Legal framework
Legal and jurisdictional context for repatriation from Bolivia
When a British national dies in Bolivia, their death must be registered under Bolivia's local law before any repatriation can begin. A death certificate issued in Bolivia is a legal document under that country's jurisdiction. For it to be accepted in the UK, it must be translated into English by a qualified translator and, in some cases, authenticated by the relevant authorities.
The UK does not impose an entry ban on repatriated remains, but airline and IATA standards require the body to be embalmed to international standards and transported in a zinc-lined coffin. These requirements exist in all cases of international air transport of human remains.
The process
How repatriation from Bolivia works in practice
The process follows a fixed sequence. Each step must be completed before the next can begin.
Documentation
Documentation requirements for repatriation from Bolivia
The following documents must all be in place before the body can leave Bolivia. Your repatriation coordinator will obtain these on your behalf, working with the local funeral director.
Timeline analysis
Realistic timelines for repatriation from Bolivia
Based on cases handled from Bolivia, the typical timeline is 14-21 days. In the best-case scenario, where the cause of death is clear, documentation is issued without bureaucratic delay, and no post-mortem is required, the process can complete in 10 days. This is not the norm.
Complex cases involving a required post-mortem, a coroner's investigation, a death in a remote part of Bolivia, or a dispute over the cause of death can take 35+ days or considerably longer. Families should plan for the typical range rather than the best case.
Factors that extend the timeline
- Fiscalia investigation required for all unnatural deaths before body release
- Altitude sickness deaths at La Paz (3,600m), Lake Titicaca, or Uyuni require FELCC investigation
- Instituto de Investigaciones Forenses (IDIF) handles post-mortems in La Paz or Santa Cruz
- No direct UK flights; routing via Sao Paulo (LATAM) or Lima (LATAM/Copa) required
- Documentation in Spanish throughout
Edge cases
Complications and edge cases in repatriation from Bolivia
Criminal investigation or suspicious death
Where the death is subject to a criminal investigation in Bolivia, local authorities will retain the body until the investigation is concluded. Neither the Embassy nor a repatriation company can override this. The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) can provide consular support but cannot intervene in another country's judicial process. The timeline in these cases is entirely dependent on the local investigation.