Arkansas Home Burial Laws: Can You Bury Someone on Your Property?
Yes, home burial is legal in Arkansas — but requires county approval, health dept clearance, and formal registration. Here is the exact process.
All articles about Arkansas Funeral Laws & Consumer Rights Guide.
Yes, home burial is legal in Arkansas — but requires county approval, health dept clearance, and formal registration. Here is the exact process.
Arkansas has no state funeral assistance fund. County pauper programs are the only option. Here is how they work and what families need to do.
Arkansas crematories cannot contract directly with the public — a funeral director must serve as intermediary. Here's what this means for cost, options, and your rights.
Arkansas law allows families to handle funerals without a licensed funeral director — with one major exception. Here is exactly where DIY ends and a license begins.
A practical checklist covering every required step after a death in Arkansas — pronouncement, permits, death certificates, funeral arrangements, and estate tasks.
Comparing a funeral consumer rights guide to hiring a lawyer for Arkansas funeral planning — cost, speed, and what each option actually covers.
Practical steps to protect yourself from inflated funeral costs in Arkansas using federal and state consumer protection laws — no attorney needed.
What you actually need to legally bury someone on your own land in Arkansas — permits, zoning, county registration, and the one step most families skip.
The best resource for Arkansas families who cannot afford a traditional funeral — county assistance, direct cremation, VA benefits, and your legal rights.
Real Arkansas funeral cost benchmarks for 2026. Direct cremation averages $1,676. Burial tops $7,600. What drives the gap and how to avoid overpaying.
When someone dies at home in Arkansas, the first hours involve legal decisions most families don't know they need to make. Here's the exact sequence.
When an Arkansas coroner takes jurisdiction, how long they can hold a body, what families can do, and how coroner holds affect the funeral and death certificate timeline.
Arkansas families have federal rights to itemized pricing, outside caskets, and no forced bundles. Here's how the FTC Funeral Rule works in Arkansas.
How to report an Arkansas funeral home to the right agency, why your complaint must be notarized, and what happens after you file with the Insurance Department.
Five practical alternatives to a full-service funeral in Arkansas — from direct cremation to home funerals — with legal requirements, costs, and tradeoffs for each.
Arkansas law sets a strict hierarchy for who controls cremation authorization. Disputes can legally freeze all funeral arrangements. Here is how it works.
Arkansas state law does not require a burial vault. But cemeteries can still mandate one. Here's how the rules actually work and what you're legally obligated to pay.
In Arkansas, a veteran's DD Form 93 legally overrides the surviving spouse's funeral rights. Here's how military disposition authority works and what families need to know.
In Arkansas, whether the coroner or the medical examiner takes jurisdiction over a death determines everything about your timeline. Here's how the system works.
An Arkansas declaration of final disposition legally overrides your spouse and all family members. Here's how to execute one correctly and why it matters.
Shipping a body from Arkansas requires a burial-transit permit, specific preparation rules for common carriers, and coordination between two states. Here's how it works.
Arkansas veterans are entitled to free burial at the state veterans cemetery and VA burial allowances. Here's who qualifies, what's covered, and how to apply.
Arkansas scattering ashes rules for private land, public land, water, and at sea. What state law says, what federal rules apply, and what families need to know first.
How Arkansas prepaid funeral contracts work, your right to cancel or transfer to a new provider, the $35 fee cap, and what Form AID-FI-C3 actually does.
Home funerals are legal in Arkansas. A family member can act as the funeral director. Here is what the law requires and where the real barriers are.
Arkansas funeral homes must follow the FTC Funeral Rule. Here's what specific violations look like, how to spot them, and what to do if you've been overcharged.
Arkansas funeral procession laws — when a procession has right-of-way, what escort vehicles are required, and how drivers are expected to respond to a procession.
In Arkansas, a funeral home can legally freeze all arrangements when siblings disagree on burial vs cremation. Here's what the law says and what it costs you.
How Arkansas funeral homes upsell grieving families, what practices are illegal, and how to protect yourself with specific consumer rights under state and federal law.
The Funeral Consumers Alliance of Northwest Arkansas negotiates low-cost funeral arrangements for members. Here's what the alliance offers and its geographic limits.
Arkansas does not require embalming in most cases. Refrigeration at 45°F is a legal alternative. Here's exactly when each applies and when you can decline entirely.
Arkansas law gives families 90 days to claim ashes before a funeral home can scatter them. Here's what the state requires for cremated remains.
Arkansas requires a burial-transit permit before cremation or out-of-state transport of remains. Here is what triggers the requirement and the exact process.
When Arkansas requires a burial-transit permit, how to get one, what cemetery registration involves, and what happens if the permit is missing before cremation or transport.
Arkansas funeral laws explained plainly. Embalming is not universally required. The 48-hour rule, FTC rights, and what the state actually mandates vs. what funeral homes claim.
Arkansas autopsies are ordered by coroners or the state medical examiner. Learn when they're mandatory, who pays, and how they affect cremation and burial.