Pet Loss Guide · By Jessica Merrow
“The morning I lost Max, I hadn’t said goodbye. He was fine at breakfast — tail wagging, nudging my hand for a piece of toast. By afternoon, he was gone. And I had no idea what to do next — with the grief, or with his ashes.”
Quick Answer: What to Do with Pet Ashes
- Keeping them in an urn at home
- Scattering them in a meaningful place
- Turning them into jewelry or a keepsake
- Creating a memorial in your garden
Each option depends on whether you want a daily connection, a specific place to visit, or a symbolic goodbye. There’s no single best way — only what fits your life and how you grieve.
After I lost Max, I kept his ashes in a small wooden box on my dresser for almost a year. Not because I had a plan. Just because I wasn’t ready to decide. Eventually, I chose a simple urn and placed it on the bookshelf next to his photo and his favorite tennis ball — somewhere I’d see him every morning without making it a destination for grief.
Since then, I’ve spoken with hundreds of pet owners going through the same uncertainty. Some wanted ashes at home. Some couldn’t stand the idea. Some buried them under a tree. Some wore them around their neck. All of it was right. This guide is what I wish I’d had — 12 real options for what to do with pet ashes, with honest costs, real drawbacks, and how to actually do each one.
In This Guide
- Can I Keep Pet Ashes at Home?
- Where Should I Put My Pet’s Ashes Outside?
- Can I Turn Pet Ashes Into Something?
- Can I Carry Pet Ashes With Me?
- Are There Rituals I Can Do With Pet Ashes?
- Is It OK to Keep Pet Ashes at Home?
- Where Should I Put My Pet’s Ashes?
- What Is the Best Option for Pet Ashes?
- How to Choose What Feels Right for You
- Products We’ve Tested and Recommend
- FAQ
- A Final Word from Jessica
Can I Keep Pet Ashes at Home?
Yes — and for many pet owners, keeping ashes at home is the first and most natural instinct. Having a physical place in your home where your pet “is” can be quietly stabilizing during early grief. Here’s how the main options work.
Placing Ashes in an Urn
An urn is the most common choice for how to keep pet ashes at home. The range is wider than most people expect — from simple metal keepsakes under $20 to handcrafted breed-specific sculptures near $300.
Splitting Ashes into Keepsake Sharing Containers
If more than one person loved this pet — a partner, a sibling, a parent — mini sharing urns let each person keep a portion. They’re small (typically 3–5 cubic inches), designed to be held rather than displayed.
How to Display Pet Ashes at Home
- Choose a location you pass naturally — the kitchen windowsill, the bookshelf, a bedroom dresser. Somewhere that becomes part of daily life, not a destination for grief.
- Pair with one or two objects: a favorite photo, their collar, a paw print. Three items maximum — more starts to feel like a shrine, which some people find harder to live with over time.
- Avoid direct sunlight for metal or resin urns — color fading is a real issue over months and years.
- If you have other pets, consider placement height. Dogs especially will knock things over.
Marble Finish Keepsake Sharing Urn
Best for families sharing ashes — compact, handmade, durable metal with velvet bag included
From $13
Where Should I Put My Pet’s Ashes Outside?
Some owners don’t want ashes in the house — not because they’re avoiding grief, but because they find more peace in the idea of their pet being outside, in the world. These are the main outdoor and nature-based pet burial options.
Memorial Garden Stone
A garden stone gives you a fixed outdoor place to visit — like a marker, but one that fits into a real garden. Choose a stone with personalized engraving and place it somewhere your pet loved — under a tree, near the back fence, by the flower bed they always dug up. You don’t need to bury ashes beneath it; the stone itself is the memorial.
Tree Planting / Living Urn
Mixing a small amount of ashes into soil around a newly planted tree turns loss into something that keeps growing. Some biodegradable living urn kits are designed specifically for this — they include a vessel you place in the ground with the ashes inside. Plant in a spot you’ll tend and visit.
Scattering Ashes
Scattering is final in a way other options aren’t — which is both its appeal and its difficulty. Choose a meaningful location — a beach, a park, a trail you walked together. Check local regulations before scattering on public land or water (rules vary by state and country — this is not legal advice). Bring whoever wants to be there. No ceremony required.
Dog Memorial Monogram Stone
Custom concrete garden stone — durable, weathersealed, with paw print, name & dates
$195
Can I Turn Pet Ashes Into Something?
Yes — and these options go beyond storage. They turn ashes into something that looks like your pet, or something made with your own hands.
Custom Statue or Figurine
Breed-specific cremation urns — shaped like a bulldog, a golden retriever, a tabby — hold the ashes and look like the animal you lost. Some include a memory capsule inside for photos or small mementos. Order through a specialist retailer and expect 2–4 weeks for production. The likeness varies significantly by manufacturer — read reviews specifically about accuracy before ordering.
DIY Memorial Jewelry Kit
Kits like Lovenary let you combine a small amount of ash with resin to create a pendant yourself. The kit includes resin, mold, mixing tools, and a chain. Most pieces take 24–48 hours to cure. The act of making it is meaningful in itself — but resin work has a learning curve. Watch a tutorial before starting.
