The preneed landscape in North Carolina and South Carolina is changing faster than most funeral home programs have adapted to. The macro forces — cremation rates, demographics, carrier consolidation, and digital consumer behavior — aren't going to reverse. The funeral homes that thrive in the next five years will be the ones that understand what's actually happening and adjust their strategy accordingly.
Here's what Duane is seeing across NC and SC funeral home programs in early 2026.
The Cremation Mix Shift Is Permanent — And Still Moving
In 2010, the national cremation rate was roughly 40%. In 2026, it's approaching 65% nationally, with NC and SC tracking that trend closely. For funeral homes that built their preneed programs in the traditional-burial era, the math has quietly changed.
A traditional funeral home with 200 at-need calls was used to average preneed contracts of $8,500–$11,000. As cremation becomes the majority of their volume, average contract values have dropped to $5,500–$7,500 for many programs — even as they're writing the same number of contracts. That's a $600,000–$700,000 annual revenue difference that didn't require a single bad month to happen.
What this means for preneed strategy
- Volume targets need to be recalibrated — you need more contracts to produce the same revenue
- Cremation-with-services education is now essential — families don't automatically know a meaningful cremation service is possible
- Traditional burial should be actively presented, not passively offered — for families where it's appropriate, it represents dramatically better care and meaningfully higher contract values
- Younger prospect targeting matters more — families in their 50s and 60s are more likely to still be open to traditional arrangements than families in their 80s
Carrier Consolidation Is Reducing Real Choice
The preneed insurance carrier landscape has consolidated significantly over the last decade. Homesteaders Life, Wellabe (formerly Great Western Financial), FDLIC, NGL, and a handful of others account for the majority of NC/SC preneed volume. Several smaller carriers that funeral homes had relationships with have been acquired or exited the market.
Consolidation has a predictable effect on contract terms: carriers with reduced competition have less pressure to maintain competitive commission rates, favorable inflation protection terms, or flexible contract structures. Several NC funeral homes have found their carrier's terms significantly less favorable upon contract renewal than when they originally signed.
What funeral homes should do: Understand every term in your carrier contract — not just commission rates, but inflation protection formulas, assignment terms, transfer provisions, and service agreements. Many funeral homes have never had an independent review of their carrier terms. In a consolidating market, that independent review is more valuable than ever.
The Boomer Wave Is the Largest Preneed Opportunity in Decades
The leading edge of the Baby Boomer generation turned 80 in 2026. Over the next 15 years, boomers will drive a sustained increase in at-need call volume — and they represent the single largest preneed prospect pool in recent history.
Boomers are different from previous generations of preneed prospects. They are more digitally active, more financially literate, more skeptical of sales conversations, and more likely to have done their own research before speaking to a preneed counselor. They respond poorly to scripts and pressure and well to consultative conversations grounded in their specific goals and concerns.
In NC and SC specifically, retirement migration continues to add prospects: retirees from the Northeast and Midwest relocating to the Triangle, Charlotte, Wilmington, and the coastal SC market are arriving without local funeral home relationships — a meaningful opportunity for funeral homes with effective outreach.
Boomer prospect characteristics that affect preneed strategy
- More likely to have researched options online before first contact
- More likely to involve a spouse or adult child in the decision
- More likely to have specific preferences about their arrangements
- More comfortable with cremation than previous generations
- More financially sophisticated — they understand financial instruments, costs, and value
- More likely to have already planned (or avoided planning) if they've lost a spouse
Digital Lead Generation Has Permanently Changed the Funnel
Church seminars, direct mail, and community outreach remain effective in NC and SC — particularly in rural and suburban markets where community ties are strong. But the prospect funnel has fundamentally changed. A meaningful percentage of preneed prospects now research online before making contact, and some are specifically looking for the ability to initiate the process digitally.
Funeral homes without a digital presence — or with a minimal, outdated website — are invisible to an increasing share of their prospect pool. This isn't a prediction; it's happening now. Preneed counselors report more first-contact inquiries from leads who "found them on Google" and fewer cold seminar attendees.
At the same time, the funeral homes that have combined strong community presence with digital visibility are seeing an additive effect — traditional seminar attendees who have also seen the funeral home's online presence arrive with higher trust and closer to a decision.
Practical implication: Digital doesn't replace community outreach in the Carolinas — the personal relationship still closes preneed contracts. But digital absence is increasingly a barrier. A funeral home's website, Google Business Profile, and online reputation are now part of the prospect's evaluation process, whether the funeral home participates in that process or not.
What Strong Programs Are Doing Differently in 2026
Targeting younger prospects more aggressively
Seminar content and outreach targeting the 58–68 age range rather than the traditional 70+ focus. Younger prospects have higher contract values, longer policy accumulation periods, and higher average commissions.
Leading with cremation-with-service education
Not to push cremation — to help families understand that cremation doesn't have to mean no gathering, no story told, no meaningful goodbye. Many families who "just want cremation" have never been shown what a meaningful cremation service looks like.
Building a referral infrastructure
Relationships with elder law attorneys, financial advisors, Medicare/Medicaid specialists, and senior center directors who encounter preneed prospects and can make warm referrals.
Investing in counselor training and retention
The labor market for experienced preneed counselors is competitive. Funeral homes that invest in training, provide real support systems, and compensate fairly are retaining counselors. Those that don't are in a constant churn cycle.
Tracking the five KPIs consistently
Penetration rate, average contract value, conversion rate, cancellation rate, and at-need capture. High-performing programs know their numbers and adjust quarterly. Programs that only look at contracts written are managing blind.
The Fundamentals Haven't Changed
Cremation rates, carrier consolidation, and digital lead generation are real forces reshaping the preneed market. But the fundamental of what makes a preneed program succeed hasn't changed: a counselor who has genuine conversations with families about their goals, builds real relationships, follows up consistently, and serves families well.
The funeral homes that get those fundamentals right — and adapt their systems to the 2026 market — will look back on this decade as a time of significant growth, not decline.
Duane Cutlip is a Licensed Preneed Funeral Director with 20+ years of experience serving NC and SC funeral homes with consulting, training, staffing, and program audits.
Talk to Duane — (919) 822-2010