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Cat cremation · aftercare

Cat cremation in Australia

Cat cremation is the most common way Australians say goodbye to a cat. A private (individual) cremation returns your cat's ashes to you; a communal (shared) cremation usually does not.

Here's how private and communal cat cremation differ, the cat-specific urn and keepsake options, what collection looks like, and how to compare providers honestly.

Providers to compare
36Providers to compare
Offer private cremation
36Offer private cremation
Publish pricing
31Publish pricing
Cat cremation

36providers listed

Aftercare you can arrange

  • Private cremation36 listed
  • Ashes returned36 listed
  • Home collection34 listed
  • Memorial keepsakes35 listed

Counts reflect providers with the option confirmed in our data. Species support, availability and pricing vary — confirm directly with the provider.

In plain terms

The essentials, answered

Short, honest answers you can act on — then confirm the specifics with each provider. This is general information, not veterinary advice.

Private vs communal is the key choice

A private (individual) cat cremation returns your cat's ashes to you. A communal (shared) cremation is done with other pets and usually does not return ashes.

A small urn suits most cats

Cats sit in a fairly narrow weight range, so most fit a small urn or keepsake. The choice is mostly material and style rather than size.

Collection is often available

Many providers collect from your home or vet clinic, or you can drop off. Home collection may add a fee — confirm this and the service area first.

Keepsakes can follow the ashes

With a private cremation you can keep the ashes, set some aside for a keepsake urn or jewellery, or ask about a paw print. Confirm what's included versus an extra.

Compare by pet type

How aftercare changes from pet to pet

The private-versus-communal choice is the same for every pet, but size, transport, ashes volume and keepsakes shift by species. Here's the honest picture — and where to go for each.

Step by step

From your first choice to a keepsake for your cat

Arranging a cremation is really a short sequence of decisions. Work through them in order and you'll know exactly what to confirm with a provider before anything is booked.

1

Step 1

Choose private or communal

A private (individual) cremation is what makes an ashes return possible. A communal cremation is shared and usually does not return ashes — so decide this first.

2

Step 2

Confirm they accept cats

Ask the provider to confirm they can care for a cat. Support for this pet type varies, so it's worth checking before anything else.

3

Step 3

Arrange collection or drop-off

Confirm whether the provider collects from your home or vet clinic, or whether you drop off — and whether a collection fee applies.

4

Step 4

Confirm ashes return & timing

Ask whether the ashes are returned to you or your vet, roughly how long that takes, and how your pet is identified through the process.

5

Step 5

Choose an urn or keepsake

Ashes are often returned in a simple container. Decide whether to keep that, move to an urn you like, or set aside a little for a keepsake or jewellery.

6

Step 6

Confirm what's included & the price

Ask for an itemised quote so you know what the base price covers, and what collection, ashes return, urns or memorials add on top.

Private vs communal

The one choice that decides the ashes

Almost every cat cremation question traces back to this. Here's the honest difference — and why ashes return usually depends on it.

Ashes returned

Private / individual cremation

Your cat is cremated individually, so the ashes returned are your cat's. Choose this if keeping the ashes matters. It usually costs more than communal.

Usually no ashes

Communal / shared cremation

Your cat is cremated with other pets and the ashes are usually not returned. Some providers scatter them at a dedicated site. It's typically the lower-cost option.

What shapes the cost

What changes the price of cat cremation

Published pricing varies, and these are not quotes. A few factors explain most of the difference — use the cat cremation cost guide for indicative ranges, then confirm with the provider.

Private vs communal

An individual cremation that returns ashes costs more than a shared one that does not.

Collection

Home collection often adds a fee, sometimes by distance; vet drop-off can be lower.

Urn & keepsakes

A basic container is often included; a chosen urn, keepsake or jewellery is charged on top.

Your cat's size

Cats vary less than dogs, but a larger cat may still shift the price band slightly.

After-hours & timing

After-hours call-outs or a faster return can affect what you pay.

Location & service area

Where you are, and how far a provider travels, can change the total.

