Embalmer Jobs
Embalmer jobs are open across funeral homes, mortuaries, cremation services, and hospital morgues, from entry-level apprentice to licensed funeral director, with specializations in restorative art, mortuary science, and body preparation. Find a role that fits from the openings below and apply directly.
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Our associates celebrate lives. We celebrate our associates.
Professional Services is looking for a proficient Embalmer to answer heavy phone traffic, embalm human remains, assist in dressing, cosmetizing and casketing remains, making removals from places of death, maintaining a neat and clean work environment and other duties as assigned.
Essential Job Functions: Must be able to perform the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodations.
- Embalm human remains following mortuary standard preservation.
- Professionally and courteously answer our heavy phone traffic.
- Continuously put our mission, vision and values into practice.
- Maintain positive, respectful and professional working relationships with co-workers, cross-functional departments and all Rose Hills associates.
- Maintain a respectful work environment and positive working relationships with our third party removal companies, Hospital, Convalescent staff & Coroners Offices.
- Demonstrate willingness to help others.
- Complete death calls and perform removals from places of death.
- Strictly adhere to our attendance policy.
- Carry out all responsibilities following our company policies, procedures, rules, and controls.
- Abide by our company dress code and any department requests regarding work attire.
- Adhere to safety rules and funeral service industry regulations.
- Promptly report unsafe practices to management.
- Keep management promptly and fully informed of all issues, matters of significance, and take prompt corrective action where necessary.
- Perform other duties as assigned or directed by management.
- Prepare human remains for viewing, burial and other final disposition.
- Ability to dress, cosmetize and casket human remains.
- Abide by established company policies, procedures, and controls.
- Assist with and or moving supplies upstairs and maintaining supply levels.
- Any other duties as assigned or directed by management.
Special Skills:
- Must have the ability to professionally, efficiently and accurately complete tasks in an environment where constant interruptions occur.
- Communicate persuasively with co-workers, management team and customers, to gain cooperation; use persistence, finesse, and tact.
- Anticipate the needs of our department and recommend solutions.
- Have good written and oral communication skills.
- Know how to prioritize.
- Be accessible and approachable.
- Be self-motivated and adaptable to change.
- Detail orientated.
- Understand the importance of continuous learning.
- MS Office Software: Outlook, Excel, Word, PowerPoint
- Be familiar with HMIS program
Specific Job Requirements:
- Must possess a valid Embalmer’s license with the State of California.
- Must possess a valid California Driver’s License
- Documentation of HBV vaccination record, agree to take HBV vaccination or sign a HBV informed consent/ refusal form
Physical Requirements:
Includes but not limited to standing for long periods of time, occasionally may lift weight of up to 50lbs. Must be able to work every day around human remains and be able to tolerate odors and fumes from both the human remains and chemicals (such as formaldehyde, embalming fluid, cauterizing chemicals, and body fluids); odors, fumes, and dusting powders may cause discomfort and/or irritation to eyes and respiratory passages. Must be able to lift, carry, push or pull up to twenty (20) to thirty (30) bodies/caskets per day, weighing from 70lbs to 300lbs into and out of refrigerated storage; must have good driving record and be able to drive Company vehicles as needed; must be able to physically and emotionally handle the requirements of constantly being around and moving human remains in a temperature controlled environment. Must constantly think about and comply with health and safety regulations, and practice good hygiene. Hazard exposure: to human diseases, chemicals, sharps, and occasional low-level radioactivity (resulting from medical tests on bodies).
This is a rotating four (4) days on, four (4) days off schedule:
7:00am – 5:30pm
Compensation:
$26.00/hr – $36.00/hr
Exact compensation may vary based on skills, experience, and location.
Benefits (dependent upon eligibility):
Medical*Dental*Vision*Flexible Spending Accounts (health care and dependent care)*Health Savings Account with Company Contribution*Sick Leave*Short-Term Disability*Long-Term Disability*Life Insurance*Voluntary Accidental Death or Dismemberment Insurance*Dependent Life Insurance*SCI 401(k) Retirement Savings Plan with Company match*Employee Assistance Program
Rose Hills is an Equal Opportunity Employer. The company’s hiring procedures do not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, ethnicity, age, sex, sexual-orientation, veteran’s status or disability, or any other legally protected status.
SCI Shared Resources, LLC is committed to an inclusive, barrier-free recruitment and selection process. On request, we will seek to provide appropriate accessibility options to all applicants with disabilities.
As part of your pre-employment background check, your criminal conviction history will be verified given that this role requires the following material job duties: Working around and/or handling deceased and working around families and colleagues. Convictions creating a direct, adverse, and negative relationship with the identified job duties may result in withdrawal of a conditional job offer.
Postal Code: 90601
Category (Portal Searching): Operations
Job Location: US-CA - Whittier
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Find Embalmer JobsEmbalmer Job Market
A snapshot from current openings nationwide, updated as new roles post.
Who's Hiring
- Service Corporation International23

