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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.

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.