About Us

VITA Life and Legacy

 

You deserve to feel calm, clear, and supported through some of life's most significant moments.

VITA Life and Legacy is here to help.

 

Whether you are planning ahead, supporting someone at the end of their life, or navigating loss, this is a place where you will find compassionate guidance and a steady hand to help you through.

 

Kerry Tully is an experienced Funeral Celebrant, End-of-Life Doula, and Author with over 18 years in the field. She works with individuals and families across three areas of support, each one designed to bring clarity and calm when it is needed most.

 

For those who want to plan ahead, Kerry helps you document your wishes, organise your affairs, and put everything in place so the people you love are not left guessing.

When someone is approaching the end of their life, Kerry provides compassionate, practical guidance every step of the way, from emotional support through to bedside vigil care, so no one has to face that season alone.

And when the time comes to farewell someone you love, Kerry creates meaningful, personalised ceremonies that truly honour who they were. From traditional funerals and memorial services through to ashes scattering and pet memorials, every service is crafted with care, dignity, and heart.

Wherever you are in this journey, VITA Life and Legacy walks alongside you.

How can we help you?

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Funerals &

Memorials

Planning a farewell for someone you love is one of life's hardest moments. I'm here to guide you through it with care, creating a meaningful ceremony that truly reflects the life and legacy of your loved one.

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End-of-Life

Doula

You don't have to do this alone. As an end-of-life doula, I provide practical, emotional and spiritual support for individuals and families, offering a steady, caring presence when it matters most.

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The Complete

End-of-Life Planner

Planning ahead isn't about death - it's about love, legacy and peace of mind. Explore The Complete End-of-Life Planner and other resources to start your journey toward feeling organised, prepared and truly ready.

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Resources and Helpful Connections

Explore a range of organisations, support services, and practical resources to help you navigate ageing, illness, end-of-life planning, grief, and loss with confidence.

The Complete

End-of-Life Planner

Most Australians leave their family with no plan. This book changes that. Record your funeral wishes, life story, digital passwords, important documents, and heartfelt letters to loved ones - everything your family needs, all in one place.

  • Gives your family clarity during an emotional time

  • Keeps important personal, legal, and practical information in one place.

  • Allows your wishes to be known and respected

  • Helps reduce stress and uncertainty for loved ones

  • Provides peace of mind for you and the people you love

Blogs & Stories

How to Plan Your Funeral and Leave a Legacy Your Family Will Be Grateful For | Cover image

How to Plan Your Funeral and Leave a Legacy Your Family Will Be Grateful For

April 01, 20265 min read

Nobody likes thinking about their own funeral. But here's the thing: the people who do think about it, and actually plan ahead, give their families one of the greatest gifts imaginable: clarity, comfort and the freedom to grieve without the chaos.

If you've been putting this off because it feels morbid or overwhelming, you're not alone. But preplanning your funeral and getting your legacy in order is one of the most loving, practical things you can do for the people you'll leave behind.

This guide will walk you through exactly what it involves, why it matters, and how to get started today.

Why Funeral Preplanning Matters More Than You Think

When someone dies without any plans in place, their family is left making dozens of decisions, often within 24 to 48 hours, while they're in shock and grief. Funeral costs, burial preferences, music choices, readings, who to notify. It's a lot.

Preplanning removes that burden. It means your wishes are known, your family isn't guessing, and the focus can be on honouring your life rather than scrambling to organise it.

It also gives you something most people never get: a say in how you're remembered.

What Is Legacy Planning?

Legacy planning goes beyond your will. It's about capturing who you are, your values, your stories, your wishes, so that something meaningful lives on after you're gone.

It can include:

  • Your personal history and life story

  • Letters or messages to loved ones

  • Your values and what you want to pass on

  • Practical information like account details, insurance policies and contacts

  • Your funeral and end-of-life wishes

  • Charitable intentions or gifts

Think of it as a complete picture of your life and wishes, not just the legal bits.

How to Start Planning: A Practical Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Get Your Documents Together

Start by gathering the essentials: your will, any existing insurance policies, superannuation details, property documents and identification. If you don't have a will, this is the time to sort one out.

Step 2: Record Your Funeral Wishes

Think about what kind of service you'd like. Burial or cremation? Religious or secular? Formal or relaxed? Are there songs, readings or people you'd want involved? Write it all down somewhere your family can find it.

Step 3: Write Down Your Life Story

This is the part most people skip, and the part families treasure most. Your memories, your values, the lessons you've learned. Even a few pages can mean the world to the people who love you.

Step 4: Leave Messages for the People You Love

Letters, notes, even voice recordings. These become irreplaceable. Don't assume people know how you feel. Tell them, and leave it somewhere they'll find it when they need it most.