Lovenary Paw & Heart DIY Memorial Kit
5 styles, engravable, everything included — making it is the memorial
$80
Can I Carry Pet Ashes With Me?
Yes — cremation jewelry for pets holds a small amount of ash inside a sealed pendant, bracelet, or charm. The ash is invisible from the outside. What you wear is just jewelry.
This isn’t about being unable to let go. For many people — especially those who travel, live alone, or simply don’t want a permanent home display — jewelry is the most honest answer to where to put pet ashes. On your body. With you. Without ceremony.
Ash-Infused Necklace
Teardrop, heart, or geometric pendants with a sealed interior chamber. Most come with a small funnel for loading the ash. Use it over a piece of paper so nothing is lost. The chamber holds a symbolic amount — not a significant portion of ashes.
Cremation Bracelet
Wider band bracelets with a hidden interior compartment, often personalizable with initials or a name. Check reviews specifically about seal reliability — clasp mechanisms on some models are fiddly.
Teardrop Pet Urn Necklace
3 colors, 2 materials, custom engraving + pet motif — daily wear, genuinely personal
$75–$95
Are There Rituals I Can Do With Pet Ashes?
Not every option involves a product. Sometimes what matters most is the act — something you do together, or alone, that marks the moment.
A Planting Ceremony
If you’re going the tree or garden route, turn planting into a small ritual rather than a task. Invite the people — and other pets — who knew them. Choose a day when you’re ready, not just when it’s convenient. Say something out loud, even if it’s just their name. Research suggests that naming grief — speaking it — helps the brain process loss differently than staying silent.
A Small Family Gathering
Some families hold a brief gathering — not a formal service, just people who loved the pet, together. Share a memory. Look at photos. Let kids participate if they want to. The gathering doesn’t need to be tied to the ashes at all. Grief shared doesn’t calcify the way isolated grief does.
Is It OK to Keep Pet Ashes at Home?
Yes — in the United States and most other countries, there are no legal restrictions on keeping pet ashes at home. They are not classified as hazardous material and require no special storage or permits.
From an emotional standpoint, keeping ashes at home is one of the most common choices pet owners make — and there’s nothing unhealthy about it. Grief counselors generally agree that having a physical object or location associated with a lost pet can support the grieving process, not prolong it. The best way to store pet ashes at home is simply in a container you find meaningful, in a place you’ll see naturally rather than avoid. If you share your home with others who feel differently, a small sharing urn lets each person handle their portion in their own way.
Where Should I Put My Pet’s Ashes?
There’s no single right answer, but three placement approaches tend to work well:
Where to put pet ashes ultimately comes down to one question: where would feel most natural to you a year from now, not just today?
What Is the Best Option for Pet Ashes?
There is no single best option for pet ashes — but there is a best option for you, based on how you grieve and how you live.
For pet owners who need daily comfort and live in a stable home: a well-chosen urn, placed somewhere you’ll see it, is the most reliable long-term choice. For those who move often or travel: cremation jewelry offers a connection that goes with you. For those who need a place to visit rather than an object to look at: a garden stone or planted tree creates that anchor outside the home.
The one approach I’d caution against: deciding too quickly under pressure. What to do with pet ashes is not an urgent decision — ashes can be stored safely for months or years while you figure out what actually feels right. Choosing too fast because you feel like you should have an answer is how people end up with something that doesn’t fit.
How to Choose What Feels Right for You
These five questions will help narrow it down quickly:
A place to go: garden stone or planted tree
Mobile: cremation jewelry, small keepsake urn
$50–$150: garden stone, bracelet
$150+: breed statue, granite stone
Ongoing presence: urn, jewelry, garden stone
Products We’ve Tested and Recommend
Every recommendation below includes a real drawback — because a recommendation without one isn’t honest.
Urns
Marble Finish Keepsake Sharing Urn
Best for: families sharing ashes — handmade, durable metal, velvet bag included
Drawback: Small capacity (3–5 cu in). Not suitable as sole urn for larger pets.
$13–$46
Pet Memorial Wooden Urn Box
Best for: owners who prefer a natural, understated look
Drawback: Smaller interior than photos suggest (5″×3″×2.25″). Measure first.
$19
Bulldog Urn — Breed-Specific
Best for: owners who want the urn to actually look like their dog
Drawback: Breed-specific, higher price, US shipping only. Not a quick-turnaround option.
$300+
Garden & Outdoor
Dog Memorial Monogram Stone
Best for: homeowners with a garden and a specific spot in mind
Drawback: Heavy and large (up to 21″×21″). Not practical for renters.
$195
Heart Granite Memorial Stone
Best for: a compact outdoor marker with custom engraving, handcrafted
Drawback: Salmon/grey color options only — not everyone’s preference.
$140
Cremation Jewelry for Pets
Teardrop Pet Urn Necklace
Best for: daily wear, discreet, engravable with pet motif
Drawback: Necklace only — no bracelet option in this style.
$75–$95
Custom Engraved Cremation Bracelet
Best for: wrist-wear preference; their consistently highest-selling product
Drawback: Two lengths — read sizing guide carefully before ordering.
