Cremation Costs

Cost of Cremation in Louisiana (2026): Prices by City

ยท12 min readยทLocal Cremation Guide

Arranging a cremation in Louisiana often means weighing cost against the state's deep-rooted funeral traditions. Louisiana has a lower cremation rate than the national average, a reflection of strong customs around viewings and burial. That cultural backdrop matters for pricing: with fewer families choosing cremation, fewer providers compete purely on a low direct-cremation number, so the spread between the cheapest and most expensive option in a given city can be wide.

As of 2026, direct cremation in Louisiana typically costs between $895 and $4,149, with most families landing somewhere in the middle of that range. What you actually pay depends heavily on whether you choose a dedicated cremation provider or a full-service funeral home, and on which part of the state you live in. This guide lays out real 2026 price ranges across major Louisiana cities, explains what moves the number up or down, and shows you how to find a fair price near you.

Typical Cost of Cremation in Louisiana

The price you pay in Louisiana comes down to two things: the type of service you choose, and the provider you use. The three most common options are:

  • Direct cremation -- cremation without a viewing, visitation, or formal service. The body is cremated once the required paperwork is complete, and the ashes are returned to the family. This is the most affordable path, typically $895 to $4,149 statewide depending on the city and provider.
  • Cremation with a memorial service -- direct cremation plus a memorial gathering, which can include a rented room, staff time, and coordination. Across Louisiana this commonly runs from roughly $3,890 to $11,945, depending on how elaborate the service is.
  • Full-service cremation -- a traditional funeral with a viewing and ceremony before the cremation, including embalming, a rental casket, and facility use. This is the costliest route, typically $6,295 to $13,800.

Because direct cremation is the simplest and most affordable choice, the rest of this guide focuses on it -- though the city table below includes memorial-service pricing as well.

Cost of Cremation by Louisiana City

The table below shows real 2026 price ranges for direct cremation and cremation with a memorial service across major Louisiana cities. These figures reflect pricing from cremation-only providers as well as traditional funeral homes that offer cremation packages. Each range runs from the lowest-cost direct cremation specialist up to a mid-tier funeral home in that market, which is why the spread can be sizable.

CityDirect CremationWith Memorial
New Orleans$1,195 - $3,240$3,895 - $11,945
Baton Rouge$1,259 - $3,595$3,890 - $8,750
Shreveport$1,609 - $3,520$5,420 - $8,765
Metairie$1,820 - $2,350$4,945 - $9,375
Lafayette$1,734 - $4,149$5,220 - $7,820
Lake Charles$1,400 - $2,910$5,460 - $8,305
Bossier City$900 - $1,995$6,360 - $7,280
Kenner$1,755 - $1,957$6,289 - $6,455
Alexandria$995 - $3,670$4,190 - $7,720
Monroe$1,350 - $2,395$5,140 - $7,610
Prairieville$1,000 - $2,000$1,800 - $3,200
Houma$1,900 - $2,534$4,325 - $6,305

Note: These ranges represent typical pricing in each city as of 2026. Individual providers may fall above or below these figures depending on the specific services included, current market conditions, and any add-on fees. Always request a written, itemized quote before committing.

A few patterns stand out. The lowest entry points in the state show up in markets like Bossier City and Alexandria, where some providers start under $1,000. The wide top end in cities like New Orleans and Lafayette reflects full-service funeral homes that happen to offer a cremation package -- those higher numbers are not what you would pay at a dedicated direct cremation provider. In the New Orleans metro, it is worth comparing Metairie and Kenner alongside the city itself, since suburban providers sometimes price differently.

What Drives the Price Differences

Two families in the same Louisiana city can pay very different amounts for what is essentially the same service. Understanding why helps you recognize a fair deal -- and steer clear of overpaying.

Provider type

This is the single biggest factor. A dedicated direct-cremation provider runs lean, with low overhead and a streamlined process, so its prices sit at the bottom of each range. A full-service funeral home carries the cost of a chapel, viewing rooms, embalming facilities, and a larger staff -- and those costs are folded into its pricing even when all you want is a simple cremation. The same cremation can cost under $1,000 at one firm and several thousand at another across town.

Local competition

Cities with many competing providers tend to have lower prices. Because Louisiana's overall cremation demand is lower than the national average, some smaller markets have only one or two firms handling cremation, which reduces price pressure at the low end. Larger metros such as New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and Shreveport have more providers competing for business, which generally keeps entry-level prices more reasonable.

What's included in the package

A quoted price means little until you know what it covers. A genuine direct cremation package should include transportation of the deceased, the cremation itself, a basic container, refrigeration or holding, filing of the death certificate and permits, and return of the ashes. Some "starting at" prices leave out items you will inevitably need, so the headline figure can mislead. For a full walkthrough of what belongs in a package, see our guide to cremation cost breakdown: what you actually pay.

Add-on fees

Watch for charges that are not in the base price: extra death certificate copies, mileage or distance fees if the death occurred far from the provider, after-hours or weekend pickup, holding fees if cremation is delayed past the required waiting period, and an upgraded urn. These can add several hundred dollars. Our overview of hidden cremation fees to watch for covers the most common ones.

