Pet ashes · aftercare
What happens to your pet's ashes
Whether you get your pet's ashes back comes down to the cremation type: an individual (private) cremation returns the ashes to you, while a communal (shared) cremation usually does not.
Here's what ashes returned actually means, how they're returned, whether they can be divided, and the keepsakes — urns, jewellery and memorials — that can follow.
- Confirm ashes returned
- 61Confirm ashes returned
- Offer private cremation
- 57Offer private cremation
- Publish pricing
- 51Publish pricing
In the directory
Ashes returned61providers confirm ashes returned
Aftercare you can arrange
- Ashes returned61 listed
- Private cremation57 listed
- Home collection54 listed
- Memorial products56 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.
Ashes return depends on the cremation type
An individual (private) cremation keeps your pet separate, so the ashes returned are your pet's. A communal cremation is shared, and ashes are usually not returned.
How ashes are returned
Ashes usually come back within a week or two, in a simple container, returned to you directly or through your vet. Timing and container vary, so confirm both.
Ashes can often be divided
Many families keep a main portion and set aside a little for a keepsake urn or a piece of jewellery. Ask about splitting the ashes before the cremation.
How your pet is identified
Reputable providers track your pet through the process so you receive only your pet. It's a fair and common question to ask exactly how that works.
Step by step
From cremation type to keepsake
The ashes journey is really a short sequence of decisions. Work through them in order and you'll know what to confirm with a provider before anything is booked.
Step 1
Choose the cremation type
An individual (private) cremation is what makes an ashes return possible. A communal cremation is shared and usually does not return ashes.
Step 2
Confirm the ashes come back
Ask whether the ashes return to you or your vet, roughly how long that takes, and how your pet is identified through the process.
Step 3
Choose a container
Ashes are often returned in a simple container. Decide whether to keep that, move to an urn you like, or divide the ashes across keepsakes.
Step 4
Decide on a keepsake
Some families keep a portion in a keepsake urn, a piece of jewellery or a paw print. If so, ask early whether the ashes can be split.
Step 5
Check any engraving
If a plaque or engraving is added, confirm the exact spelling, dates and wording before it is made — engraving is hard to change afterwards.
Step 6
Confirm collection or delivery
Agree how the ashes and any keepsakes reach you — collected in person, delivered, or returned through your vet — and any fee that applies.
Private vs communal
The one choice that decides everything
Almost every ashes question traces back to this. Here's the honest difference — and why ashes return usually depends on it.
Individual / private cremation
Your pet is cremated individually, so the ashes returned are your pet's. This is the option to choose if keeping the ashes matters.
Communal / shared cremation
Your pet is cremated with other pets and the ashes are usually not returned. Some providers scatter them at a dedicated site.
After the ashes come home
Keepsakes that follow the ashes
Once the ashes are back, the rest is personal. These are the choices families most often make — providers may offer some directly and others through a partner, so ask what's included and what's an extra.
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?”
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?”
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?”
Scattering tube
A simple, often biodegradable tube designed to make scattering the ashes easier and more dignified.
When it matters
If you plan to scatter in a favourite place rather than keep the ashes.
Ask the provider
“Is a scattering option available, and is it suitable for the spot I have in mind?”
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?”
Compare providers
Australian providers that confirm ashes returned
Every provider here lists ashes returned in our data. Each capability is drawn from provider data — a blank means we haven't confirmed it, so ask. Confirm the cremation type, timing and any fee before booking.
All 61 providers that confirm ashes returned
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 nothing about the ashes is left unclear.
Questions
Frequently asked questions
Common questions, answered plainly. Confirm anything specific directly with the provider.
Will I get my pet's ashes back?
It depends on the cremation type. With an individual (private) cremation, your pet is cremated separately and the ashes are returned to you — usually within a week or two, in a simple container or an urn. With a communal (shared) cremation, pets are cremated together and the ashes are usually not returned. If keeping the ashes matters, confirm the cremation is individual before booking.
How are pet ashes returned?
Ashes are typically returned in a basic container or a chosen urn, either collected by you, delivered, or returned through your vet. Many providers offer an urn, keepsake or memorial as an option. Timing and what's included vary, so confirm how and when the ashes come back, and what container is part of the price.
Can pet ashes be divided or split?
Often, yes. Many families keep a main portion in an urn and set aside a small amount for a keepsake urn or a piece of ashes jewellery. Because this is usually arranged around the cremation, it's best to ask before booking whether the ashes can be divided and how.
How long does it take to get pet ashes back?
For an individual cremation it's commonly around a week to two weeks, though it varies by provider, location and how busy they are. Ask for an expected timeframe when you book, and how you'll be told when the ashes are ready.
How do I know the ashes are my pet's?
With an individual cremation, your pet is kept separate and identified through the process — many providers use a tracking or tagging system. It's a reasonable and common question, so ask a provider to explain exactly how they identify and track your pet.
What can I do with my pet's ashes?
Common choices are keeping them in an urn at home, dividing them across keepsakes or ashes jewellery, scattering them in a favourite place, or burying them with a garden marker. There's no single right answer — see our urns, jewellery and memorial guides for the options, and confirm what a provider can arrange.
Does Final Tail sell urns or handle the ashes?
No. Final Tail is an independent directory and information service. We don't sell urns or memorial products and we don't provide or arrange cremation. We list providers that confirm ashes returned so you can compare them, then confirm the cremation type, timing and what's included directly with the provider.
Keep exploring
Related guides & next steps
Understand private vs communal cremation, estimate cost, then explore urns, jewellery and memorials.
When you're ready
Compare pet cremation providers across Australia
See private vs communal cremation, ashes returned, collection options and pricing links, then confirm the cremation type 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.