What to Do When Someone Dies UK — Complete Checklist
Practical checklist for when someone dies. Immediate steps, who to notify, finances to handle, and support available. A guide through a difficult time.
·4 min read
Losing someone is overwhelming. This practical guide helps you through the necessary steps, one at a time.
First Steps
Immediately After Death
When Death Occurs
What to Do
At home (expected)
Call GP or out-of-hours service
At home (unexpected)
Call 999
In hospital
Staff guide you through process
In care home
Staff handle immediate steps
First 24-48 Hours
Step
Details
1
Get medical certificate of cause of death
2
Contact funeral director (optional but helpful)
3
Notify immediate family
4
Find will if there is one
5
Secure property if empty
Medical Certificate
Who Issues
When
Doctor
Within days of death
If not seen by doctor recently
Coroner may be involved
Coroner
If unexpected/unknown cause
Registering the Death
Timeline
Location
Registration Deadline
England/Wales
Within 5 days
Scotland
Within 8 days
How to Register
Step
Details
Book appointment
Local registry office
Bring
Medical certificate
Provide
Details about deceased
Receive
Death certificates (pay for extras)
Receive
Green form (burial/cremation)
Death Certificate Costs
Item
Cost
Standard copy
£11
Order several
You’ll need multiple
Recommended
4-5 copies minimum
Who Needs Death Certificate
Organisation
Original or Copy
Banks
Usually certified copy
Pension providers
Certified copy
Insurance
Original or certified
Probate
Original required
Solicitors
Original or certified
Tell Us Once Service
What It Does
One Notification
Updates
DWP (benefits)
Stops/adjusts payments
HMRC
Tax matters
Passport Office
Cancels passport
DVLA
Driving licence
Local council
Council Tax, voting
State Pension
Stops payments
How to Use
Method
Details
Online
Through gov.uk
Phone
Registry gives you number
Information needed
Personal details, NI number
When
After registering death
Funeral Planning
Immediate Decisions
Decision
Options
Burial or cremation
Personal/religious preference
Funeral director
Compare prices
Simple or traditional
Cost varies hugely
Religious elements
Minister/celebrant
Funeral Costs
Type
Typical Cost
Simple cremation
£1,500-£2,500
Traditional cremation
£3,500-£5,000
Traditional burial
£4,000-£6,000+
Direct cremation
£1,000-£1,500
Natural burial
£2,000-£4,000
Paying for Funeral
Option
Details
Estate pays
From deceased’s accounts
Pre-paid plan
If they had one
Funeral expenses payment
If on certain benefits
Family pays
Then reclaim from estate
Payment plans
Some directors offer these
Finances to Handle
Banks and Building Societies
Step
Action
1
Call bereavement line (on website)
2
Provide death certificate reference
3
Small amounts may be released immediately
4
Larger amounts need probate
5
Joint accounts usually continue
Common Bank Bereavement Lines
Bank
Bereavement Support
Most banks
Have dedicated teams
Call
Main number, ask for bereavement
What they need
Death certificate, your ID, authority
Stopping Payments
Priority
Stop/Redirect
Direct debits
Review, cancel unnecessary
Standing orders
Cancel or redirect
Subscriptions
Cancel (gym, streaming, etc.)
Keep
Essential utilities until sorted
Probate
What Is Probate?
Concept
Explanation
Definition
Legal right to deal with estate
When needed
Assets over £5,000-£15,000 (varies by institution)
Who applies
Executor (if will) or administrator (no will)
Grant of Probate
Official document
When Probate Is Needed
Situation
Probate Required?
Property
Usually yes
Large bank balances
Yes
Investments
Usually yes
Small amounts
Often not
Joint assets (survivorship)
No
Life insurance in trust
No
Probate Process
Step
Timeline
Apply online
gov.uk
Pay fee
£300 (estates over £5,000)
Wait
4-8 weeks typically
Receive grant
Then can access assets
Benefits and Entitlements
Bereavement Benefits
Benefit
Who Gets It
Bereavement Support Payment
Surviving spouse/civil partner
Widowed Parent’s Allowance
If children (pre-2017)
Funeral Expenses Payment
If on qualifying benefits
Bereavement Support Payment
Feature
Details
Lump sum
£2,500 or £3,500 (if children)
Monthly
£100 or £350 (if children)
Duration
Up to 18 months
Claim within
21 months of death
Benefits to Stop/Adjust
Benefit
Action
State Pension
Tell Us Once
Pension Credit
Tell Us Once
Housing Benefit
Notify council
Council Tax
Notify council (may get discount)
Property Matters
If It’s Their Home
Situation
Action
Owned outright
Estate inherits
Joint tenants
Survivor inherits
Tenants in common
Their share to estate
Rented
Notify landlord
Mortgaged
Contact lender
Council/social housing
Notify landlord
Practical Steps
Action
When
Secure property
Immediately
Redirect mail
Royal Mail redirection
Clear perishables
Soon
Consider insurance
Keep buildings insurance
Don’t rush clearance
Take your time
Tax Matters
Notify HMRC
Via
Method
Tell Us Once
Department notified
Self-assessment
May need final return
Estate
May owe or be owed tax
Potential Tax Issues
Issue
What Happens
Income tax
Final return may be needed
Inheritance tax
If estate over threshold
Capital gains
On asset sales
Self-Care
You Matter Too
Remember
Be Kind
Take breaks
Paperwork can wait
Accept help
People want to help
Don’t rush
Especially big decisions
Professional help
Grief counselling available
Support Available
Service
For
Cruse Bereavement
0808 808 1677
Citizens Advice
Practical help
Marie Curie
Support services
Age UK
Help for older people
GP
Mental health support
Summary: Timeline Checklist
First Week
Action
Done
Get medical certificate
☐
Register death
☐
Order death certificates (4-5)
☐
Use Tell Us Once
☐
Find will if exists
☐
Contact funeral director
☐
First Month
Action
Done
Arrange funeral
☐
Notify banks
☐
Cancel unnecessary direct debits
☐
Apply for probate (if needed)
☐
Claim bereavement benefits
☐
Redirect mail
☐
First Three Months
Action
Done
Receive probate grant
☐
Access accounts
☐
Settle debts from estate
☐
Begin distributing estate
☐
Handle property
☐
Key Contacts
Service
Number/Website
Tell Us Once
Via registry office
Probate
gov.uk/applying-for-probate
Cruse
0808 808 1677
Citizens Advice
citizensadvice.org.uk
This is a lot to deal with while grieving. Take it one step at a time, ask for help, and know that most things can wait a little while. The practical matters will get done — your wellbeing matters too.