Dog urns · aftercare
Dog urns and keepsakes
A dog urn holds your dog's ashes after an individual cremation. Because dogs vary so much in size, capacity matters more than for most pets — a small terrier and a great dane need very different urns.
Here's how dog urn sizing works as a general guide, the keepsake options that follow, and what to confirm with the provider.
- List memorial products
- 57List memorial products
- Also return ashes
- 56Also return ashes
- Publish pricing
- 50Publish pricing
In the directory
Dog urns57providers list memorial products
Aftercare you can arrange
- Memorial products57 listed
- Private cremation53 listed
- Home collection51 listed
- Ashes returned56 listed
Counts reflect providers with the option confirmed in our data. Availability, inclusions 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.
Size is the big decision
Dog urn capacity is guided by weight. A small dog and a large dog need very different sizes, so start from your dog's healthy weight.
Ashes come back with private cremation
An individual (private) dog cremation returns your dog's ashes to you. A communal cremation is shared and usually does not.
Paw prints suit dogs well
A dog's paw print makes a distinctive keepsake. It's often decided around the cremation, so ask about it early.
Display or keep it simple
Some families choose a display urn for a considered spot at home; others prefer something simple, or to scatter. Both are fine.
Getting the size right
Dog urn sizing, as a general guide
Dogs span a huge weight range, so sizing matters. These bands are a general starting point by weight — confirm the exact capacity with the provider, as designs differ.
Choose your dog's size
~10–25 kg
healthy body weight
- Approx. capacity
- ≈ 400–900 cc
- Typical
- Mid-size breeds — such as kelpies, staffies or spaniels.
A general starting point only — confirm the exact capacity you need with the provider.
As a rough guide, urns are sized to hold about 1 cubic inch — roughly 16 cc — of capacity for every 450 g (1 lb) of your pet's healthy body weight. Providers usually build in extra room, so treat the bands below as a starting point and confirm the capacity you need with the provider.
Keepsakes for dogs
Dog keepsake options
Common choices alongside a dog urn. Availability and pricing vary by provider — these are general examples, so ask what's offered directly or through a partner.
Standard urn
A simple urn that holds all of the ashes — often timber, ceramic, a tin or a scatter-ready box.
When it matters
If you'd like to keep the ashes together at home in something more finished than the basic container.
Ask the provider
“Is a basic urn included, and what does a different material or size cost?”
Keepsake urn
A small urn that holds a portion of the ashes, so more than one person can keep some.
When it matters
When the ashes will be shared, split between a main urn and keepsakes, or partly scattered.
Ask the provider
“Can the ashes be divided across a main urn and one or more keepsakes?”
Paw print
An ink or clay impression of your pet's paw, taken as a keepsake.
When it matters
Often decided at the time of collection or cremation, so it's worth asking about early.
Ask the provider
“Is a paw print taken, and is it ink, clay or both?”
Memorial box
A wooden or presentation box that keeps the ashes together with keepsakes like a paw print, fur clipping or photo.
When it matters
When you'd like everything kept together in one considered piece.
Ask the provider
“What does the box include, and can I add a paw print or engraving?”
Plaque or nameplate
An engraved plate for an urn, keepsake box or marker — usually a name, dates and a short line.
When it matters
When you'd like the piece personalised with your pet's name and dates.
Ask the provider
“What can be engraved, and can I check the spelling and dates before it's made?”
Ashes jewellery
A pendant, bead or keepsake piece made to hold a small amount of ashes, or crafted to carry them.
When it matters
If you'd like to keep something close day to day, rather than only at home.
Ask the provider
“Do you make this in-house or through a partner, and how is the piece sealed?”
Before you choose
What to confirm with the provider
A few quick checks make sure a dog urn fits and reads exactly the way you want.
Capacity for your dog
Larger dogs need noticeably more capacity. Confirm the urn suits your dog's weight rather than relying on a size name alone.
Paw print timing
If you'd like a paw print, ask early — it's usually taken around the time of collection or cremation.
Engraving
For a nameplate or engraving, proof the spelling and dates before it's made — it can't be changed later.
Compare providers
Providers that list memorial products
These providers list memorial products in our data — a general signal, not a specific dog-urn range. Most pet cremation providers handle dogs, so confirm urn suitability, sizing and what's included directly. A blank field means we haven't confirmed it.
All 57 providers that list memorial products
Want to filter by state, collection or pricing? Browse the full pet cremation directory
How to choose
Questions worth asking
Bring these to a provider so a dog urn choice is clear before you commit.
Questions
Frequently asked questions
Common questions, answered plainly. Confirm anything specific directly with the provider.
What size urn do I need for my dog?
Dog urn capacity is guided by your dog's healthy body weight — as a rough rule, about 1 cubic inch (roughly 16 cc) per 450 g (1 lb), with a little extra room. As a general guide, small dogs (up to ~10 kg) suit a small urn, medium dogs (~10–25 kg) a medium urn, large dogs (~25–40 kg) a large urn, and giant breeds over ~40 kg may need an extra-large or custom urn. Confirm the exact capacity with the provider.
Will I get my dog's ashes back?
With an individual (private) dog cremation, your dog 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.
Can I get a paw print of my dog?
Many providers offer an ink or clay paw print as a keepsake. It's usually taken around the time of collection or cremation, so ask early. Whether it's included or an extra varies, so confirm with the provider.
What keepsakes work well for a dog?
Common choices include a display or timber urn, a paw print, a keepsake urn holding a portion of the ashes, a memorial box, or a piece of ashes jewellery. Availability differs between providers, and Final Tail doesn't list specific products, so ask what each provider offers.
Does Final Tail sell dog urns?
No. Final Tail is an independent directory and information service — we don't sell urns or memorial products. We list providers that state they offer memorial products so you can compare them, then confirm dog urn sizing, options and pricing directly with the provider.
Keep exploring
Related guides & next steps
Estimate dog cremation cost, understand ashes return, and compare urn options.
When you're ready
Compare pet cremation providers across Australia
See ashes returned, memorial products, collection options and pricing links, then confirm dog urn sizing and what's included directly with the provider.
Final Tail is an independent directory and information service. We do not sell urns, jewellery, plaques or memorial products, and we do not provide or arrange cremation or veterinary services. This information is general only. Availability, inclusions, materials, engraving, sealing, pricing, turnaround and whether ashes are returned or can be divided vary between providers and must be confirmed directly with each provider.
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.