Funeral repatriation route guide

Repatriation from Norway to the Philippines

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

3-6 weeks Typical timeline
Oslo British Embassy
3-5 days Documentation time

Quick answer

Repatriation from Norway to the Philippines: what to expect

Norway has a Filipino community, with nationals working in Oslo and other Norwegian cities in healthcare, domestic services, and the offshore energy sector. The Philippine Embassy in Oslo is fully operational. When a Filipino national dies in Norway and their family wishes to repatriate remains to the Philippines, the death is registered with Folkeregisteret (the civil registration system administered by Skatteetaten). The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) requires a Report of Death (ROD) issued by the Philippine Embassy in Oslo. The dodsattest must be included in all repatriation documentation. The Philippines is not a Hague Apostille Convention member; Norwegian documents require full consular authentication through the Philippine Embassy in Oslo. (Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs, 2025; Skatteetaten, Norway, 2025.)

  • Key document: dodsattest (death certificate) (in Norwegian)
  • Documentation takes 3-5 days. Appoint a specialist on day one.
  • British Embassy or High Commission in Oslo registers the death and advises. They cannot fund repatriation.
  • Death must be registered with Folkeregisteret (the civil registration system / Skatteetaten) promptly.
  • the Philippines Embassy in Oslo can advise on documentation. They cannot fund repatriation.
Typical timeline3-6 weeks
Fastest case2-3 weeks
Complex case6-12 weeks

The process

What happens after a death in Norway

Call 112 for emergency services (or 02800 for police, 113 for ambulance). Death is certified by a physician. The dodsattest is registered with Folkeregisteret (the civil registration system, administered by the Norwegian Tax Administration / Skatteetaten). The police take jurisdiction for violent or unexplained deaths. Note that deaths occurring in Svalbard require transfer to mainland Norway before any international cargo flight can depart. Norway is a Hague Apostille Convention member.

Step by step

Timeline: Norway to the Philippines

1

Immediate steps after death

Day of death. Call +44 (0)20 7008 5000 (FCDO) or 112 (police 02800 / ambulance 113) for local emergency services.

Family or travel insurer

2

Death registered. Dodsattest (death certificate) obtained.

Death must be registered with Folkeregisteret (the civil registration system / Skatteetaten). Violent or unexplained deaths (police take jurisdiction) may delay this step.

Local funeral director and registry

3

the Philippines Embassy in Oslo 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 the Philippines

Once all documentation complete.

Repatriation specialist and airline cargo

7

the Philippines funeral director takes custody. Receiving funeral director coordinates with local authorities.

Within 24 hours of arrival.

Receiving funeral director

In the Philippines

When the body arrives in the Philippines

The Philippine funeral director takes custody at Ninoy Aquino International Airport (MNL) in Manila, Mactan-Cebu International Airport (CEB), or Francisco Bangoy International Airport (DVO) in Davao, depending on the final destination. The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) handles civil registration of deaths abroad through the Philippine Overseas Labor Office (POLO) or the relevant Philippine Embassy or Consulate. The Embassy or Consulate in the origin country must issue a Report of Death (ROD) before repatriation can proceed; the ROD is a required document. The Philippines is not a member of the Hague Apostille Convention; all foreign documents require full consular authentication through the Philippine Embassy or Consulate in the country of origin. An embalming certificate and hermetically sealed coffin are required for all air imports. Burial or cremation permit from the Local Civil Registry Office (LCRO) is required before final disposition. (Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs/PSA, 2025.)

Consular support

The Philippine Embassy or Consulate in Oslo can advise on documentation requirements and must issue a Report of Death (ROD) before repatriation can proceed. The Philippines is not a Hague Apostille Convention member; all documents require full consular authentication. The Embassy cannot pay for or arrange repatriation.

Common questions

FAQs: repatriation from Norway to the Philippines

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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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