Posted on Leave a comment

How to Choose the Best Custom Pet Urn for Your Beloved Companion (2026)

How to Choose the Best Custom Pet Urn for Your Beloved Companion

A row of ceramic pet urns in different shapes and sizes — round, square, with sculpted lids — displayed on a wooden shelf in soft afternoon light

Reading time: 6 minutes


The Urn Decision Most Families Get Wrong

If you’ve just received ashes back from the vet, you probably didn’t expect the urn decision to take a week. Most families tell us they assumed they’d pick something off a shelf at the crematorium and be done.

It doesn’t usually work that way. The crematorium options are functional but generic. So families go home, search “custom pet urn” online, and find themselves staring at 200 options that all look similar in product photos.

This guide cuts through that. We make ceramic pet urns, and we’ve shipped 1,200+ in the last three years. Here’s what to look for — and what we wish more families knew before they ordered.

The 3 Things That Actually Matter

Ignore the marketing photos. Here’s the real decision framework:

1. Capacity: Does It Actually Fit?

This is the #1 mistake. Pet cremation urns are usually listed in cubic inches (in³) or milliliters (ml). The rule of thumb: 1 lb of body weight ≈ 1 cubic inch of cremated remains. A 10-lb cat needs a 10 in³ urn minimum, and most families want 10-20% extra space for comfort.

Here’s a quick guide:

Pet WeightMinimum Urn CapacityRecommended
Small cat (5-10 lbs)10 in³15-20 in³
Medium cat / small dog (10-25 lbs)25 in³30-40 in³
Medium dog (25-50 lbs)50 in³65-80 in³
Large dog (50-90 lbs)90 in³100-130 in³
Giant breed (90+ lbs)130 in³150+ in³ or split into multiple keepsake urns

7 Ceramic Pet Urn Styles Worth Considering

We make and ship 7 different styles. Here’s the honest comparison:

#StyleCapacityBest ForPrice
1Custom Pet Photo Urn – Handcrafted Ceramic Memorial (12oz)12oz (~12 in³)Cats, very small dogs, keepsake portion of larger pet’s ashes$51.20
2Customized Plaster Pet Sculpture with Magnet – Personalized Cat or Dog Keepsake for Car, Fridge, Framesee PDPCats$34.60″ to “$154.00
3Handmade Leather Pet Portrait Keychain – Custom Dog or Cat Face Charm – A Meaningful Memorial Gift for Pet Loverssee PDPCats$142.20″ to “$155.60
4Custom 3D Pet Portrait Pendantsee PDPMulti-pet$127.60″ to “$291.20
5[Custom Needle-Felted Pet Portrait BroochHandmade Wool FeltWedding & Memorial Keepsake](http://mocha.casa/shop/product/custom-needle-felted-pet-portrait-brooch/)see PDPMulti-pet$127.60″ to “$156.80
6Custom Wool Felt Pet Portrait – Embroidered Wool Art, Pet Memorialsee PDPMulti-pet$34.00″ to “$58.20
7Custom Leather Pet Portrait Keychain – Handmade Embossed Pet Memorial Keyringsee PDPMulti-pet$70.40″ to “$95.20

Our most-ordered style: the Custom Pet Photo Urn (Style #1 above) — it’s the one with a 3D sculpted lid of your pet’s face. Capacity-wise it works for cats and small dogs. For larger dogs, customers either order Style #5 (Pet Urn Figurine with 1000ml capacity) or split ashes across multiple keepsake urns (one for home, one to scatter, one for a child’s room).

What to Avoid

Three red flags we’ve learned from customer complaints over the years:

  1. “Ceramic-look” resin or plastic — these are cheap imitations. They look fine in photos, but they yellow within 2 years and the lid doesn’t seal properly. We only use glazed ceramic.
  2. No capacity listed — if a seller doesn’t list cubic inches or milliliters, walk away. The industry is unregulated and many generic imports are 30-50% smaller than the size they appear in photos.
  3. No custom photo process described — if “custom” just means a nameplate, it’s not really a memorial piece. The whole point of a custom urn is the 3D sculpture or the printed photo. If the process isn’t described on the product page, the result is generic.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to get a custom pet urn?

