Alabama Estate Planning: Understanding Funeral and Burial Decision Rights
Most estate planning conversations cover the expected ground. Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, beneficiary designations. The right of disposition rarely comes up.
Most estate planning conversations cover the expected ground. Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, beneficiary designations. The right of disposition rarely comes up. That gap is worth closing. In Alabama, funeral and burial decisions follow a specific legal priority order. When family members cannot agree, the dispute can reach a probate court judge within hours of a death. For clients with blended families, estranged relatives, or strong personal preferences about end-of-life arrangements, this belongs in the planning conversation. What Does Alabama Law Say About Who Controls Funeral Decisions? Alabama Code Section 34-13-11 establishes a legal priority order for who has authority over funeral and burial arrangements after death. For most clients without advance planning, that order follows next-of-kin lines. A surviving spouse comes first, followed by adult children, then parents, then siblings, then more distant relatives. Two designations sit above even the surviving spouse. A military designation on file through the Department of Defense controls disposition for service members. And a sworn affidavit executed during a client’s lifetime naming a specific authorizing agent places that person at the top of the priority order entirely, above all family members. That second option is the planning tool most clients and their advisors have never discussed. Why Does a Will Not Solve This Problem? This is worth flagging directly with clients who believe their will addresses end-of-life arrangements. Wills are typically read and admitted to probate after funeral decisions have already been made. Alabama generally requires disposition within 48 hours of death. A document that is not legally operative within that window cannot reliably direct the decisions that happen inside it. The sworn affidavit under Section 34-13-11 is different. It is a standalone document, separate from a will or healthcare directive, that takes effect immediately upon death. Clients who have documented preferences inside a will, or communicated them only verbally, may not have the protection they believe they have. What Happens When Family Members Cannot Agree? When two or more people hold an equal right of disposition and cannot reach a majority agreement, any of them, or the funeral home holding the remains, can file a petition with the Alabama probate court. A judge then determines who is most appropriate to make the final call. Cremation adds another layer. Alabama law requires a cremation authorization form signed by the authorizing agent before cremation can proceed. A contested cremation is effectively blocked until the dispute is resolved. The costs of holding the remains during that process fall to the parties involved. This moves quickly and carries real financial and emotional weight. Which Clients Should Be Having This Conversation? A few situations warrant raising this directly: Clients in blended families where adult children from different relationships hold equal legal standing are particularly exposed. If those children disagree about burial versus cremation, each has the standing to create a dispute requiring court involvement. Clients who are estranged from family members who would still appear in the priority order face a similar issue. Legal standing does not require an active relationship. Unmarried partners are especially vulnerable. Without a formal affidavit designation, a long-term partner may have no legal standing in the priority order at all, regardless of the length or depth of the relationship. What the Affidavit Actually Does The sworn affidavit under Alabama Code Section 34-13-11 is available to any Alabama resident who is at least 18 and of sound mind. It names a specific authorizing agent and can specify the location, manner, and conditions of disposition. It is not a replacement for a will, trust, or healthcare directive. It fills a specific gap those documents cannot reliably reach. The document is not complex. The situation it prevents can be. The Broader Planning Principle The right of disposition is a specific example of a pattern that runs through estate planning. Who is legally in charge of a decision, and whether that was properly documented in advance, determines how a plan executes when it is actually needed. That principle applies to powers of attorney during incapacity, trustee and executor selection during administration, and the right of disposition at death. In each case, the absence of a clear designation does not leave a neutral outcome. It transfers the decision to a legal default, a priority list, or a court. Working with Heircraft Planning Heircraft Planning works with financial advisors, CPAs, and other professionals who want to make sure their clients have a complete planning picture. Learn more at heircraftplanning.com. Free in-person seminars are held throughout the year in Mobile for clients who want to understand the system before making decisions. View upcoming dates at heircraftplanning.com/upcoming-events. The post Who Controls the Funeral? What Alabama Law Says About Disposition of the Body appeared first on Estate Planning Law Firm in Mobile, AL | Heircraft Planning, LLC.
