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Enterprise

Dignity returns to profit despite revenue dip as customers spend more on funerals

Restrictions at the start of 2021 impacted business as clients chose simpler ceremonies

Listed funeral business Dignity has swung back to a profit after covid lockdown restrictions meant more attended funerals could take place.

A new pricing strategy meant revenues fell in 2021 from £314.1 million to £312 million but pre-tax profits hit £32 million, compared to a pre-tax loss of £19.6 million in 2020. But restrictions at the start of 2021 continued to impact upon the Sutton Coldfield-based business.

In an update to the stock exchange, it said: "Restrictions in client choices due to covid-19 continued to adversely impact average revenue as clients opted for simpler funerals during the first half of 2021."

There has been an improvement since restrictions were removed but Dignity warned the end of covid could hit the business as death rates fall once the pandemic subsides.

The funeral sector has seen a huge spike in business due to excess deaths but has been unable to cash in on additional services because restrictions banned large gatherings. Dignity revealed, for example, that with the end of restrictions, sales of flowers and memorials increased per funeral to £154.

The company said: "The biggest factor affecting us is likely to be the death rate and there is a real risk that, after covid-19 passes, the excess death effect of the past two years starts to reverse itself which it will do at some point."

With the rollout of the covid-19 vaccine, deaths in 2021 were 14,000 lower than 2020, the company added.