Funeral repatriation route guide

Repatriation from Norway to Bosnia

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

2-3 weeks Typical timeline
Oslo British Embassy
5-10 days Documentation time

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If your loved one has passed away in Norway, we are here around the clock to guide you through every step of bringing them home to Bosnia.

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The process

What happens after a death in Norway

Call 112 (police) or 113 (ambulance) for emergency services. Death is registered with Folkeregisteret (Norwegian Population Register) via Skatteetaten. The official death certificate is the dodsattest. The Norwegian Police Service investigates violent, suspicious, or unexplained deaths. Norway is a Hague Apostille Convention member since 1980. The British Embassy in Oslo can assist British nationals. (FCDO Travel Advice Norway 2025; Norwegian Skatteetaten population register procedures 2025.)

Key facts

Repatriation from Norway to Bosnia: what to expect

Repatriation from Norway to Bosnia follows Norway's civil registration and export procedures. Most cases take 2-3 weeks.

  • Key document: dodsattest (death certificate from Folkeregisteret via Skatteetaten)
  • Documentation takes 5-10 days. Appoint a specialist on day one.
  • British Embassy in Oslo can advise. They cannot fund repatriation.
  • Norway is a Hague Apostille member (1980). This simplifies document authentication.
  • All Norwegian-language documentation requires certified translation where needed.
Typical timeline2-3 weeks
Fastest case7-14 days
Complex case3-6 weeks

Step by step

Timeline: Norway to Bosnia

1

Immediate steps after death. Report to local emergency services and contact a specialist at once.

Day of death. FCDO 24-hour emergency line: +44 (0)20 7008 5000.

Family or travel insurer

2

Death registered. Dodsattest (death certificate from folkeregisteret via skatteetaten) obtained from Folkeregisteret (Norwegian Population Register), administered by Skatteetaten (Tax Administration).

Registration must occur promptly. The Norwegian Police Service investigates violent or suspicious deaths. Body release requires police clearance before repatriation can proceed.

Local funeral director and civil registry

3

Embassy or consulate notified. Notify the Embassy of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Norway. Hague Apostille applies (2008).

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

Family or repatriation specialist

4

Embalming and preparation for international air transport.

After body released by authorities. IATA P650 requirements apply.

Licensed local funeral director

5

All export permits and authenticated documents obtained. The dodsattest is issued in Norwegian. Certified translation is required for non-Norwegian-speaking destinations.

Allow 5-10 days. Cannot begin until death certificate issued.

Local funeral director and authorities

6

Air cargo from Oslo Gardermoen (OSL), Bergen (BGO), or Stavanger (SVG) to Sarajevo International Airport Butmir (SJJ), Mostar Airport (OMO), or Banja Luka Airport (BNX).

Once all documentation complete.

Repatriation specialist and airline cargo

7

Funeral director in Bosnia and Herzegovina takes custody at cargo terminal. Maticna sluzba (civil registry) at local opstina notified. Hague Apostille applies (Bosnia and Herzegovina joined 2008).

Within 24-48 hours of arrival.

Receiving funeral director

Common questions

FAQs: repatriation from Norway to Bosnia

In Bosnia

When the body arrives in Bosnia

The funeral director in Bosnia and Herzegovina takes custody at the cargo terminal. Death is registered with the maticna sluzba (civil registry department) within the relevant opstina (municipality). Death certificates are issued in Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian. Bosnia and Herzegovina is a Hague Apostille Convention member since 2008, which simplifies document authentication for most Western documentation.

Consular support

Embassy of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Norway: contact the Bosnian Embassy or Consulate for documentation guidance. Hague Apostille applies (Bosnia and Herzegovina joined 2008).

We are here to help, any time of day or night

If your loved one has passed away in Norway, please do not face this alone. Our team will guide you through every step of bringing them home.

No obligation. Your details are kept strictly confidential.

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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