
Funeral & Burial Assistance for Seniors 2026: Real Help
When a loved one dies, grief arrives alongside a stack of bills — and the average funeral now runs $7,000 to $9,000. If you’re searching for funeral assistance for seniors, you deserve a clear-eyed map of what help actually exists, because there is a lot of misinformation online. The honest truth is that no single program covers a full funeral, but several sources can be stacked together to ease the burden. I’ll walk you through each one, what it really pays, and how to apply, so you can plan ahead or act quickly when the time comes.
Table of Contents
- The Social Security $255 Death Benefit
- Veterans Burial Benefits
- State Medicaid Burial Assistance
- FEMA Disaster-Related Funeral Aid
- Other Help: Counties, Charities & Final Expense
- Planning Ahead to Protect Your Family
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Social Security $255 Death Benefit
The most well-known program is also the most misunderstood. Social Security pays a one-time, lump-sum death payment of exactly $255. That figure is not a typo and it is not adjusted for inflation — it has been frozen at $255 since 1954. It will not cover a funeral; think of it as a small contribution, nothing more.
To receive it, the deceased must have earned enough Social Security work credits, and the payment goes to a surviving spouse who was living with the deceased at the time of death. If there is no qualifying spouse, it can go to a spouse or child who was already receiving benefits on the deceased’s record. You must apply within two years of the death, typically by calling Social Security at 1-800-772-1213, since this benefit usually cannot be claimed online. Far more valuable than the $255, for many widows and widowers, are the ongoing survivor benefits — read my guide to Social Security benefits to understand those.
Veterans Burial Benefits
If your loved one was a veteran, the VA offers meaningful help, and this is one of the most underused benefits in the country. For a non-service-connected death on or after October 1, 2025, the VA pays a burial allowance of up to $1,002, plus an additional $1,002 plot allowance when the veteran is not buried in a national cemetery. For a service-connected death — meaning the death resulted from a service-related condition — the maximum burial allowance rises to as much as $2,000.
Beyond cash allowances, every eligible veteran is entitled to burial in a VA national cemetery at no cost, including the grave, opening and closing, a government headstone or marker, a burial flag, and a Presidential Memorial Certificate. A surviving spouse can often be buried there too. These in-kind benefits are frequently worth far more than the cash allowance, so always ask the funeral home to coordinate with the VA.
State Medicaid Burial Assistance
If your loved one was enrolled in Medicaid — particularly under an Aged, Blind, or Disabled category — many states offer a burial or funeral assistance program. Amounts vary widely by state; for example, some programs provide up to roughly $2,000 toward final expenses for qualifying residents. Because Medicaid is administered state by state, you’ll need to contact your state’s Medicaid office or Department of Human Services to learn the specific benefit and how to apply. This is also the moment to know that Medicaid generally allows a person to set aside money in an irrevocable funeral trust without it counting against asset limits — an important planning tool I discuss in my Medicaid spend-down guide.
FEMA Disaster-Related Funeral Aid
When a death is caused by a federally declared disaster — a hurricane, flood, wildfire, or similar event — FEMA’s Individual Assistance program can reimburse funeral costs. Covered expenses include the funeral service, burial or cremation, a casket or urn, the burial plot, clergy and transportation of remains. The death certificate must directly attribute the death to the disaster. This is a reimbursement program, so keep every receipt and the death certificate, and apply through FEMA at DisasterAssistance.gov.
Other Help: Counties, Charities & Final Expense Insurance
When the programs above fall short, several other avenues exist:
- County indigent burial programs. Most counties have a program of last resort that arranges a basic cremation or burial when a family genuinely cannot pay. Contact your county social services office.
- Religious congregations and benevolence funds. Many churches, synagogues, and mosques quietly help members with funeral costs.
- Nonprofit and crowdfunding help. Organizations and community fundraisers can fill gaps, especially for younger survivors.
- Final expense (burial) insurance. A small whole-life policy of $5,000–$25,000 designed to pay funeral costs. It’s worth comparing against simply pre-funding a funeral trust, since premiums over many years can exceed the payout.
| Program | Typical Amount | Who Qualifies | Apply Through |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security lump sum | $255 (flat) | Surviving spouse/child | 1-800-772-1213 |
| VA burial (non-service) | Up to $1,002 + $1,002 plot | Eligible veterans | VA.gov / funeral home |
| VA burial (service-connected) | Up to $2,000 | Service-related death | VA.gov |
| State Medicaid burial | Varies (often ~$2,000) | Medicaid enrollees | State Medicaid office |
| FEMA funeral aid | Reimbursement of costs | Disaster-caused death | DisasterAssistance.gov |
| County indigent burial | Basic burial/cremation | Low-income, no funds | County social services |
Planning Ahead to Protect Your Family
The single kindest thing you can do is reduce the decisions and costs your family will face. Compare prices — funeral homes are required by the FTC’s Funeral Rule to give you an itemized price list, and cremation typically costs a fraction of a traditional burial. Consider a pre-paid funeral trust rather than a large insurance policy, set aside a small fund earmarked for final expenses, and write down your wishes so loved ones aren’t guessing. If money is tight while you’re living, make sure you’re also claiming every benefit you’re owed, from SSI to Medicaid long-term care.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Social Security pay for funeral costs?
Only a one-time $255 lump-sum death payment, which goes to an eligible surviving spouse or child. It does not cover the cost of a funeral and has not increased since 1954. Apply within two years of the death.
How do I get help paying for a funeral with no money?
Stack every source you qualify for: the $255 Social Security benefit, VA burial allowances if a veteran, your state’s Medicaid burial program, and your county’s indigent burial program of last resort. Religious congregations and crowdfunding can fill remaining gaps.
What burial benefits do veterans receive?
Eligible veterans receive free burial in a VA national cemetery with a grave, government headstone, and burial flag, plus a cash allowance up to $1,002 (non-service-connected death) or as much as $2,000 for a service-connected death, with an added plot allowance in some cases.
Is final expense insurance worth it for seniors?
It can be, if you can’t qualify for other coverage and want a guaranteed payout. But compare carefully — premiums paid over 15–20 years can exceed the benefit. A pre-paid funeral trust is often a better value for those who can fund it.
Related Articles You May Find Helpful
- Social Security Complete Guide 2026
- Medicaid Spend-Down 2026: Qualify Without Going Broke
- SSI 2026: Payment Amounts, Eligibility & How to Apply
- My Social Security Account 2026: Login & Setup Guide
- Senior Transportation Assistance 2026: Free Rides Guide
Sources
- Social Security Administration — Lump-Sum Death Payment (Form SSA-8)
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — Burial Allowances
- DisasterAssistance.gov / FEMA — Funeral Assistance
This article is for educational purposes and is not legal or financial advice. Program amounts and rules change — confirm with each agency. See our Editorial Guidelines.