Every week, people search for grave locations in Brandon and many give up after trying one or two generic websites. The reality is that burial records here are maintained by several different agencies, and you need to know which one to contact for your specific situation.
This guide walks you through all of them — step by step, with links, phone numbers, and tips that come from people who actually research burials in this area.
What this guide covers: Free grave search tools with step-by-step instructions, Brandon cemetery resources, official burial records, veteran grave search, genealogy archives, local tips, and all official links and contact details.
How to Find a Grave in Brandon Online for Free
Start online before visiting any office. Most burial records from the 1900s onward are indexed in at least one of these free databases:
Canadian GravesitesCanada
Volunteer-run database of Canadian cemetery records.
Find a Grave — Micro Step-by-Step
Enter the Name
Type the first and last name in the search bar.
Filter by Brandon
In “Cemetery Location” type “Brandon” and select from dropdown.
Review Results
Each result shows name, dates, cemetery name, and photo availability. Click to open the full memorial.
Get Exact Location
On the memorial page, find: cemetery name, plot/section number, GPS coordinates, and Google Maps link.
Request a Photo
No headstone photo? Click “Request Photo.” A local volunteer may visit the cemetery and photograph it for you — free.
BillionGraves — Step-by-Step
Search by Name
Enter first and last name, click Search.
Filter by Location
Use location filters to narrow to Brandon area.
Get GPS Directions
Click the result to see headstone photo with exact GPS coordinates. Tap “Get Directions” to navigate directly to the grave on your phone.
Official Burial & Death Records
Contact the provincial vital statistics office for death certificates ($15-$50 CAD).
Official Records Source
Provincial vital statistics office
What Death Certificates Reveal
They list the burial location and funeral home — often the fastest shortcut to finding the grave.
Newspaper Obituaries
Obituaries almost always name the cemetery. Search at your local library or newspapers.com.
How to Find a Veteran’s Grave
Still Cannot Find?
Search Find a Grave filtered to Brandon. Volunteer coverage for veteran graves is typically very thorough.
Free Genealogy Resources
Local Library
Most libraries offer free access to Ancestry.com and historical newspapers. Visit with your library card.
Map — Cemeteries in Brandon
Local Tips & Insider Tricks
Quebec records are often in French: Many Quebec burial records, especially Catholic church records, are in French. FamilySearch has indexed many of these.
Winter cemetery visits: Canadian winters make cemetery visits difficult Nov-Mar. Call the cemetery office ahead to check hours and access.
Provincial archives: Each province has a provincial archive with historical burial records. Many are being digitised and put online.
Frequently Asked Questions
Need More Help?
Could not find what you need? Leave a comment with the details you have. Our community may be able to help.