If you die in Michigan without naming a funeral representative, state law decides who picks your casket, burial plot, cremation, and memorial service. The default order goes spouse, then kids, then grandkids, then parents, then siblings. For most families that works. For families with second marriages, estranged children, no spouse, or strong personal preferences (cremation versus burial, religious differences, military honors), the default is exactly wrong. Michigan's 2016 Funeral Representative Designation Act fixed this by letting any adult name the person they trust to handle their final arrangements. The form takes 10 minutes and costs nothing to fill out beyond a notary trip.
Why You Need One
Funeral disputes are one of the most common and most painful family fights after a death. Real Michigan scenarios I see often:
- A widower remarried late in life. His adult children from the first marriage and his current wife disagree on burial location. Without a designation, Michigan default rules give his current spouse the call. The kids resent it for the rest of their lives.
- A divorced parent wants to be cremated. The adult children, raised by the other parent, want a traditional Catholic burial. Default order gives the kids equal authority to overrule each other and the funeral home stalls for weeks.
- A single Michigan resident with no spouse and no kids has a sister she has not spoken to in 20 years. Without a designation, Michigan law makes that sister the decision-maker. The friend who actually cared for her in the final years has no legal standing.
- A veteran wants military honors at a national cemetery. The surviving spouse remarried civilian and prefers a private service. Default rules give the spouse the call.
The Funeral Representative Designation solves all of these. It picks one person, in writing, with priority over everyone else (with one narrow military exception).
Who Decides if You Don't Designate Anyone
Without a designation, Michigan Public Act 57 of 2016 establishes this priority order for whoever has authority over funeral arrangements:
- Any military designee under federal law (only applies if the deceased was an active service member at the time of death).
- Your designated funeral representative (only if you signed one).
- Your surviving spouse.
- Your adult children, with equal authority among them.
- Your adult grandchildren, with equal authority among them.
- Your parents.
- Your grandparents.
- Your adult siblings.
- Other descendants, in the order they contact the funeral home.
Two key things to notice. First, Michigan law gives equal authority within a tier. If you have three adult children, all three of them have to agree. Any one can effectively block decisions, and Michigan funeral directors will often refuse to act until the dispute is resolved. Second, "in the order they contact the funeral home" -- the last fallback -- is a literal rule. Whichever cousin calls first gets the authority.
The 2016 Michigan Funeral Representative Designation Act
The Michigan legislature passed Public Act 57 of 2016, codified at MCL 700.3206, which took effect on June 27, 2016. The Act was advocated for by the Michigan Funeral Directors Association after years of family disputes that left bodies in funeral home freezers while siblings sued each other.
The law does two things:
- It establishes a clear, statutory priority order for who has authority to make funeral decisions (the list above).
- It allows any adult of sound mind to designate a "funeral representative" who has FIRST priority -- ahead of even the surviving spouse -- with one narrow exception for active military service members.
The designation is its own document. It is not part of your will (although you can include the same language inside your will, the funeral representative is normally a separate signed document so it can be acted on immediately, before the will is even located).
What Powers Does a Funeral Representative Have?
Under MCL 700.3206, a funeral representative has the right and power to make every decision about:
- Burial vs. cremation vs. entombment
- The funeral home and cemetery used
- The casket, urn, marker, and burial vault
- The memorial service, including religious or non-religious format
- The handling of the body, including whether to embalm
- Whether to disinter and rebury the remains later
- Possession of cremated remains immediately after cremation
- Pre-paid funeral arrangements made before death
The Act treats a funeral representative as a fiduciary. They are legally required to act in your best interests and to follow any preferences you wrote down in the designation document. Most well-drafted Michigan forms include a section where you can specify burial vs. cremation, the funeral home, religious preferences, and any other final wishes. The representative does not have to follow vague general preferences, but they do have to follow specific written instructions.
