Funeral repatriation route guide
Repatriation from Russia to Germany
For British families. 24/7 support, every step handled.
Quick answer
Repatriation from Russia to Germany: what to expect
Russian nationals form a significant community in Germany. This corridor handles cases where a Germany-based Russian has a family member die in Russia and needs remains brought to Germany. Note that diplomatic relations have been significantly affected since 2022.
- Key document: Svidetelstvo o smerti (Certificate of Death) from ZAGS (civil registry), in Russian, requiring certified English translation
- FCDO advises against all travel to Russia (gov.uk, 2026)
- British Embassy Moscow operates with significantly reduced consular capacity since 2022
- No direct flights between Russia and the UK since March 2022. Cargo routes via third countries.
- Documentation takes 14-28 days in most cases
- All Russian documentation requires certified English translation
- Germany Embassy in Moscow can advise on documentation. They cannot fund repatriation.
The process
What happens after a death in Russia
Call 112 for emergency services. Death in Russia is registered with ZAGS (Zapisi Aktov Grazhdanskogo Sostoyaniya), the civil registry office, which issues the Svidetelstvo o smerti (Certificate of Death) in Russian. Certified English translation is required for all UK purposes. Where a death is violent, suspicious, or unexplained, the Sledstvenny Komitet (Investigative Committee) takes jurisdiction and a post-mortem is required before the body is released. The Direct air routes between Russia and the UK have been suspended; repatriation therefore requires routing via a third country such as Turkey, the UAE, or Georgia. This adds time and complexity. uk, 2026) provides the most current guidance on what consular assistance is available and the specific risks.
Step by step
Timeline: Russia to Germany
Contact the FCDO emergency line immediately. This is the primary channel given the reduced embassy capacity.
Day of death. Call +44 (0)20 7008 5000 (FCDO) or +49 30 5000 2000.
Family in the UK
Death registered with the local ZAGS office. Svidetelstvo o smerti obtained in Russian.
Days 1-7. Registration is generally required within 3 days under Russian law.
Local contacts and repatriation specialist
Germany Embassy in Moscow notified
Simultaneous with Step 1. Embassy advises on what assistance is currently possible.
Family or repatriation specialist
Post-mortem completed if required by Sledstvenny Komitet. Body released.
Variable: add 1-4 weeks if investigation and post-mortem required.
Sledstvenny Komitet and medical authorities
Embalming and preparation. Certified English translations of all documents arranged.
After body is released. Allow 14-28 days for full document set including translations.
Local funeral director and repatriation specialist
Export permit obtained. Air cargo routing via third country (Turkey, UAE, or Georgia) arranged.
Once documentation is complete. Transit routing adds time.
Repatriation specialist and airline cargo
Air cargo from Russia via transit country to the United Kingdom.
Once all documentation and transit arrangements are in place.
Repatriation specialist and airline cargo teams
Germany funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal. receiving funeral director coordinates with local authorities.
Within 24 hours of arrival in the UK.
Receiving UK funeral director
In Germany
When the body arrives in Germany
The German funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal, typically Frankfurt (FRA), Munich (MUC), or Berlin (BER). A Leichenpass (body transport passport) or equivalent laissez-passer must accompany the remains. The local Gesundheitsamt (public health authority) may inspect the remains on arrival. The receiving funeral director registers the death with the local Standesamt (civil registry) if required. (German Federal Foreign Office, Auswaertiges Amt, 2025.)
Consular support
German Embassy in Moscow can advise on document requirements for repatriation to Germany. Federal Foreign Office (Auswaertiges Amt) emergency assistance: +49 30 5000 2000 (24 hours). The German Embassy cannot pay for or arrange repatriation.
Common questions
FAQs: repatriation from Russia to Germany
The current diplomatic and flight situation means timelines are longer and less predictable than before 2022. In the most favourable circumstances, 3-4 weeks is possible. Most cases take 4-8 weeks. Cases involving a post-mortem, diplomatic complications, or delays with transit routing can take 12 weeks or more.
The British Embassy in Moscow has significantly reduced staff and cannot provide the full range of consular services following diplomatic expulsions since 2022. It may be able to register the death and provide limited guidance. The FCDO 24-hour emergency line (+44 (0)20 7008 5000) is the primary point of contact and should be called immediately.
No. Direct passenger and cargo flights between Russia and the UK have been suspended since March 2022. Repatriation cargo must route via a third country, typically Turkey, the UAE, Georgia, or another country with open air routes to both Russia and the UK. This adds transit time and requires careful cargo management.
The core documents are: the ZAGS Svidetelstvo o smerti (death certificate) with certified English translation, post-mortem report where required, embalming certificate, freedom from infection certificate, export permit, and any transit country documentation. All Russian documentation requires certified English translation.
Common transit routes currently include via Istanbul (Turkey), Dubai (UAE), or Tbilisi (Georgia). The specific routing depends on cargo availability, airline operations, and the current situation at the time. Your repatriation specialist assesses the best available route and manages all bookings.
Cremation is available in Russia. However, the same restrictions on flight routes, documentation, and consular access apply to repatriation of ashes as to full body repatriation. Ashes would still need to transit via a third country. Specialist coordination is essential.
The German funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal. A Leichenpass or laissez-passer must accompany the remains. The Gesundheitsamt may inspect the remains. The death is registered with the local Standesamt. All foreign documents must carry certified German translation where required.
We are here to help, any time of day or night
If your loved one has passed away in Russia, please do not face this alone. Our team will guide you through every step of bringing them home.
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.
Sources: FCDO gov.uk · Russia repatriation guide · Frequently asked questions