How to Save on Cremation in Louisiana

Direct cremation is already the most economical option, but you can lower the cost further with a few simple steps:

  • Choose direct cremation. Skipping the viewing, embalming, and formal funeral service is the largest single saving available. You can still hold a meaningful memorial gathering later, on your own terms and at your own venue, often at a fraction of the cost.
  • Get at least three itemized quotes. Contact a mix of dedicated cremation providers and traditional funeral homes, and ask each for a complete General Price List. Under the FTC Funeral Rule, providers must give you itemized pricing over the phone and in writing.
  • Compare apples to apples. Make sure each quote covers the same items -- transportation, cremation, basic container, permits, and return of remains. A lower headline price that excludes essentials is not actually cheaper.
  • Bring your own urn. Providers cannot charge you a handling fee for using an urn you bought elsewhere. A simple online urn can save $100 to $300 over the funeral home's display models.
  • Ask about veteran and senior discounts. Many Louisiana providers offer reduced pricing for veterans and seniors. Veterans may also qualify for burial benefits that offset some costs -- see our guide to cremation benefits for veterans.
  • Consider online cremation services. Several reputable online-first companies serve Louisiana metros at transparent, fixed prices. They are worth comparing against local providers -- see online cremation companies compared.

How to Compare Local Providers

Price matters, but it should not be your only consideration when choosing a cremation provider. The right provider combines a fair price with reliability, clear communication, and compassionate service. One thing to know up front: in Louisiana, only a licensed funeral director can authorize and arrange cremations, and the state requires a 24-hour waiting period after death before cremation can take place. That means even a simple direct cremation runs through a licensed firm. When comparing options in your city:

  • Verify licensing. Confirm the provider and the crematory it uses are licensed and in good standing with the Louisiana State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors, which regulates funeral establishments in the state.
  • Read recent reviews. Check Google and the Better Business Bureau for feedback on responsiveness, accuracy of pricing, and how the provider handled the return of remains.
  • Ask who performs the cremation. Some providers -- especially online companies -- coordinate with a local crematory partner rather than operating their own. Ask which facility will be used and confirm its credentials.
  • Confirm the timeline. Ask how soon pickup can occur, how the 24-hour waiting period affects the schedule, how long until the ashes are returned, and who your point of contact will be throughout.

A good way to start is to look up cremation providers in your specific city. Browse listings for New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Shreveport, or Lafayette to compare options near you, then request itemized quotes from two or three before deciding.

If you want to see how Louisiana pricing compares to the rest of the country, our average cremation cost by state guide puts these numbers in national context. Louisiana's lower cremation rate and traditional market mean its low-end prices are not always as competitive as states where cremation is the norm, so shopping around matters more here than in many places.

Pre-Planning to Lock In Today's Prices

If you are arranging cremation for yourself rather than responding to an immediate loss, pre-planning is worth considering. Because Louisiana's lower cremation demand means fewer providers compete on price, doing your research ahead of time pays off. Get quotes from at least three providers and ask specifically about all-inclusive direct cremation packages. Many Louisiana firms offer pre-need plans that let you lock in today's price for a service that may not be needed for years. The benefits include price protection against future increases, relief for your family from having to make financial decisions while grieving, and the time to compare providers carefully without urgency.

Even if you do not pre-pay, simply writing down your wishes -- that you prefer direct cremation, and which provider you trust -- can save your family thousands of dollars and a great deal of stress. Learn more in our guide to planning cremation in advance.

Prices in this guide are 2026 estimates and will vary by provider and location. The figures shown are typical ranges, not guaranteed quotes. Always request a written, itemized price list from any provider before making a decision.

Helpful Resources

For authoritative, up-to-date information on cremation costs, consumer rights, and planning:

Related guides on this site:

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does cremation cost in Louisiana in 2026?

Direct cremation in Louisiana typically costs between $895 and $4,149 as of 2026. The exact price depends on your city and the type of provider -- dedicated cremation specialists charge the least, while full-service funeral homes charge more. Cremation with a memorial service runs roughly $3,890 to $11,945, and a full traditional funeral with cremation costs considerably more.

What is the cheapest city for cremation in Louisiana?

Bossier City has some of the lowest entry-level direct cremation prices in the state, with providers starting around $900, and Alexandria and Prairieville also have options near or under $1,000. That said, Louisiana's lower cremation demand means price competition varies, so it is always worth comparing several quotes in your own city rather than assuming one place is cheapest.

Why is direct cremation so much cheaper than a full funeral?

Direct cremation skips the most expensive parts of a traditional funeral -- embalming, a viewing, a casket, facility rental, and staff for the ceremony. The body is cremated soon after the paperwork is complete and the 24-hour waiting period passes, and the ashes are returned to the family. You can still hold a memorial gathering afterward on your own terms, which keeps the meaningful part of saying goodbye while removing the largest costs.

Does Louisiana require a funeral director for cremation?

Yes. Louisiana requires that only a licensed funeral director can authorize and arrange cremation services, and there is a 24-hour waiting period after death before cremation can take place. Even a basic direct cremation must run through a licensed funeral establishment, so confirm any provider you consider is properly licensed with the state board.

How can I make sure I am getting a fair price?

Request an itemized General Price List from at least three providers and compare the total cost for the same set of services -- transportation, cremation, basic container, permits, and return of remains. Under the FTC Funeral Rule, providers must give you this pricing on request. Knowing the typical range for your city, shown in the table above, gives you a benchmark to judge any quote against.

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