$100
Pet Cremation Jewelry Pendant
Best for: budget-conscious buyers — stainless steel, waterproof, multi-color
Drawback: Mass-produced feel. Better for everyday wear than as a gift.
$16
Keepsakes & Statues
Lovenary Paw & Heart DIY Memorial Kit
Best for: people who want to make something themselves — the process is the memorial
Drawback: Resin has a learning curve. Watch a tutorial before starting.
$80
Polyresin Memorial Dog Angel Statue
Best for: outdoor display — weatherproof, handmade, unique shape
Drawback: Dog-specific design. Cat owners may not find it fitting.
$53
| Product | Core Strength | Main Drawback | Best For | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marble Sharing Urn | Budget-friendly, well-made, compact | Small capacity only | Families splitting ashes | Buy |
| Wooden Urn Box | Natural look, understated | Smaller than photos suggest | Minimalist display at home | Buy |
| Bulldog Urn | Breed-accurate, memory capsule | Expensive, slow shipping | Dog owners wanting likeness | Buy |
| Monogram Garden Stone | Durable, large, customizable | Heavy, not for renters | Homeowners with garden space | Buy |
| Heart Granite Stone | Compact, handcrafted, engravable | Limited color options | Smaller outdoor memorial | Buy |
| Teardrop Urn Necklace | Engravable, daily wear, personal | Necklace only | Daily discreet connection | Buy |
| Cremation Bracelet | Hidden compartment, engravable | Sizing must be checked | Wrist-wear preference | Buy |
| Cremation Pendant | Waterproof, multi-color, affordable | Mass-produced feel | Budget buyers, everyday wear | Buy |
| Lovenary DIY Kit | Therapeutic making process | Resin learning curve | Hands-on grievers | Buy |
| Dog Angel Statue | Weatherproof, handmade, outdoor | Dog-specific design | Outdoor garden display | Buy |
FAQ
Q1. Can I split pet ashes between family members?
Yes. There are no legal restrictions in most regions on dividing pet ashes between family members. Mini keepsake urns and sharing containers are designed specifically for this. Each person can keep their portion in whatever form feels right to them.
Q2. What to do with pets ashes if you live in a small space?
Cremation jewelry or a small keepsake urn are the most practical options for apartment living. Both take up minimal space and don’t require a dedicated display area. A mini sharing urn fits in a drawer if you’re not ready to display it yet.
Q3. What to do with a pet’s ashes if family members disagree?
This is more common than people admit. A practical solution: keep a small portion in a sharing urn for yourself, and allow others to handle their portion separately. You don’t have to agree on one approach.
Q4. What are the best pet urns for dogs specifically?
For dogs, breed-specific urns offer the most personal result. For a budget-friendly option, the Marble Finish Sharing Urn works for any breed. Confirm the cubic inch capacity against your pet’s weight — roughly 1 cubic inch per pound of body weight is the standard estimate.
Q5. Can cremation jewelry for pets actually hold real ashes?
Yes. Quality cremation jewelry includes a sealed interior chamber that holds a small amount of ash — typically enough to fill a thimble. Once sealed, the ash is permanent. Stainless steel and sterling silver options are both waterproof and corrosion-resistant.
Q6. How long can you keep pet ashes?
Indefinitely. Pet ashes are dry calcium phosphate — they don’t decompose, smell, or change over time. As long as they’re stored in a sealed container away from moisture, they can be kept for years or decades with no degradation.
Q7. Do pet ashes smell?
No. Pet ashes from a licensed crematorium are odorless. The cremation process burns away all organic material. If you notice any smell, it’s more likely from the container or packaging than the ashes themselves.
Q8. Can you travel with pet ashes?
Domestically in the US, yes — the TSA allows cremated remains in carry-on luggage, though the container must pass X-ray screening. For international travel, requirements vary significantly by country. Check the destination country’s import rules before traveling (this is not legal advice).
Q9. Can you bury pet ashes in your yard?
In most US states, yes — burying pet ashes on your own private property is legal. Some municipalities have specific rules, so a quick check of local ordinances is worth doing. Burying on public land or in parks typically requires permission.
Q10. What happens to pet ashes if not collected?
Policies vary by crematorium. Most will hold ashes for 30 to 90 days before following their unclaimed remains protocol. If you’re not ready to collect immediately, contact the crematorium to confirm their policy and request additional holding time.
A Final Word from Jessica
If your pet’s ashes have already been buried, scattered, or handled in some way — and you’re reading this feeling like you missed something — you didn’t.
The ashes are not where the love lives. They never were.
And if you want something tangible — a memorial stone, a piece of jewelry, a figurine that looks like them — those things don’t require ashes to be meaningful. They exist for anyone who loved a pet and wants to say so, regardless of what happened to the ashes. The form the memorial takes matters far less than the fact that you’re still looking for ways to honor them.
Jessica Merrow is a pet loss grief counselor and writer who has supported hundreds of grieving pet owners through one of life’s most painful experiences. After losing her golden retriever Max unexpectedly, she dedicated herself to understanding the psychology of pet grief — and helping others feel less alone in it.