Compare providers

Australian providers to compare for cat cremation

Nearly all pet cremation providers care for cats. The list below draws on providers whose data confirms cat support or names cats among the pets they serve — with the rest of the directory just a click away.

8 with pet type confirmed in our data28 that name this pet in their pet-type list
36Providers to compare
36Offer private cremation
36Return ashes
31Publish pricing
Celestials Pet CremationMelbourne / VictoriaPet type listed

From $195

Private cremation Yes
Communal cremation Yes
Home collection Yes
Ashes returned Yes
Water cremationAsk
Edenhills Pet CremationMelbourne; Victoria; Adelaide; South AustraliaPet type listed
Private cremation Yes
Communal cremationAsk
Home collection Yes
Ashes returned Yes
Water cremationAsk
Evermore Pet CremationPerth region from Joondalup to Mandurah.Pet type listed

From $235

Private cremation Yes
Communal cremationAsk
Home collection Yes
Ashes returned Yes
Water cremationAsk
Paws to HeavenGreater BrisbanePet type listed

From $230

Private cremation Yes
Communal cremationAsk
Home collection Yes
Ashes returned Yes
Water cremation Yes
PetrestSydneyPet type listed
Private cremation Yes
Communal cremation Yes
Home collection Yes
Ashes returned Yes
Water cremationAsk
AvailableNot confirmed — ask the providerWater cremation (aquamation) available in this list

Many pet cremation providers support cats, but Final Tail still recommends confirming pet type, ashes return and collection directly before booking. A blank field means we haven't confirmed it — ask the provider.

Want to filter by state, collection or pricing? Browse the full pet cremation directory

How to choose

Questions worth asking

A short checklist to work through with a provider so a cat cremation is clear before you book.

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Questions

Frequently asked questions

Common questions, answered plainly. Confirm anything specific directly with the provider.

How much does cat cremation cost in Australia?

It depends mainly on the cremation type. As a broad guide, communal cremation often runs from around $120, while private (individual) cremation is commonly $180 to $400, with collection, after-hours call-outs and urns usually extra. See our cat cremation cost guide for indicative ranges, then confirm the current price with the provider.

Will I get my cat's ashes back?

With a private (individual) cat cremation, your cat is cremated separately and the ashes are returned to you, usually within a week or two. With a communal (shared) cremation the ashes are usually not returned. If keeping the ashes matters, confirm the cremation is individual before booking.

What size urn do I need for my cat?

Most cats fit a small urn. As a rough guide, urn capacity is about 1 cubic inch (roughly 16 cc) per 450 g (1 lb) of healthy body weight, so a typical cat needs only a small urn, with a little more for a larger cat or room for keepsakes. Confirm the exact capacity with the provider — see our cat urns guide.

Can the provider collect my cat?

Many providers offer home collection or can collect from your vet clinic, and some ask you to drop off. Home collection may add a fee. Confirm whether collection is available for your area and what it costs.

What keepsakes can I get for my cat?

With a private cremation you can keep the ashes in an urn, set aside a portion for a keepsake urn or ashes jewellery, or ask about a paw print. Availability varies by provider, and Final Tail doesn't list specific products, so ask each provider what they offer.

Does Final Tail arrange cat cremation?

No. Final Tail is an independent directory and information service, not a cremation or veterinary provider, and does not arrange services. We list providers so you can compare them, then confirm cat cremation availability, pricing, collection and ashes return directly with the provider.

Keep exploring

Related guides & next steps

Estimate cat cremation cost, understand ashes return, and explore cat urns and keepsakes.

When you're ready

Compare cat cremation providers across Australia

See private vs communal cremation, ashes returned, collection options and pricing links, then confirm cat cremation availability and what's included directly with the provider.

Final Tail is an independent directory and information service, not a cremation or veterinary provider, and does not arrange services. This information is general only and is not veterinary advice. Provider support can vary by pet type, size, location and service area, so availability, species suitability, pricing, collection, ashes return and memorial options must be confirmed directly with each provider before booking.

Final Tail is an independent directory. We collect provider details from public listings, provider websites and information shared with us. Services, availability and pricing may change, so please confirm directly with the provider before making arrangements.