Arizona Funeral Resources and Education
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Complete Paperwork

Recommendations for Completing Paperwork

  • Complete and file all advance directives, including Living Will and Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare. Determine with your doctor if you should have a Portable Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (​POLST).
  • Anticipated deaths that occur at home but not on hospice service must have a physician of record involved to avoid being considered an unattended death.
  • Assign a family member, friend, or other designated agent to carry out all funeral arrangements. You can find a Designated Agent for Funeral Arrangements here. Individuals choosing to have someone who is not a family member or a professional funeral director must do so in writing and have it notarized prior to death.
  • ​Fill out a Arizona Death Certificate Worksheet for all family members to keep on file, so the basic information is handy whenever it’s needed.
  • Many Registrars may have no experience with a family filing their own paperwork. It can be helpful, in the case of an anticipated death, to visit their office to inform them of your intent. (See Resources For Professionals for information you can bring with you. And check out Sample Forms to familiarize yourself with what paperwork in Arizona looks like.)

On This Page

  • Recommendations for families choosing to handle their own paperwork
  • How to complete the death certificate
  • Who has the authority to manage the final affairs as next-of-kin
  • How to designate an agent other than family to manage final affairs
  • How to obtain certified copies of the death certificate

Completing the Death Certificate

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Home Funerals Led by Next-of-Kin
Families in Arizona may care for their own dead from death to disposition (Arizona Statute § 36-326). Immediate family members of the deceased are not prohibited from providing for the care, preparation, or disposition of human dead bodies. Embalming is primarily a cosmetic procedure and is not required by law. ​This includes cleansing, dressing, and casketing or shrouding in the home; sheltering in place in the home; filing the death certificate through the registrar where the person died or with the Arizona Department of Health/Bureau of Vital Records; transporting the deceased; making arrangements for burial (cremation requires a funeral director to make the call); or burying on private property.

 Obtaining and Filling Out the Preliminary Report of Death:
  • A completed and signed death certificate must be obtained from the physician, hospice nurse, medical examiner, attending physician, tribal law enforcement officer, and/or other qualified authority who pronounces the death and authorizes cause of death on the medical portion of the death certificate within 72 hours;
  • The next-of-kin or designated agent completes the demographic portion;
  • If a funeral director is hired, he or she will complete the demographic portion using information provided by the family;
  • The next-of-kin or the designated agent, if acting as the funeral director, will sign as the funeral director;
  • The form must be filled out as specified, with no cross-outs or white-outs;
  • Every box must be completed, including NA or N/A;
  • Obtain a certified copy of the death certificate for use in obtaining a disposition transit permit for completing the final disposition or for moving the deceased out of state.

Getting the Death Certificate Signed by a Medical Authority
  • Physicians or medical examiners, or law enforcement officers on tribal lands, must certify the medical portion of the death certificate within 72 hours of the death. It is up to the filing party to locate and obtain that signature if the death certificate is initiated by a different authority.
  • Families of patients who have been on hospice service may be assisted by the attending hospice nurse in locating and obtaining the physician's signature.
  • A Note About Unattended Deaths: If the person is not on hospice service but death outside a medical setting is anticipated, the likelihood of a death investigation can be reduced by contacting the primary care provider in advance to confirm their ability to certify the death based on known health conditions.

If the body must be moved from a hospital, hospice, care facility, or medical examiner’s office, a required form must be obtained from the facility before removal. These institutions may have their own policies regarding body removal protocol, so check as well in advance as possible to ensure a smooth transition from institutional care.
 
Filing the Death Certificate and Obtaining a Disposition Transit Permit
While there are precise steps for completing paperwork without hiring a funeral director, they are, in most cases, no more daunting than any other form filing. The information required for the demographic portion is personal individual and family history, all of which will have to be located by the family anyway and then conveyed to a funeral director if the family chooses to hire one to fill it in for them. There is no cost to filing by families.
 
