Guidance
ChileWhen bereavement:someone deathdies abroad
in Chile
Information to help the friends and family of British nationals who have died in Chile.
- From:
Foreign&CommonwealthOfficeand- Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office
- Published
- 25 July 2016
- Last updated
-
283DecemberFebruary20232026 — See all updates
Documents
Details
Disclaimer
This information is not meant to be definitive, nor is it to be taken as a substitute for independent legal advice. Neither His Majesty’s Government nor its staff take any responsibility for the accuracy of the information, nor accept liability for any loss, costs, damage or expense that you might suffer as a result of relying on the information. Some of the information may not be relevant to your circumstances. The language used is intended to be general and factual and is not meant to cause offence.
This guidance includes information on:
- what to do when someone dies in Chile
- burial and cremation
- returning bodies to the UK (repatriation)
Updates to this page
Published 25 July 2016
Last updated 283 DecemberFebruary 2023
+ show2026
href="#full-history">+ show all updates
-
Sign up for emails or print this page
Details
Disclaimer
This information is not meant to be definitive, nor is it to be taken as a substitute for independent legal advice. Neither His Majesty’s Government nor its staff take any responsibility for the accuracy of the information, nor accept liability for any loss, costs, damage or expense that you might suffer as a result of relying on the information. Some of the information may not be relevant to your circumstances. The language used is intended to be general and factual and is not meant to cause offence.
This guidance includes information on:
- what to do when someone dies in Chile
- burial and cremation
- returning bodies to the UK (repatriation)
Updates to this page
Published 25 July 2016
Last updated 283 DecemberFebruary 2023
+ show2026
href="#full-history">+ show all updates
-
Sign up for emails or print this page
Details
Disclaimer
This information is not meant to be definitive, nor is it to be taken as a substitute for independent legal advice. Neither His Majesty’s Government nor its staff take any responsibility for the accuracy of the information, nor accept liability for any loss, costs, damage or expense that you might suffer as a result of relying on the information. Some of the information may not be relevant to your circumstances. The language used is intended to be general and factual and is not meant to cause offence.
This guidance includes information on:
- what to do when someone dies in Chile
- burial and cremation
- returning bodies to the UK (repatriation)
Updates to this page
Published 25 July 2016
Last updated