Bangor Mail

Burial and crem fees reach high

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FAMILIES are being hit hard across North Wales as cremation and burial fees soar to an all-time high.

A burial now costs an eye-watering £1,334 on average in Wales, and Aberystwyt­h is the most expensive place to be cremated at £795 - an increase of 8.2% year-on-year.

According to figures by Funeralboo­ker, an independen­t funeral booking service, cremation fees have shot up across the board in the region during the past year, with a 5.3% increase in Conwy, a 1.3% hike in Bangor and 1.1% increase in Wrexham. Cemetery fees have also seen an alarming increase, with a whopping 9.9% increase in Conwy.

A burial in a cemetery in Conwy now costs £995 – a £90 increase in a year. But it’s far more expensive to be buried in a Wrexham cemetery, where fees have risen to a hefty £1,586, an increase of 1% from 2016. In Gwynedd, cemetery fees have risen to £1,207, an increase of 6.3% year on year.

One of the cheapest counties to be buried in is Powys where fees have been frozen for a year.

A burial costs £845, just £4 more than in Barry in Merthyr, the cheapest place to be buried in Wales at £841.

Cruse Bereavemen­t, who offer support and counsellin­g to those bereaved, say that families are being forced to take out loans to pay for funerals, which cost on average around £3,500.

A spokeswoma­n for the charity said: “The cost of cremation and burial fees is very worrying for families.

“Not only are people dealing with bereavemen­t they suddenly have big bills to pay, it compounds grief.

“Many people end up paying by credit cards or taking out loans, although the government can step in to help if somebody is on benefits.”

Garry Lloyd Jones, a funeral director in Llanrwst and Colwyn Bay, said there can be help for families who have trouble paying for a loved one’s cremation and burial.

Garry said: “It all depends on what the family wants, a funeral can cost as little as £2,000. We can apply for grants for hardpresse­d families if needed, and we can offer payment plans.”

Garry added: “If it’s a sudden death, or, perhaps, somebody who has died at a young age, meeting the costs of a burial can be very traumatic.”

A Conwy Council spokeswoma­n said: “Some Conwy County Council bereavemen­t service fees and charges have increased in price (between 2-10%) but costs remain either just below or at the national Wales and UK average.”

 ??  ?? Above, from left: handlers JR Griffith, Gwynfor Owen, Rhion Owen, Jeff Evans and Aled Owen
Left: Young trialist Rhion Owen, of Rhosybol, with his dog Ross
Right: Medwyn Evans, one of the two judges
Above, from left: handlers JR Griffith, Gwynfor Owen, Rhion Owen, Jeff Evans and Aled Owen Left: Young trialist Rhion Owen, of Rhosybol, with his dog Ross Right: Medwyn Evans, one of the two judges
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