Funeral repatriation route guide

Repatriation from France to Canada

For British families. 24/7 support, every step handled.

2-4 weeks Typical timeline
Paris British Embassy
3-5 days Documentation time

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Key facts

Repatriation from France to Canada: what to expect

France and Canada maintain a close bilateral relationship rooted in the Francophone heritage of Quebec and the Acadian regions. France and Quebec have a formal cultural and diplomatic framework, and there is an active migration corridor between France and francophone Canada. The Canadian Embassy in Paris is fully operational. When a person with Canadian family connections dies in France, the death is registered with the local mairie (town hall). The acte de deces is in French, which is one of Canada's two official languages, simplifying reception in Quebec. Canada joined the Hague Apostille Convention, in force November 2024; France is also a Hague member. (FCDO Travel Advice: Canada, 2025; Service Canada, 2025.)

  • Key document: acte de deces (death certificate) (in French)
  • Documentation takes 3-5 days. Appoint a specialist on day one.
  • British Embassy or High Commission in Paris registers the death and advises. They cannot fund repatriation.
  • Death must be registered with the local mairie (town hall) civil registry promptly.
  • Canada Embassy in Paris can advise on documentation. They cannot fund repatriation.
Typical timeline2-4 weeks
Fastest case10-14 days
Complex case4-8 weeks

In Canada

When the body arrives in Canada

The Canadian funeral director takes custody at Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ), Vancouver International Airport (YVR), Montreal Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport (YUL), or another major airport cargo terminal, depending on the family's destination. Death registration in Canada is handled by the provincial civil registration authority in the province where the death is registered: for example, Service Ontario in Ontario, or the Quebec Directeur de l'etat civil. Foreign death certificates must be apostilled and, where not in English or French, accompanied by a certified translation. Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) clearance is required for all imported human remains. Provincial regulations for burial and cremation vary and are enforced by the receiving funeral director. Canada joined the Hague Apostille Convention; it entered into force in November 2024. An embalming certificate and hermetically sealed coffin are required for all air imports. (Service Canada, Provincial civil registration offices, 2025; Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), 2025; FCDO Travel Advice: Canada, 2025.)

Consular support

The Canadian High Commission or Embassy in Paris can advise on documentation requirements for repatriation to Canada. Canada joined the Hague Apostille Convention, in force November 2024. The High Commission cannot pay for or arrange repatriation. Contact the relevant provincial civil registration authority for civil registration queries.

The process

What happens after a death in France

Call 17 for police, 15 for ambulance, or 112 for the EU emergency number. Death is certified by a physician. The acte de deces is registered with the local mairie (town hall). The Procureur de la Republique (public prosecutor) takes jurisdiction for violent or unexplained deaths. France is an EU member and Hague Apostille Convention member.

Step by step

Timeline: France to Canada

1

Immediate steps after death

Day of death. Call +44 (0)20 7008 5000 (FCDO) or 17 (police) / 15 (ambulance) / 112 (EU emergency) for local emergency services.

Family or travel insurer

2

Death registered. Acte de deces (death certificate) obtained.

Death must be registered with the local mairie (town hall) civil registry. Violent or unexplained deaths (Procureur de la Republique) may delay this step.

Local funeral director and registry

3

Canada Embassy in Paris notified

Simultaneous with Step 1. Embassy provides a list of local funeral directors.

Family or repatriation specialist

4

Embalming and preparation.

After body released by authorities.

Licensed local funeral director

5

All export documentation and permits obtained.

Allow 3-5 days. Cannot begin until death certificate issued.

Local funeral director and authorities

6

Air cargo to Canada

Once all documentation complete.

Repatriation specialist and airline cargo

7

Canada funeral director takes custody. Receiving funeral director coordinates with local authorities.

Within 24 hours of arrival.

Receiving funeral director

Common questions

FAQs: repatriation from France to Canada

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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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