Step 5: Make Sure Someone Knows Where Everything Is

The best plan in the world is useless if no one can find it. Tell a trusted person, your partner, an adult child, a close friend, where your documents and wishes are kept.

Step 6: Review It Regularly

Life changes. Your plans should too. Set a reminder to review everything every year or after any major life event.

Common Mistakes People Make (and How to Avoid Them)

  • Leaving it too late.None of us know when our time will come. Starting now, even with just a few notes, is infinitely better than not starting at all.

  • Keeping it all in your head.Your family can't read your mind. Write it down.

  • Focusing only on finances.The legal and financial side matters, but so does the personal side. Don't neglect your story and your wishes.

  • Not telling anyone.Someone needs to know your plans exist and where to find them.

The Emotional Side of Planning Ahead

It's normal to feel a bit confronted when you first sit down to do this. But most people find that once they start, it actually feels like a relief. There's something grounding about getting your affairs in order. It's an act of love and of taking control.

Many people also find it prompts meaningful conversations with family members that they'd been putting off for years.

Ready to Get Started?

The hardest part is simply beginning. That's why we created the Vita Life and Legacy Planner, a guided, all-in-one resource that walks you through every aspect of legacy planning and funeral preplanning, step by step.

It's practical, it's personal, and it's designed to make this process as straightforward and meaningful as possible.

Get your Vita Life and Legacy Planner today and give your family the gift of clarity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it too early to start planning my funeral?

No. In fact, the earlier you start, the better. Preplanning is something anyone over 18 can and should consider. It's not about being morbid. It's about being prepared.

What's the difference between a will and legacy planning?

A will deals with the legal distribution of your assets. Legacy planning is broader. It includes your personal wishes, your story, messages to loved ones and your funeral preferences. Both are important.

Do I need a solicitor to do this?

For your will, yes. It's worth getting professional legal advice. For the personal and practical side of legacy planning, you can absolutely get started on your own with the right tools and guidance.

What if my wishes change?

That's completely fine. Your legacy plan isn't set in stone. Review it regularly and update it as your life evolves.

How do I bring this up with my family?

It can feel awkward, but most families are relieved when someone takes the lead. You might frame it as wanting to make things easier for them, rather than focusing on death itself. Starting the conversation is the hardest part.

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Our Customers Say About Us

In our time of sadness and sorrow, Kerry was wonderful. From the moment we met her she was compassionate and understanding. She advised and made recommendations that were suitable to our needs and requirements. It was so comforting to have her guide us both in our time of sadness. Kerry’s very down-to-earth approach, put my wife and I at ease, as we both felt more than comfortable with Kerry’s way of explaining things and guiding us. Dave

Kerry, I wanted to thank you for the service on Friday. It was absolutely beautiful. Perfect in every way. Your attention to detail made the day so special and something I will never forget. Thank you for going over and above your role and being so accommodating when changes were through at you. You are an amazing person and we are truly grateful. Michelle

Kerry was a huge help in organising the funeral. She kept a level head when we were consumed with grief.

 Kerry delivered a very personal touch, and it was very evident that she takes great joy in being able to do the very vest in presenting a celebration of your loved one’s life.

 She organized so much for us, from putting together the order of service and liaising with the Funeral Directors, to making sure everything ran smoothly on the day.

 Kerry also made sure that people who worked with and had an association with Dad know of his passing. Such a caring and genuine lady.

 Karen

Kerry really excelled herself in assisting with the entire ceremony, not only presenting on the day but in preparation.

 

From contacting and notifying key invites from various organisations. Providing items for display, organising a bagpiper to play at the service, preparing order the of service and providing the family with a compilation of Dads life in a beautifully presented memorial booklet including the Eulogy and service outline.

 

Kerry managed to fill so many voids in the preparation and handling making everything less stressful for the family and bringing the whole day together perfectly.

 

Lindsay

Meet Kerry Tully

Kerry is the Founder of VITA Life and Legacy, Funeral Celebrant, End-of-Life Doula, End-of-Life Specialist, and author of The Complete End-of-Life Planner.

This work is not just my profession. It is deeply personal.

I have experienced loss in some of its most tender forms, including the grief of losing my son, my father, my grandparents, and dear friends. Each of those losses shaped me in ways I still carry. It was after losing my grandfather that I felt a quiet, certain knowing: when the time came for my grandmother, I wanted to help with her farewell. That moment became the beginning of everything.

Over the past 18 years I have had the honour of supporting countless families through life's most significant moments, creating ceremonies that are deeply personal and meaningful. Every farewell has only deepened my belief that how we mark the end of a life truly matters.

That belief is what inspired me to write this planner. Because everyone deserves clarity, and a calm, structured path through what can otherwise feel like an impossible process.

My hope is simply this: that you feel less alone, more prepared, and quietly confident that the things that matter most are taken care of.