The Jewish cemetery is located in the north of the town and is framed by a 1 m high field stone wall. It is freely accessible through an iron gate in the form of a menorah. The cemetery and the synagogue were donated by Michael Sperling (1803-1866), a wealthy grain dealer who, among other things, financed the railway line to the Oderhafen in Groß-Neuendorf. In 1855, the Sperling family acquired a plot of land in the immediate vicinity of the village location for the construction of their own cemetery, where in 1860 the grain dealer Michael Sperling (1803-1860) was the first to be buried. However, the oldest of the approximately 35 surviving tombstones is said to date from 1842. Almost 30 of the probably 40 gravestones are still standing in the cemetery. The last tombstone is clearly dated 1910. There are both Hebrew and Latin inscriptions mostly on the back of the stones. In front of the cemetery there is an information board "Jewish life in Groß Neuendorf".