Our ceramic urns take 10-15 days to handcraft, plus 6-12 days for shipping. Rush production (5-7 days) is available for most styles — useful if you’ve scheduled a memorial service and need the urn by a specific date.

Can I put the ashes in myself, or do I need a vet?

You can transfer the ashes yourself. The urn comes with a felt or velvet bag to hold the ashes, which sits inside. The lid lifts off, you place the bag inside, and replace the lid. No tools needed, no vet required.

Can the urn be personalized with my pet’s name?

Yes — all of our urns have a custom text field during checkout where you can add the pet’s name (up to 20 characters) and a short inscription (up to 50 characters). Names are hand-painted in a complementary color, not stuck on as a sticker.

Do you ship internationally?

Yes — we ship to 30+ countries. Shipping is calculated at checkout based on destination and weight. Most countries don’t charge customs on memorial items under $800.

What if my pet was very large?

We offer sizes up to 1000ml (34 in³) which fits dogs up to ~80 lbs. For larger dogs, you can split the ashes across multiple keepsake urns — many families order 2-3 smaller urns (one for home, one for a child’s room, one to bury or scatter).

Can I see a proof before production?

Yes. For urns with custom photo lids, we send a digital proof of the 3D sculpture within 2-3 days. You approve before we cast. If something doesn’t look right, we redo the sculpt free.

Start With a Style That Speaks to You

If you know your pet’s size, the capacity table above narrows it to 1-2 options. If you’re drawn to the sculpted lid (most popular), start with the Custom Pet Photo Urn. If you want something simpler and more traditional, the Handmade Ceramic Cat Urn is our most affordable.

All styles ship in 10-15 days. Custom photo included in price.

Need help choosing? Email us at hello@petpresence.com with your pet’s name, weight, and any preference (sculpted lid vs. photo wrap vs. plain ceramic) — we’ll write back with our top 2 picks within a day.

Materials & Craft: What’s Actually Inside

All of our ceramic urns are made from a high-fired stoneware clay (not cheap terracotta or resin). We fire at 2200°F (1200°C) which makes the body non-porous — meaning it won’t absorb moisture, won’t crack in cold weather, and won’t degrade over decades. The glaze is food-safe and lead-free, even though the urn is not intended to hold food.

Why this matters for a memorial: A cheap resin urn will yellow and become brittle in 3-5 years. A high-fired ceramic urn will look the same in 30 years. Some of our customers have inherited their parents’ ceramic urns — the craftsmanship is meant to outlast you.

Where to Place the Urn in Your Home

There’s no wrong place, but these are the 5 most common placements we hear from customers:

  1. The mantle — most traditional, visible to all guests, conversation piece
  2. A bookshelf alcove — quieter, surrounded by other meaningful objects
  3. The bedroom — for families who want the comfort of proximity at night
  4. A garden or windowsill — for families who like the connection to nature
  5. A home office — for people who want their pet with them during the work day

Our recommendation: Choose a place you’ll see every day, not a hidden corner. Grief researchers keep finding that visible, integrated memorials help more than tucked-away ones. The point is to include them, not to store them.

A Note on Scattering & Partial Ashes

If you’re planning to scatter some of the ashes (in a favorite park, on a hike, or at sea), we recommend keeping a portion in the urn and scattering the rest. Many families split ashes 50/50 — half in the urn for home, half for the journey.

A practical tip: If you have multiple family members who each want a portion, order 2-3 small keepsake urns instead of one large one. Each family member keeps one at home, and the memorial is shared. We can split your order into 2-3 urns for the same total cost as one large urn.


Related Reading