Practical guidance

What to do if someone dies in Venezuela

This guide explains what happens after a death in Venezuela, who to contact, and how to arrange for your loved one to be brought home to the UK. The information comes from FCDO and government sources. Every situation is different, and if you need someone to guide you through it, our team is available any time.

Typical timeline

5–8 weeks

Typical cost

FCDO 24hr helpline

+44 (0)20 7008 5000

When a British national dies in Venezuela, contact the British Embassy in Caracas and the FCDO Emergency Travel Line: 020 7008 5000. Venezuela’s economic and infrastructure crisis means this is a more complex case than most South American countries.

Step one: Notify the Embassy and FCDO

British Embassy Caracas: +58 212 319 5800 FCDO Emergency Travel Line: 020 7008 5000 (available 24 hours)

The British Embassy in Caracas operates with reduced staffing. Response times may be longer than at British posts in more stable environments.

Step two: Appoint a specialist

Venezuela requires a company with Latin America experience and specific knowledge of the Venezuelan administrative landscape. The CICPC forensic process, SAREN civil registry, and MPPS export permit system each involve separate institutions, and the chronic supply and capacity shortages mean delays are routine.

Step three: Understand the administrative chain

Venezuela has a multi-institution process for repatriation:

  1. CICPC (Cuerpo de Investigaciones Cientificas, Penales y Criminalisticas) — investigates unnatural deaths and issues forensic documentation
  2. Registro Civil — death registration for natural deaths
  3. SAREN (Servicio Autonomo de Registro Nacional) — civil registry documentation and certified copies
  4. MPPS (Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Salud) — Ministry of Health, issues the export permit

Each of these institutions is operating under the pressures of Venezuela’s economic crisis. Delays at any stage are common.

The economic crisis context

Venezuela’s collapse since 2015 has created chronic shortages throughout the system. Hospitals face shortages of medicines and equipment. Administrative offices may lack basic supplies, power, or staffing. Embalming facilities can face shortages of chemicals and materials — confirm availability with your local funeral home before proceeding.

The practical currency in Venezuela is the US dollar. Payment for local services is typically in cash US dollars. UK families should confirm payment arrangements with their repatriation company.

Deaths outside Caracas

Maracaibo (Venezuela’s second city and oil industry hub): deaths require transfer to Caracas or use of Maiquetia airport facilities.

Remote oil field areas (Orinoco Belt): significant transfer distances; timing is unpredictable.

Canaima National Park (Angel Falls, tepuis): charter aircraft evacuation required. Extended timelines.

Border regions (Colombia, Brazil, Guyana): FCDO advises against all travel to these areas. Deaths here involve heightened complexity.

Air routing

Simon Bolivar International Airport (CCS) at Maiquetia. Most major carriers have suspended Venezuelan routes. Cargo connects via Bogota (Avianca/LATAM), Panama City (Copa Airlines), or Miami. No direct UK flights.

Timeline and cost

  • Natural death in Caracas: 3–5 weeks
  • Unnatural death or outside Caracas: 5–8 weeks
  • Remote area or border region: 3–5 months

Further resources

First things first

What to do in the first 24 hours

The immediate period after a death abroad is disorienting. Here are the steps in the order they normally need to happen.

1

Contact local emergency services

2

Contact the British Embassy or consulate

FCDO 24hr: +44 (0)20 7008 5000

3

Appoint a local funeral director

A local funeral director in Venezuela will take care of the body, arrange embalming, obtain the necessary documents, and coordinate with airlines. The embassy can recommend accredited directors. You can also contact a specialist UK repatriation company, who will coordinate with a local partner on your behalf.

4

Contact your travel insurer

If your loved one had travel insurance with repatriation cover, contact the insurer immediately. They will often have an emergency assistance line and may appoint their own funeral director. They may cover the full cost of repatriation, which can be .

5

Gather the required documents

Repatriation from Venezuela requires specific paperwork before a body can be transported. Your local funeral director will handle most of this.

What to expect

How long does it take?

Best case 3–5 weeks
Typical 5–8 weeks
Complex cases 3–5 months

Factors that can extend the timeline

  • Spanish documentation requiring certified translation
  • Severely degraded healthcare and administrative infrastructure nationwide due to economic crisis
  • Very limited international flight connections since major airlines withdrew Venezuelan routes
  • Deaths in remote oil field areas (Maracaibo Basin, Orinoco Belt) requiring transfer to Caracas
  • Political instability affecting government processes and British Embassy operations

Cost guide

How much does it cost?

Full repatriation guide for Venezuela

Detailed information on the full repatriation process, embassy contacts, cost breakdown, cultural considerations, and more.

View full guide

Speak to our team

We coordinate repatriations from Venezuela every week. If you need someone to take over the arrangements, call us now.

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Reviewed by the Repatriate Service editorial team. Information sourced from UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) guidance, official embassy contacts, and professional repatriation experience. Updated June 2026.

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