Important: a funeral representative is also legally responsible for paying for the funeral. The Act says the representative "must ensure payment for the costs of disposition" and is "liable for the costs of disposition" to the extent payment is not otherwise covered. In practice this means the representative needs to know how the funeral will be paid for -- prepaid plan, life insurance, your estate, or out-of-pocket reimbursement from your estate. Most Michigan wills include language directing the personal representative to reimburse the funeral representative from estate assets first.
Who Can (and Cannot) Serve
Who CAN serve
Anyone over the age of 18 of sound mind. The person does not need to be a relative. Common Michigan choices:
- A spouse, adult child, or sibling
- A close friend or godchild
- A pastor, priest, rabbi, or imam
- A long-time business partner or executor
Who CANNOT serve
Michigan law specifically excludes certain people who would have a conflict of interest:
- A licensed health professional who provided care during your last illness
- An employee or volunteer of the health facility, nursing home, or hospice that provided care
- An officer or employee of the funeral home that will provide your services
- An officer or employee of the cemetery where you will be buried
- An officer or employee of the crematory that will perform the cremation
- Anyone convicted of intentionally killing or felony abuse, neglect, or exploitation of you
There is one important exception: if your spouse or close relative happens to also be one of the excluded categories above (your sister works at the funeral home, your wife is the hospice nurse), they are NOT excluded. The exclusion only applies to non-family employees with a financial conflict.
Loss of designation by divorce
Michigan automatically revokes the designation of a former spouse (and that former spouse's relatives) upon divorce or annulment. So if you named your wife as funeral representative and you later divorce, the law treats the designation as if she predeceased you. Always update the document after a divorce anyway -- automatic revocation prevents the old spouse from acting, but it does NOT name a replacement. Without an updated designation, you fall back to the default priority order.
Michigan Form Requirements
For the designation to be valid under MCL 700.3206, it must:
- Be in writing. Oral instructions to family members do not count.
- Be dated with the date of signing.
- Be voluntarily signed by you (the declarant) or, if you are physically unable to sign, by another person at your direction in your presence and the presence of a notary public.
- Be signed in the presence of either:
- A notary public who acknowledges your signature, OR
- Two adult witnesses who also sign the document.
- Include an acceptance signature from the funeral representative (and, if named, the successor representative) acknowledging the appointment. The funeral home will not act on a designation without acceptance.
Witnesses cannot be the funeral representative or successor, and cannot be employees of the funeral home, cemetery, or crematory that will provide services (with the family-member exception above). Witnesses can be employees of the funeral establishment if they are also relatives.
How to Fill It Out Yourself
The form is one of the simpler Michigan estate planning documents to handle yourself. Here is the process:
- Get a Michigan-specific template. Generic "funeral wishes" documents from national sites do not satisfy MCL 700.3206. The Michigan Funeral Directors Association template, the David Carrier Law form, and CreateMIWill's kit all include the right statutory language.
- Decide who you want. Pick someone level-headed who knows your wishes, lives close enough to act within 48 hours, and is willing to handle the funeral logistics and any family pushback.
- Pick a successor. Always name a backup in case your first choice is unavailable, deceased, or unwilling to serve. Without a successor, you fall back to the statutory order.
- Fill in your preferences. Most Michigan forms let you specify:
- Burial or cremation
- Specific funeral home or cemetery (optional)
- Religious or non-religious service
- Open or closed casket
- Military honors if applicable
- Any other specific instructions (for example, "no obituary in print," "donate body to U-M medical school," "Scottish bagpipe performance")
- Have your funeral representative and successor sign the acceptance section. They are agreeing to serve. This is critical -- without their acceptance, the funeral home will not honor the designation.
- Sign in front of a notary AND two witnesses. Banks and credit unions notarize for free. Witnesses can be neighbors, friends, or coworkers (not the funeral representative).
- Distribute copies. Give a signed copy to your funeral representative, your successor, and (optionally) your usual funeral home so it is on file. Keep the original with your other estate planning documents in a place your family can access immediately.
