 19 of the 20 most expensive crematoriu­ms in the country, with a direct correlatio­n between an absence of competitio­n and higher prices.

Funerals now commonly reaching £5,000 or more once all additional costs, such as cars, coffins and administra­tion fees are included.

London is home to the UK’S most expensive cemeteries with land in the capital at a premium. However, it is Wales and the South West that have seen the sharpest hikes in the last 12 months, each with 12 per cent increases for average burial prices in just a year.

Official figures also released today by Registers of Scotland showed that in 2017 there were 5,022 more deaths north of the Border than births registered.

0 Both burials and cremations have risen in price over the last few years in Scotland

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