It is a legal requirement that every death that occurs in Queensland has to be registered with the Births, Deaths and Marriages. Burnett Regional Funeral Services will do this on your behalf.

Once the death is registered, a formal death certificate, which is needed in relation to any legal and estate issues, will be issued to the informant who signed the Form 8 – Death Registration Information form.

To make the process easier at the time, you may wish to record this information in advance, and bring it along to your initial meeting.

Viewing a loved one can have great benefits for grieving relatives. Often, we find it difficult to believe that someone has died and seeing it for ourselves helps us to accept the reality, so necessary before we can begin to move forward with the changes a death can mean.

Seeing a person’s body in an appropriate and attractive well-prepared environment can leave us with a sense of peace and dignity, which can be very important.

If the death has involved sickness, pain and struggle, or even violent or accidental death, then this sense of peace, and even beauty can help us to appreciate and celebrate the person’s life more easily.

When we have not been present when death has occurred, especially if it was an unexpected death, we may be tormented by thoughts of that time and seeing the person can help move our thoughts past that painful thinking.

Family members who visit or view have an opportunity to share and comfort one another, to say a personal goodbye, to place personal items in the coffin and to prepare for the more public funeral.

Once the funeral has taken place, the death certificate application will be sent to The Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages. This is done electronically to speed up the process, but in the event that the funeral takes place on a Friday afternoon/weekend, it will not be processed until the following Monday morning.

The processing by Births, Deaths and Marriages usually takes 5-10 working days. In the event that you still haven’t received it after this period, please do not hesitate to let us know, and we will contact the Registry on your behalf.

The Death Certificate will be forwarded directly to the next-of-kin who signed Form 8 (Death Registration Information).

The Funeral Director does not directly deal with organising the plaque or headstone, but we can advise you of the monumentalists in the area.

The local council will be able to advise of the size and design for a lawn plaque. In some cases, part of the cost of the burial plot is allocated for the plaque.

The North Burnett Regional Council allocates $200 for a lawn cemetery plaque and $100 for a columbarium plaque. This price includes the cost of the plinth, headstone and top dressing, installation and administration costs, if completed within 24 months of interment.

However, please note: the cost is non-transferrable and the plaque must be organised by the council through their preferred supplier who is Worsell & Co. The cost covers a basic brass plaque with six lines of writing. Other designs and additional elements such as a photo can be organised, however, the applicant will be billed by the council for the excess fees over $200.

The council do have a book of designs that you are able to view, but further designs can be seen on www.worssell.com.au.
There is a form that needs to be completed to apply for a plaque – Application for Plaque .

Bundaberg Regional Council has no allocation for a plaque.

Crematoriums prefer at least 48 hours’ notice before ashes are collected. This allows sufficient time for processing of ashes and relevant paperwork to be completed.

Collection times by Burnett Regional Funeral Services usually take about five (5) days. If you require ashes urgently, please let us know when arrangements are being made.

It is important that anyone who receives Centrelink Benefits notifies Centrelink of the passing of the person.
Download the Advice of Death form here