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You must contact the cemetery before selling to or buying from a third party and the transfer of the rights must be done through the cemetery operator. The cemetery operator will verify that the seller is in fact the interment rights holder, update the public register and issue a new interment rights certificate.
Memorials. The person named on a Deed as owner of Exclusive Right of Burial in a grave also has the right to have a memorial erected on that grave. Responsibility for any memorial erected on a grave lies with the person named on the Deed pertaining to it.
If the deceased owner did not specifically devise (gift) the family plot in his or her will to someone and did not transfer the family plot to the cemetery in order to make the family plot inalienable, the deceased owner's heirs (often a surviving spouse and/or surviving children) inherit the plot.
There are many options for selling a burial plot online. You can use a specialized service, such as Grave Solutions or Plot Brokers, or place your own ad on free websites like Craigslist and Ebay. Placing your own ad can be advantageous, as there are no fees or costs to the seller.
You must contact the cemetery before selling to or buying from a third party and the transfer of the rights must be done through the cemetery operator. The cemetery operator will verify that the seller is in fact the interment rights holder, update the public register and issue a new interment rights certificate.
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People also ask

The simple answer is no. Burial plots are not like traditional real estate which always passes through a court supervised probate after death. When you purchase a burial plot, you do not actually own the land, the cemetery still holds title to the land.
There are many options for selling a burial plot online. You can use a specialized service, such as Grave Solutions or Plot Brokers, or place your own ad on free websites like Craigslist and Ebay. Placing your own ad can be advantageous, as there are no fees or costs to the seller.
As of July 1, 2012, Ontario consumers with unused and unwanted interment and scattering rights will be able to either resell them on the open market or return them to the cemetery where they were purchased.
If the grave owner has died, you must transfer the ownership of the grave to a living owner before you arrange any further burials in the grave. You also need to transfer ownership to a living owner to erect a new memorial or carry out any additional works on the grave. It costs £82 to transfer ownership.
Ontario law requires that every interment right be sold in perpetuity. This means you and your heirs will own the interment rights forever.

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