DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How much does a burial vault cost?
A burial vault, sometimes called a grave liner, is the outer container that holds the casket underground. Most cemeteries require one, even though it is rarely demanded by law, because it stops the ground from sinking as the earth settles. For many families it is an unwelcome surprise, a real cost they did not know was coming. The price ranges widely depending on the material and how much the funeral home marks it up.
The quick version
- It is usually a cemetery requirement, not a legal one, so ask the cemetery what it actually demands.
- A basic grave liner meets most cemetery rules for far less than a lined and sealed burial vault.
- Funeral homes and cemeteries both mark vaults up, and you can often buy one from a third party.
- It only applies to burials, so a direct cremation or cremation with service avoids it entirely.
- The FTC Funeral Rule requires the price to appear on the itemized General Price List.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 4% less than the advertised list price for burial vault.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- $900“The $900 included the burial vault, digging of the grave, installing of the vault, tent set up, artificial grass, and sealing of the vault.”
- $1,840“This is a small town in South Carolina with only one funeral home within a 20 mile radius, so I think they grossly overcharge.”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
Two things drive the price: what the cemetery requires and what you are upsold. A simple concrete grave liner that just supports the soil sits at the low end. A sealed, lined, reinforced burial vault with a warranty sits far higher, and the sales pitch leans on protecting the casket, which it does far less than the marketing suggests. On top of that, both the funeral home and the cemetery add their own markup, so the same vault can cost very different amounts depending on who sells it to you.
How to pay less
- Ask the cemetery for the minimum it requires, since a plain grave liner is often enough and costs much less than a sealed vault.
- Decline the premium sealing and lining upgrades, which add cost without meaningful benefit.
- Price the vault from a third-party supplier, as you are often allowed to provide your own.
- Compare the funeral home's price against the cemetery's, because one is sometimes far cheaper.
- If you are open to cremation, remember that a direct cremation skips the vault, the cemetery plot and much else.
Common questions
Is a burial vault required by law?
Almost never. It is the cemetery, not the state, that usually requires an outer container, and many accept a basic grave liner. Ask the cemetery directly what its rules are.
What is the difference between a grave liner and a burial vault?
A grave liner is a plain container that keeps the ground from sinking. A burial vault is sealed and lined and costs more. Most cemetery requirements can be met with the cheaper liner.
Can I buy a vault somewhere other than the funeral home?
Often, yes. Like a casket, a vault can frequently be supplied by a third party. Check the cemetery's rules and compare prices, since markups are large.
Do I need a vault for a cremation?
No. Vaults apply to casket burials. A direct cremation or a cremation with service avoids the vault, the cemetery plot and the opening fee altogether.