Here's something most people don't realize: you probably can bury a family member on your land. I say "probably" because—and this is where it gets messy—the answer hinges on a tangle of state statutes, county health codes, your specific property deed, and sometimes even what your neighbors think about it.
Before you assume the funeral industry has monopolized death care, consider this: home burial predates commercial cemeteries by centuries. It never actually became illegal in most places. It just got buried (pun intended) under layers of regulation that make many families give up before they start.
Here's the short answer: yes, in most states. The longer answer? It's complicated.
The federal government stays out of this entirely. Washington doesn't care where you bury Aunt Martha. That leaves decisions to state legislatures and—more importantly—county health departments, who worry about things like groundwater contamination and property values.
Only three states throw up serious roadblocks: California, Indiana, and Washington. California essentially banned the practice decades ago except for established cemeteries. Indiana did something similar. Washington makes the permitting process so onerous that few families bother.
Everywhere else? Technically allowed. But "allowed" doesn't mean "easy."
Take Texas, for instance. The state says you can absolutely bury on private land. You'll need a transit permit from the county (costs about $15-30). ...