A complete, lender-ready breakdown of what it takes to open a crematory in the US, written from the real plans we've built for funded death-care operators.
The short answer: opening a standalone crematorium in the US typically costs $300,000-$500,000 and takes 9-18 months, most of it spent securing an air-quality permit and a state crematory licence before the unit can legally operate. With the national cremation rate now above 63% and climbing toward 82% by 2045, demand is structural, but the high fixed cost means your plan lives or dies on projected cremation volume.
Yes, with volume. The variable cost of a single cremation (fuel, labour, container, maintenance) is modest relative to what it earns: a direct cremation sold to a family commonly runs $1,500-$3,000, while "trade" cremations performed wholesale for other funeral homes that lack their own retort run $200-$400 each. A single retort can typically perform 3-6 cremations per day, so a crematory that lines up steady trade volume from surrounding funeral homes plus a direct-to-consumer brand can fill capacity quickly.
The tailwind is real: the NFDA puts the 2025 US cremation rate at 63.4%, projected to reach 82.3% by 2045, and funeral homes are increasingly bringing cremation in-house specifically to recapture the margin they currently pay third-party crematories. The risk is the fixed cost: until you hit break-even volume, a $400k investment with a retort running half-empty is a cash drain. That tension is exactly what a lender or investor will probe, and exactly what your financial model has to answer.
Equipment is the headline number, but it is under half the real total. A new mid-range human cremation retort runs roughly $150,000-$200,000 for the unit alone; delivery, installation and the surrounding work pushes the all-in figure to $300,000-$500,000 for a standalone facility.
| Line item | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Cremation retort (new, mid-range unit) | $150,000-$200,000 |
| Delivery, crane & installation | $30,000-$80,000 |
| Building / facility build-out or renovation | $50,000-$200,000 |
| Air-quality permitting & emissions controls | $15,000-$50,000 |
| Zoning & land-use approvals | $5,000-$25,000 |
| Gas line & electrical upgrades | $10,000-$40,000 |
| Refrigeration / body holding & prep | $15,000-$40,000 |
| Software, vehicle & working capital | $25,000-$65,000 |
| All-in standalone crematory | $300,000-$500,000 |
A refurbished retort can cut equipment cost dramatically (used units start far lower), but factor in refurbishment, freight and emissions-compliance verification before assuming the saving is real, an under-spec'd unit that fails an air-quality inspection is the most expensive line item of all.
Map local cremation demand and competing crematories, and confirm the site can be zoned for a crematory, the most common deal-killer.
Wholesale "trade" crematory for funeral homes, a consumer direct-cremation brand, or an add-on to a funeral home. Each has a different plan.
Many jurisdictions require a conditional-use permit specific to crematories before you can build.
In most states this must be granted before the unit is installed (e.g. PA's GP-14, Florida's air general permit, NY DEC, a CA air-district permit).
Often via the funeral or cemetery board, plus operator/technician certification. California requires your incorporation docs, zoning and air permit.
Purchase and install the unit and supporting equipment, scheduling utility and emissions work alongside.
Chain-of-custody and identification protocols, staff training (CANA/ICCFA), case-management software and recordkeeping.
Sign trade agreements with surrounding funeral homes to fill capacity, and launch a direct-cremation consumer funnel.
Required before installation in most states; governs emissions and stack testing. Issued by the state environmental agency or local air district.
Often via the funeral/cemetery board; may require incorporation docs, zoning and the air permit, plus annual renewal and inspection.
Frequently a conditional-use permit specific to crematories. Confirm before you sign on a site.
Crematory managers and technicians typically need recognised training on file with the board.
Requirements vary materially by state and municipality, so the regulatory section of your plan should name the specific agencies and permit numbers for your location with a realistic timeline, lenders treat a vague permit plan as the single biggest execution risk.
For an SBA loan or an investor, a credible plan includes an executive summary and funding request; a local market analysis (cremation rate, demographics, competing crematories, trade vs direct opportunity); an operations plan (retort capacity, daily throughput, staffing, identification and compliance protocols); a regulatory plan (the permits above with a dated timeline); and a 5-year financial model covering the startup budget, a realistic cremation-volume ramp, fixed-cost coverage, break-even, and a debt-service-coverage ratio (DSCR) of at least 1.25 for SBA eligibility.
Because the spend is real estate plus heavy equipment, the SBA 504 loan is often the best fit (long term, low down payment for owner-occupied property and major equipment), with SBA 7(a) and conventional equipment financing as alternatives. Whichever route, the lender's decision turns on a model that shows cremation volume reaching DSCR-positive territory on a defensible timeline.
We build lender- and investor-ready crematorium business plans, complete with the local permit roadmap and a 5-year financial model underwriters accept. Our team has produced 200+ funded plans across regulated and capital-intensive industries.
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A standalone crematory typically costs $300,000-$500,000 all-in. The retort itself is $150,000-$200,000 new; the rest is installation, the building, permitting, utilities and working capital.
Yes. Almost every state requires an air-quality permit before installation and a state crematory licence (usually via the funeral or cemetery board), plus appropriate zoning and operator certification.
It can be, with volume. Direct cremations sell for roughly $1,500-$3,000 and trade cremations for $200-$400, against low variable cost, but profitability depends on filling retort capacity.
Usually 9-18 months, with most of the time spent on zoning, the air-quality permit and the build, not the cremation equipment itself.
Yes. Many standalone "trade" crematories operate purely wholesale, performing cremations for multiple funeral homes that do not own a retort.
Sources: NFDA 2025 Cremation & Burial Report (US cremation rate 63.4%, projected 82.3% by 2045); cremation-equipment manufacturer pricing (retort $150k-$200k; all-in $300k-$500k); state environmental and funeral/cemetery board permitting requirements (CA, PA, FL, NY). Figures are industry ranges for planning; confirm current costs and your state's rules before filing.