Pauper’s funerals cost UK councils almost £5.4 million last year, according to a new investigation, a rise of 3.5 per cent over 2016/17.
Freedom of information requests carried out by Royal London found that nearly a third of public health funerals were carried out as a result of families being unable to afford a burial, costing on average £3,757.
The pensions firm also discovered that one in 10 families went into debt as a result of covering a loved one’s funeral costs while a third of public health funerals were down to the deceased having no family. A further one in 10 had families unwilling to pay for the funeral.
Of the 390 local authorities studied, Birmingham and Manchester’s city councils, perhaps unsurprisingly, paying £990,437 and £242,178. The City of London was among the 10 councils paying the least, coughing up £715.
A Freedom of Information request, we requested found 275 local authorities spent £5,382,379 on public health funerals in the 12 months up to Apr 2018 Birminghams local authority spent the most, with public health funerals costing the city council £990,437. https://t.co/JCzAIoz9Zw pic.twitter.com/5BbpEKICTH
— Royal London (@RoyalLondon) January 9, 2019
However, Louise Eaton-Terry, funeral cost expert at Royal London, warns that the cuts local authorities are facing are causing an increase in burial fees.