Steps regarding death certificates and disposition transit permits:
  1. Acquire the death certificate from the medical authority or tribal law enforcement officer, with the medical portion completed and signed.
  2. Complete the demographic portion, no spaces left blank, signed by the next-of-kin or designated agent acting as his or her own funeral director.
  3. File the form with Vital Records within 72 hours of the death. Enlist the local or state registrar in filing electronically directly with the Vital Records Office through the Electronic Death Registration System (EDRS); call ahead to ask about office hours, or to arrange for assistance outside of normal office hours if possible
  4. Certified copies of the death certificate usually will be available for purchase from any Registrar's office, sometimes immediately.
  5. Provide notice to the local registrar or deputy local registrar in the registration district where the death occurred within 24 hours after moving the human remains from hospital, nursing care institution or hospice inpatient facility.
  6. Provide notice to the local registrar or deputy local registrar in the registration district where the death occurred within 72 hours after moving the human remains from other locations.
  7. Obtain the disposition transit permit if needed from the local registrar, a deputy local registrar or the state registrar interment of human remains in a cemetery once the location of the cemetery has been recorded in the office of the county recorder in the county where the cemetery is located or the cemetery is located on federal or tribal land.
  8. If the body will be transported out-of-state for burial or cremation, be sure to call ahead to the out-of-state cemetery or crematory to check on any unique requirements, and to ensure they'll accept a body from a family. 
  9. Register the location of the cemetery with the county office before burial takes place if you are burying on private or home land.

Disposition Transit Permit
A disposition transit permit is needed prior to disposition and when the body will be moved out of state. It is generated by the state registrar or the local registrar or deputy local registrar of the registration district where the death occurred. Make a copy for your records.

Authorization to Cremate
In Arizona, there is a 24 hour mandatory waiting period between the death and the cremation.  Cremations must be authorized by a County Medical Examiner who must sign an Authorization Form within 15 days.

Conducting Body Care
  • Bathe as desired to remove surface bacteria.
  • Wrap or clothe as desired.
  • Cool the body with the use of Techni-ice®, dry ice, air conditioning, opening a window in cool weather; 3 days under 65 degrees is sufficient under average circumstances.
  • Use universal precautions (masks, gloves, handwashing) as needed for someone with a communicable disease (see Special Circumstances below for more info).
  • Report any communicable diseases to the Arizona Department of Health’s Infectious Epidemiology Unit. (See below for how to handle Special Circumstances.) 

Tips:
  • Plan ahead whenever possible by contacting or locating key players (Registrars, Deputized agent, Medical Examiner, cemetery or crematory operator, etc.) who may need to be involved
  • Shop ahead for caskets, shrouds, urns, and other necessary goods
  • Shop for a funeral director who will assist if necessary with the services you may choose to purchase
  • Research additional information at the Funeral Consumers Alliance.

Special Circumstances

Special Circumstances for Home Funerals
 
Deaths Involving Communicable Diseases
If you've been caring for someone with a communicable disease such as Hepatitis or AIDS, the same precautions (latex gloves, for example) you took during the care apply after death. No extraordinary measures are necessary. If death occurs from a rarer infectious disease such as meningitis or a tropical fever, you should consult the Arizona Department of Health’s Infectious Epidemiology Unit at 602-364-3676  or after hours emergency number at 480-303-1191. Immediate burial or direct cremation may be recommended in such cases. Embalming is not required in any circumstances.
 
Deaths Involving Medical Examiners
Cremation certificates must be issued by a medical examiner or deputy. To locate a deputy near you, go to your county medical examiner's office.
 
In the case of unanticipated death, the Medical Examiner’s office will be contacted to determine cause of death. It is up to the ME to determine the need for an autopsy. If you are choosing to bring the body back home after the ME releases the body, be sure he or she knows of your intentions. While the body may be temporarily in the custody of the ME, when released the family again has full custody and control of the body.
 
Deaths Involving Organ Donation
Home funerals are possible at the end of organ donation harvesting. Ask the medical team what to expect and what special precautions or protocols they recommend, if any. For more information on organ donation in general, research  Arrange Disposition for a list of possible donor organizations.                                       
 
Fetal Death and Miscarriage
Fetal deaths must be reported when the death occurs at 20 or more weeks of gestation or when the weight is (350 grams) or more. Reports are sent directly to the Health Department by the physician, hospital, or clinic if a procedure was performed. Parents are entitled to conduct home funerals and choose dispositions of burial or cremation the same as birthed children.

