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Cemeteries & Crematoriums South Africa

Cemeteries & Crematoriums in South Africa

South Africa has hundreds of cemeteries, memorial parks, and crematoriums spread across all nine provinces. If you are arranging a burial, considering cremation, or researching options ahead of time, this guide covers the major facilities, types of burial grounds, and what to expect in terms of costs and availability.

Browse by Province

Gauteng

Gauteng has the highest concentration of burial and cremation facilities in the country. Major cemeteries include Westpark Cemetery and Olifantsvlei Cemetery in Johannesburg, Rebecca Street Cemetery and Waterkloof Cemetery in Pretoria, and Boksburg Cemetery in Ekurhuleni. Crematoriums include the Johannesburg Crematorium at Braamfontein and the facilities at Westpark Memorial Park. Municipal cemeteries in Gauteng are under pressure — several Johannesburg cemeteries have limited or no new burial space, making private memorial parks and cremation increasingly common.

KwaZulu-Natal

Major facilities include Stellawood Cemetery in Durban (one of the oldest in the province), Clare Estate Cemetery, and Springfield Cemetery. The Durban North Muslim Cemetery serves the province’s large Muslim community. Pietermaritzburg has the Mountain Rise Cemetery and Commercial Road Cemetery. Cremation facilities are available at several private memorial parks in the Durban metro area.

Western Cape

Cape Town’s cemeteries include Maitland Cemetery (one of the largest in the southern hemisphere), Welmoed Cemetery in Eerste River, and Klip Road Cemetery in Grassy Park. The Muslim Burial Ground at Maitland serves the Cape Malay community. Paarl Crematorium and the facilities at Maitland handle cremations for the metro. George and Stellenbosch have their own municipal cemeteries serving the wider region.

Limpopo

Polokwane Cemetery is the main municipal facility in the provincial capital. Rural areas rely on community and church burial grounds, many of which are managed by tribal authorities. Formal cremation facilities are limited — families requiring cremation services often use facilities in Gauteng.

Mpumalanga

Nelspruit Cemetery (Mbombela) and Witbank Cemetery (Emalahleni) are the largest municipal facilities. Smaller towns like Secunda and Standerton have municipal cemeteries with available capacity. As in Limpopo, cremation facilities are scarce outside the larger towns.

Eastern Cape

South End Cemetery and Cuyler Manor Cemetery serve Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth). East London Cemetery and Cambridge Cemetery handle the Buffalo City metro. Mthatha and surrounding areas rely primarily on community burial grounds. Cremation is available in the larger metros but uncommon in rural areas.

Free State

Bloemfontein’s South Park Cemetery and Hamilton Cemetery are the main facilities. Welkom and Kroonstad have municipal cemeteries. The province has a small number of cremation facilities concentrated in Bloemfontein.

North West

Rustenburg Cemetery and Mahikeng Cemetery serve the two largest towns. Mining communities around the platinum belt have dedicated sections in local municipal cemeteries. Cremation facilities are limited.

Northern Cape

Kimberley’s Du Toitspan Road Cemetery and West End Cemetery are the main facilities. Given the province’s vast distances and sparse population, many smaller towns have basic municipal cemeteries. Cremation services are available only in Kimberley.

Types of Facilities

Municipal Cemeteries

Operated by local municipalities. These are the most affordable option for burial, though availability is a growing concern in major cities. Johannesburg and Cape Town have both flagged critical space shortages. Municipal cemeteries typically offer standard grave sites, some with options for double-depth burial (two coffins in one plot, one above the other).

Private Memorial Parks

Privately operated facilities like Fourways Memorial Park in Johannesburg or Durbanville Memorial Park in Cape Town. These offer maintained gardens, memorial walls, and often both burial and cremation services on one site. Costs are higher than municipal cemeteries, but the grounds are generally better maintained and availability is less constrained.

Crematoriums

South Africa has crematoriums in all major metros, though coverage thins out in rural provinces. Cremation is growing in popularity — partly due to cemetery space shortages and partly due to cost. A cremation typically costs between R3,500 and R8,000 for the cremation itself, excluding the funeral service.

Combined Facilities

Several private memorial parks offer burial plots, cremation, ash interment (garden of remembrance), and memorial walls on a single property. These are convenient for families who want everything handled in one location.

Cemetery Costs

Burial plot costs in South Africa vary significantly by location and facility type:

  • Municipal cemetery plots: R1,500 to R6,000 depending on the municipality
  • Private memorial park plots: R8,000 to R30,000+
  • Cremation (facility fee only): R3,500 to R8,000
  • Ash niche or garden interment: R2,000 to R10,000

These are facility costs only — they don’t include the funeral service, coffin, or transport. For a complete cost breakdown, see our funeral costs guide.

Denominational Sections

Many South African cemeteries maintain dedicated sections for specific religious communities:

  • Muslim sections are found in most major municipal cemeteries, with graves oriented towards the Qibla (Mecca). Cape Town’s Maitland Muslim Cemetery and Durban’s Clare Estate Cemetery are among the largest. Muslim burial requirements — including burial within 24 hours where possible — mean availability and turnaround times at these sections are critical. Read more about Muslim funeral requirements.
  • Jewish sections are maintained at cemeteries in Johannesburg (Westpark), Cape Town (Pinelands), and Durban. The Chevra Kadisha manages Jewish burial services in Gauteng.
  • Christian denominational sections are common in older cemeteries, though most modern facilities are non-denominational.

Burial or Cremation?

The choice between burial and cremation depends on cultural traditions, religious requirements, personal preference, and cost. Our cremation vs burial comparison breaks down the practical differences to help you decide.

For help finding a funeral home to handle arrangements at any cemetery or crematorium, browse our directory.

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