The Jewish cemetery in Słomniki was established in 1898 in the immediate vicinity of the synagogue.
Due to the destruction, no original tombstones have survived in the cemetery. The fence around the cemetery was established in 1998 in cooperation with the Association of Jews from Słomniczów in Israel and the Nissenbaum Family Foundation.
In the central part of the necropolis there are four black marble monuments in the shape of elongated matzevot, commemorating the victims of the Holocaust, funded by the Association of Jews from Słomnica.
The monuments bear the names of 230 Jewish families who lived in Słomniki before the war.
On the first of them there is a Polish-Hebrew inscription: "Bl. People of Jewish families in Słomniki, victims of the genocidal German occupation of 1942 - 1945, two thousand children of women and men who were murdered in Słomniki, in the death camp in Bełżec and in martyrdom concentration camps. "May their souls live among the living."
On another monument - a huge block of rock next to the fence, probably at the site of the mass grave - there is a plaque with the following text: "In memory of Jews murdered by the Nazis in August 1942".
Currently, the area of the cemetery is flooded in winter and spring, it is difficult to reach the monument next to the fence without high boots.