- Sci Shared Resources17

- Park Lawn Corporation1

Top Industries Hiring
- Technology & Software23
What Employers Look For
The qualifications that appear most often in embalmer jobs.
- Valid state embalmer or funeral director license in good standing
- Associate or bachelor's degree in mortuary science from an accredited program
- Completion of a state-approved embalming apprenticeship
- Proficiency in arterial, cavity, and hypodermic embalming techniques
- Experience completing death certificates, burial permits, and regulatory paperwork
- Ability to perform restorative art and cosmetic preparation on decedents
Tips for Your Embalmer Job Search
List your state licensure front and center
Embalmer licensing requirements vary by state, so your resume needs to show exactly which states you're licensed in and whether your license is current. Hiring managers screen for this before reading anything else on your application.
Highlight restorative art skills specifically
Restorative art is a differentiator most candidates understate. If you've worked on trauma cases, post-autopsy preparation, or facial reconstruction, name those cases directly. Generic mentions of embalming experience don't stand out the way specific restoration work does.
Target openings that match your case volume experience
Funeral homes vary from fewer than five cases a month to high-volume operations handling dozens. Read each job listing for caseload language and match it to your background. Applying to a high-volume operation with only low-volume experience is a common mismatch worth avoiding.
Apply early to roles that fit
Migrate Mate lists embalmer openings from across the United States in one place, so you can find roles that match and apply directly to each listing.
Prepare for a practical knowledge interview
Many funeral home interviews include questions on chemical selection, injection technique, and handling regulatory paperwork like death certificates and transit permits. Review your mortuary science fundamentals and be ready to walk through your embalming process step by step.
Negotiate on-call expectations, not just base pay
Embalmer roles almost always include after-hours and weekend on-call duties. Before accepting an offer, clarify the on-call rotation schedule, whether on-call hours are compensated separately, and how frequently you'd be expected to respond. This affects your actual work schedule more than base pay alone.
Embalmer Jobs: Frequently Asked Questions
Which companies are hiring the most embalmers?
The companies hiring the most embalmers right now include Service Corporation International, Sci Shared Resources, and Park Lawn Corporation, with the largest share of openings in Ohio, California, and Alabama, based on current listings on Migrate Mate as of June 2026. Large funeral service chains and regional family-owned funeral homes tend to post the most consistently.
How many embalmer jobs are remote?
About 0% of embalmer openings are fully remote or hybrid as of June 2026, which reflects the hands-on nature of the role. Administrative functions like funeral pre-arrangement consulting and grief support coordination are the sub-areas most likely to offer any form of remote flexibility.
How do you become an embalmer?
You become an embalmer by completing an accredited mortuary science program, finishing a state-required apprenticeship under a licensed embalmer, passing your state's licensing exam, and applying for your embalmer license. Some states require separate funeral director licensure before you can work independently. Requirements differ by state, so confirm your state board's specific steps before starting your apprenticeship.
Can you get hired as an embalmer with little or no experience?
Yes, funeral homes regularly hire entry-level candidates who have completed mortuary science school and their apprenticeship hours, even without independent professional experience. Smaller independent funeral homes are often more open to new graduates than large chains. Emphasize your apprenticeship caseload, the types of preparation you completed, and any restorative work you handled during your training.
What does the embalmer interview process look like?
The embalmer interview typically starts with a phone screen focused on your licensure status and availability for on-call shifts, followed by an in-person meeting with the funeral home director. Expect questions on your embalming process, chemical selection, handling of trauma or autopsied cases, and how you manage regulatory paperwork. Some employers give a facility tour to assess your comfort with the work environment.
Where can I find and apply to embalmer jobs?
You can find and apply to embalmer jobs on Migrate Mate, which lists current openings from funeral homes, mortuaries, and cremation providers across the United States. Find roles that match your license, experience level, and location preferences, then apply directly to each listing.
See All 41+ Embalmer Jobs
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