Guidance

When someone dies in Albania

The process when a British national dies in Albania, including registering the death, funerals, and bringing the person’s body to the UK.

Contacting the insurance company

If the person who died had insurance, contact their insurance company as soon as possible. Read the general guidance on what to do when someone dies abroad, if you’re not sure if they had insurance.

The insurance company should appoint a funeral director in Albania and the UK. They may also cover the cost of bringing the person’s body to the UK (repatriation) and help with any medical, legal, interpretation and translation fees.

Registering the death

The death must be registered at the local Albanian registry office. Your funeral director can normally do this for you. You’ll need information and documents about the person who has died, including their:

  • birth certificate, showing their place of birth and parents’ names
  • official identity document (for example their British passport)
  • proof of residence address

Getting a death certificate

After registering the death, you’ll get a death certificate (“Certifikatë vdekje”). You can ask for an international version which includes an English translation. Albanian death certificates do not give the cause of death. It’s worth asking for extra copies of the death certificate, as you might need them to show to other people later.

Postmortems in Albania

A post-mortem is a medical examination of the body. There might be one in Albania if the cause of death is unknown, unnatural, sudden, violent or in cases of child deaths.

Cultural or religious sensitivities may not be taken into account. Small tissue samples and organs may be removed for testing without the family’s permission. You’ll not automatically be told if this happens.

If organs are removed, they will normally be returned before the person’s body is released for burial. In exceptional circumstances body parts may be kept without permission. This might happen if further investigation is needed. The next of kin will be told if this happens.

Direct family members or your local lawyer can apply for a copy of the post-mortem report.

Burying or cremating the body in Albania

You need a local funeral director to arrange a burial in Albania. Your funeral director can give you advice.

Cremation is not available in Albania. You may be able to have the body cremated in a neighbouring country. You will need to arrange this with a funeral director.

You should not have the person cremated abroad if you want a coroner in England and Wales to conduct an inquest into their death. In Scotland, a further investigation may still be possible.

Bringing the body to the UK

Ask your funeral director about options for bringing the person’s body to the UK from Albania.

When taking the person’s body to the UK from Albania your funeral director will need to:

  • show the death certificate
  • get permission to remove the person’s body
  • provide a special casket for transporting the person’s body
  • show the passport of the person who died

Getting the person’s belongings back

Belongings the person had with them when they died are normally given to you or the Albanian police.

If you bring the person’s body to the UK, you can ask your local funeral director to collect all the belongings and transport them together.

Clothing may be kept as evidence if there’s an investigation into the death. This will only be returned when the investigation is over.

Finding an Albanian translator

You may need a translator to help you understand Albanian rules or get documents translated. Check official translators in Albania. The embassy in Albania cannot provide translation services or pay for translation costs.

Finding an Albanian lawyer

You may need a lawyer to help you understand the Albanian legal system when someone has died. Check English-speaking lawyers in Albania. The embassy in Albania cannot give you legal advice or pay for legal costs.

Telling the UK authorities

Although you do not have to register the death in the UK, when someone dies abroad you still need to tell the UK authorities. Read general guidance on what to do when someone dies abroad to find out what to do.

Contacting the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO)

You can contact the FCDO if you still need advice:

Updates to this page

Published 12 May 2025

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