Repatriation from the UK to Ghana: What Families Must Prepare For

For the British-Ghanaian community, repatriation is not a rare event — it is a recurring reality that most established families will face at some point. With one of the largest and most established African diaspora communities in the UK, Ghanaian families navigate the UK-to-Ghana repatriation process regularly, and the community has developed informal networks of knowledge about what is involved.

Despite this, the financial scale of repatriation consistently catches families off guard. This guide provides a complete breakdown of costs, the step-by-step process, and the documentation required.

The UK-to-Ghana Repatriation Process: Step by Step

Step one is death registration. The death must be certified by a doctor and registered at the local register office in England, Wales, or Scotland. Certified copies of the death certificate are needed — budget for five to ten copies at GBP 80 to GBP 150 each, as they will be required by the funeral director, the Ghanaian High Commission, and authorities in Ghana.

Step two is engaging a funeral director with international repatriation experience. The funeral director takes custody of the body, arranges embalming, coordinates documentation, and manages the airline cargo booking. This is the central point of coordination for the entire process. Funeral director fees: GBP 800 to GBP 2,000.

Step three is Ghanaian High Commission documentation. The Ghanaian High Commission in London must process the necessary authorisation for human remains to enter Ghana. This involves submitting the death certificate, identity documents, and completing the Commission’s forms. Processing fees and timing vary — initiate this as early as possible to avoid delays that increase storage costs.

Step four is apostille legalisation of the UK death certificate for recognition by Ghanaian authorities. Apostille processing: GBP 150 to GBP 300.

Step five is embalming to international transport standards and coffin preparation. Embalming: GBP 500 to GBP 900. Zinc-lined coffin required by airlines for international cargo of human remains: GBP 600 to GBP 1,200.

Step six is air freight booking. Flights from Heathrow to Kotoka International Airport in Accra are operated by several airlines. Human remains travel as cargo, not as passenger baggage. Air freight cost: GBP 3,000 to GBP 5,500 depending on airline, weight, and booking timing.

Step seven is destination handling and transport. Airport handling at Kotoka: GBP 200 to GBP 400. Transport from Accra to the family’s region varies significantly — Ashanti Region families face different logistics than families in the Northern or Volta Regions.

Full Cost Summary: UK to Ghana

Death certificates: GBP 400 to GBP 1,500 (multiple copies across the process).
Mortuary storage (three weeks average): GBP 900 to GBP 2,100.
Funeral director: GBP 800 to GBP 2,000.
Apostille: GBP 150 to GBP 300.
High Commission fees: GBP 100 to GBP 400.
Embalming: GBP 500 to GBP 900.
Zinc-lined coffin: GBP 600 to GBP 1,200.
Air freight: GBP 3,000 to GBP 5,500.
Destination handling and transport: GBP 200 to GBP 600.

Total realistic range: GBP 6,650 to GBP 14,500.

The Local Funeral in Ghana

Ghanaian funerals are culturally significant events. The lying-in-state, church service, burial, and thanksgiving service each carry costs: venue hire, catering, printing, clothing, and ceremony. For a moderate-scale Ghanaian funeral: GBP 2,000 to GBP 8,000. For a prominent family: GBP 10,000 to GBP 20,000.

How Mutual Life Africa Covers UK-to-Ghana Repatriation

Mutual Life Africa’s GBP Diaspora Extended Plan at GBP 49.99 per month pays out GBP 15,000. This covers the full realistic range of UK-to-Ghana repatriation costs plus a meaningful contribution to the local Ghanaian funeral. Payouts go to MTN Mobile Money Ghana, Vodafone Cash Ghana, or any major Ghanaian commercial bank.

No medical exam. Apply at mutuallife.africa today.

What British-Ghanaian Families Should Do Before a Death Occurs

The families who handle UK-to-Ghana repatriation most effectively are not necessarily the wealthiest — they are the most prepared. Preparation means having a funeral cover policy in place before any health concern arises, knowing the steps of the process before they become urgent, and having a funeral director relationship already established.

For the practical first step: apply for Mutual Life Africa’s GBP Extended Plan at mutuallife.africa today. At GBP 49.99 per month, the financial foundation of a dignified repatriation and a proper Ghanaian funeral is already in place before any phone call arrives. The waiting period starts immediately. The preparation starts today.

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