Arizona ​Death Certificate Timeline for Home Funeral Families

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Authority to Make Arrangements

Recommendations:
  • Complete and file all advance directives, including Living Will and Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care (DPOAH).
  • Assign a family member, friend, or other designated agent to carry out all funeral arrangements.

The next-of-kin or a designated agent have the right to handle all aspects of after-death care. This means that families can legally care for and transport a body, keep it in their home for a viewing period, and take it for burial themselves, without hiring a licensed funeral director, except for any details the family wishes to have done by a funeral home or to arrange a cremation.

According to Arizona, the authority to make all arrangements follows this order:
  • The spouse, as long as the partners aren’t lawfully separated (with a pending petition for legal separation or divorce) at the time of death
  • The designated agent
  • The adult children
  • The parents
  • The sibling
  • Adult grandchildren
  • The grandparent
  • A person who showed care and concern for the deceased
  • A person defined as the “guardian” at the moment of death
  • Any other person authorized to make the funeral arrangements

​If there is no spouse and there are multiple adult children, a majority opinion will be sufficient to make a decision.
 
In the event that the decedent and/or the family prefer that someone outside the family oversee funeral arrangements and complete the necessary paperwork, they may appoint a designated agent to carry out their wishes on their behalf. This is accomplished by signing a Special Power of Attorney for Designated Agent form or the Arizona Designated Agent Form. 

Obtaining Official Copies of the Death Certificate

Once the death certificate is electronically filed, certified copies may be obtained at any Registrar's office throughout the state. Certified copies may be needed to settle the affairs of the deceased (for example, for insurance or benefit claims, to close accounts). For information about fees and how to order, go to the Arizona Office of Vital Records to learn more about the application and fees. Paper certified copies are $20.00 each.

Notifications and Benefits

Newspapers
Families may file obituaries and memorial notices. A newspaper may ask to see a death certificate and many newspapers charge a fee for publishing an obituary.
 
Military and Veterans Benefits
Contact the Department of Veterans Affairs for information on benefits, or visit http://www.cem.va.gov/ for online information. Among other things, you may be entitled to a U.S. flag from the Post Office, to be used at a memorial service, by presenting a certified copy of the death certificate and proof of military service. You may also qualify for a free gravesite in a VA cemetery. Toll-free:  800-827-1000.
 
Social Security Benefits
To obtain Social Security Administration information, go to http://www.socialsecurity.gov/

Check out http://www.funeralwise.com/learn/arrange/benefits for more info on Social Security and VA benefits.

Resources and Online Links

Medical Examiners
Social Security Administration
Department of Veterans Affairs

​Arizona Department of Health’s Infectious Epidemiology Unit
​
Arizona Advance Directive
Arizona Health Current Online Registry

Arizona Department of Vital Records
Vital Records Request Service
​Arizona State Donor Services

Portable Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (​POLST)
​Designation of Agent Form
Arizona 
Death Certificate Worksheet
Learn How To:
Perform Body Care
Complete Paperwork
Arrange Disposition
Transport the Dead
Create Ceremony
Go Out Greener
Work with Professionals
​Pay for a Funeral
Learn About:
How to Get Help
Arizona Funeral Law
Professional Education
Community Education
Home Funeral Resources
FAQs
​Glossary of Terms
Stories
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Arizona Funeral Resources
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Arizona Funeral Resources and Education is a noncommercial public-interest site dedicated to helping Arizona consumers care for their own dead with or without the assistance of a funeral director. All rights reserved  © FuneralPartnership.org
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  • Home
  • How To
    • How to Get Help Now
    • Learn the Law
    • Have a Home Funeral
    • Perform Body Care >
      • Cooling Techniques
    • Complete Paperwork
    • Arrange Disposition
    • Transport the Dead
    • Create Ceremony
    • Go Out Greener
    • Pay for a Funeral
    • Work with Professionals
  • Learn More
    • Resources for Professionals
    • Tools for Community Education
    • Books, Articles, Organizations
    • Glossary
    • Sample Forms
    • Special Circumstances >
      • Guidance for Care at Home
      • Practical Guide Lines
      • Ceremony Resources
  • FAQs
  • Contact Us