Total time: 10-30 minutes to fill out, plus a notary visit. Total cost: $0 if your bank notarizes for free, otherwise $5-15 for a UPS Store notary.
Common Mistakes
Naming a representative who lives out of state
If your funeral representative cannot get to Michigan within 48 hours of your death to start making arrangements, the law transfers authority back to the next person in the priority order. Always name someone local, or name a local successor as backup.
Forgetting the acceptance signature
This is the single most common DIY mistake. The form has an acceptance section that the funeral representative and successor must sign. Without it, Michigan funeral homes treat the designation as unaccepted and fall back to the default order.
Putting it only in your will
Michigan law allows you to include the funeral representative designation inside your will. The problem: a will is often not located, opened, and reviewed for several days after death. Funeral arrangements need to be made within hours. Always have the funeral representative as a separate, easily-accessible document.
Naming someone with a conflict of interest
If you name your nurse, your funeral director, or the cemetery owner as your funeral representative, the designation is invalid (unless they are also a family member). Michigan's exclusion list is strict.
Not updating after divorce or remarriage
Divorce automatically revokes a former spouse's designation, but it does not name a replacement. Always update the document after major life changes.
Not telling anyone where the document is
The most carefully drafted designation does no good if your family cannot find it within 48 hours of your death. Tell your funeral representative, successor, and any close relative where to find the original. Many Michigan residents keep a copy on file with their primary funeral home.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need an attorney to fill out the funeral representative form?
No. The form is one of the simpler Michigan documents and the statutory language is straightforward. An attorney-drafted Michigan template (from CreateMIWill or your county's funeral directors association) plus a free bank notary handles everything most families need.
What if I want to be cremated and my family is religious?
This is exactly the scenario the Funeral Representative Designation Act was designed for. Pick someone who will follow your wishes -- often a friend or pastor rather than a family member -- and write "I direct that my body be cremated" into the preferences section. The representative is legally bound to follow your written instructions.
Can my funeral representative spend my money?
Yes, but it is more nuanced than that. The representative is responsible for paying funeral costs and is personally liable if there is no other source of payment. Most Michigan estate plans direct the personal representative (the executor of the will) to reimburse the funeral representative from estate funds, prepaid funeral plans, or life insurance. Make sure your funeral representative knows how the costs will be covered.
Can I be my own funeral representative?
No -- you have to be alive to make the decisions, and the designation only takes effect at death.
Does it matter if my will and my funeral representative document name different people?
Not for funeral decisions. The funeral representative designation controls funeral and burial choices regardless of what your will says. The will controls everything else (assets, debts, guardianship of minors). It is fine and often smart to have different people in those roles -- the friend who knows your funeral wishes is rarely the same person you trust to settle your finances.
What if my funeral representative refuses to serve when the time comes?
Michigan law gives your successor representative authority. If you did not name one, or both the primary and successor refuse, the law falls back to the default priority order (spouse, then kids, etc.).
Do I need to update this document if I move?
If you move within Michigan, no. The form is good statewide. If you move out of Michigan, the form may not be honored under another state's law -- check your new state's funeral designation rules and update accordingly.
Does the funeral representative have to live in Michigan?
No, but they should be reachable within 48 hours. If they cannot act within that window, authority passes to the successor or to the default priority order.
Get Yours Done This Week
The Michigan Funeral Representative Designation is the smallest legal document you can sign that prevents the largest possible family fight. It takes 10 minutes to fill out, costs $0 to $15 to notarize, and removes one of the most painful disputes families face after a death. The CreateMIWill Will Kit includes the funeral representative designation along with the will, financial power of attorney, healthcare power of attorney, HIPAA release, and Lady Bird deed template -- the core five Michigan documents every adult should have.
Michigan Will Kit -- Includes Funeral Representative Designation
Six attorney-drafted Michigan documents in one kit: will, durable financial power of attorney, patient advocate designation (healthcare POA), HIPAA release, Lady Bird deed template, and the funeral representative designation form -- all for less than the cost of one hour with a Michigan attorney.