The Star News

The hidden complexities of body repatriation in South Africa

Staff Reporter|Published

For millions of South African families, bringing a loved one home for burial (formally known as body repatriation) is not a choice; it is an obligation. But few understand what that process involves until they are already inside it.

According to Statistics South Africa’s 2022 mortality data, between 8 and 10 per cent of deaths in the country occur outside the deceased’s home province. In Gauteng alone, nearly 8,000 people died that year while residing in other provinces. Each of those deaths set in motion the same sequence of events: a family, gathered somewhere far away, trying to figure out how to bring someone home.

Burial in ancestral soil carries a weight in South Africa that is cultural, spiritual, and, for most families, non-negotiable. In many indigenous traditions, to be buried far from home is understood as a form of incompleteness. So, the question families face is rarely whether repatriation will happen; it is whether they are prepared for what it demands.

“Families come to us in the middle of the worst experience of their lives, and most of them have never encountered this process before,” said Yaaseen Albertyn, Executive Head of Business and Client Solutions at Metropolitan. “They assume it is like arranging a courier, and it is not. Every step has a legal requirement behind it, and if you miss one, everything stops.”

The process begins before the body can move. If the deceased passed away at home, an ambulance, doctor or nurse must be called first, not to treat anyone, but to issue a formal declaration of death. Without that document, the body cannot legally be moved. Families who contact a funeral undertaker before this step can face delays and unnecessary costs. If the death occurred in a hospital, a family member must be physically present to sign the official death notification before the body is released. This cannot be done by phone or by proxy. If the cause of death was unnatural, either an accident, a homicide or a suicide, the body goes to forensics, and the family waits without any timeline they can influence.

“Families never anticipate how dependent each step is on the one before it,” said Albertyn “You need the death certificate before you can get the burial order, and you need the burial order before the body can move. For any cross-border transport into or out of South Africa, you need an embalming certificate, a sealed coffin, and permits from both countries, and sometimes embassy involvement. People think these things can run in parallel, but they mostly cannot.”

According to funeral industry data, approximately 400 Zimbabwean bodies are repatriated from South Africa every month through the Beitbridge border crossing alone, nearly 5,000 each year, a volume that reflects just how embedded this process is in the daily reality of many people. What families often do not see is that the body may pass through several different organisations before it arrives at its destination. For example, a city funeral home handles the initial removal, while a specialist logistics company moves it, and border officials process it. A receiving funeral home at the other end then takes custody.

“There is no single hand holding all of this together unless you specifically arrange for that through your insurance provider,” added Albertyn. “When families assume the first funeral home is coordinating everything, and it is not, that is when things go wrong, and they go wrong at the worst possible time.”

The financial reality of repatriation is also more complex than most families expect. Transport costs are calculated per kilometre, typically from the point of departure to the point of arrival, but the transport charge is only one component. Body preparation, embalming, a sealed zinc-lined coffin required for long-distance and cross-border transport, documentation and permits, mortuary storage and border handling fees all carry their own costs. According to funeral industry estimates, road repatriation from South Africa to Zimbabwe averages between R12,000 and R22,000. Payment is typically required before transport can begin. Families who discover mid-process that their funeral policy does not cover repatriation, or covers only part of it, face the additional burden of raising money while they are grieving.

“While many funeral policies include a repatriation benefit, policyholders are not always clear what it covers: whether there is a distance limit, whether it applies to deaths that go through forensics, whether it extends to international transport, and whether it pays for the full cost of the process or only the vehicle. These details determine whether a policy functions as genuine protection or simply as partial coverage,” said Albertyn.

“The families who avoid surprises and drama are the ones who ask the right questions before they get into it,” added Albertyn. “Everyone else is learning while they grieve, and that is a very hard way to do it.”