Coronavirus: COVID-19

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, medical schools have been unable to accept body donations. Medical schools are now looking to gradually resume donations services. However, there may be limitations for some time and donors should ensure they have alternative funeral plans.

Please contact your local medical school for further advice and guidance. If you are unable to get through to speak with your medical school, please check back with them at a later date.



Donating your body to a medical school is a valuable gift - your donation will become an important resource for training healthcare professionals or for research.

The Human Tissue Authority (HTA) does not collect or receive bodies or other human materials, but we license and inspect the organisations that do.

Find a licensed medical school

Our role is to make sure that these organisations remove, store, and use brains, bodies and tissues in an appropriate, respectful and well-managed way, and that the wishes of individual patients and their families are respected.

The HTA’s regulation helps ensure that tissue is stored to high standards, to be of most use to healthcare training and research.

We know that more people are willing to donate in the knowledge there is an effective regulator that monitors and inspects organisations against certain standards.

Body donations are highly valued by staff and students at medical schools. A donated body can be used for a number of purposes, which may include:

Anatomical examination – teaching students or healthcare professionals about the structure and function of the human body.

Research – scientific studies which to improve the understanding of the human body.

Education and training – training healthcare professionals on surgical techniques.

How to donate your body

Anyone can decide to donate their body, and medical schools welcome the offer of a donation. If you are interested in donating your body, you will need to contact a medical school for further information and a consent form. For information about how to contact your local medical school, enter your postcode into our search facility, email us or call us on 020 7269 1900.

Find a licensed medical school

Under the Human Tissue Act 2004, written and witnessed consent for anatomical examination must be given prior to death. Consent cannot be given by anyone else after your death. A consent form can be obtained from your local medical school and a copy should be kept with your Will. You should also inform your family, close friends, and GP that you wish to donate your body.

Medical schools which accept donated bodies will normally only accept donations from within their local area due to the transport costs involved. Offers of body donation from outside the area may be accepted on the condition that the donor’s estate bears the cost of transporting the body. Full details can be obtained directly from the medical schools.

Do medical schools accept all bodies?

There are various reasons why medical schools may decline the offer of a donation; they can give you more information about this when you contact them. For example, certain medical conditions may lead to the offer being declined. If a post-mortem examination (sometimes referred to as an ‘autopsy’) is needed, this may also mean that a medical school declines the offer of a body donation.

Medical schools might not be able to accept donated bodies during holiday periods, such as Christmas. Donors should ensure that they have an alternative funeral plan should their body donation not be accepted.

It is possible to donate brain tissue up to 48 hours after death so if body donation is not possible, brain donation may be an alternative option.

If body donation for ‘anatomical examination’ is not possible, you may be able to donate your body for other types of training.

For example, the National Repository Centre, based in Nottingham, was established to support members of the public who wish to donate their bodies for medical education or training. In common with medical schools, they have a body donation scheme that allows potential donors to register with them before they die.

Donating your body, organs and tissue

Despite being separate donation systems, it is possible for a person to be registered as an organ and tissue donor, and to have registered their wish to donate their body to a medical school.

Will body donation be covered under the opt-out systems of organ and tissue donation in England and Wales?



England and Wales both operate an ‘opt-out’ system of organ and tissue donation otherwise known as deemed consent. This means that unless a person has registered or expressed a decision not to donate their organs and tissue after their death, they will be regarded as having no objection to donating their organs and tissues after their death. This applies unless the person is in an excluded group.

Body donation is not be affected by the ‘opt-out’ systems, this only applies to organ and tissue donation for transplantation after death.



Body donation requires written, witnessed consent from the individual before they die. It cannot be agreed by a person’s friends or family after their death.



If I want to become an organ donor, can I also become a body donor?



Typically, medical schools will require a complete body, and will usually decline a body donation if the person has undergone surgery to remove organs or tissues for transplantation. If you have any questions about this process, please speak to your local medical school. If you would like to register for both organ and tissue donation and body donation, the HTA recommends that you ensure that those closest to you are aware of your wishes.

Further information on organ and tissue donation can be found on the NHS Blood and Transplant website.

If I donate my body, will there be a funeral or memorial service?

Medical schools will usually arrange for donated bodies to be cremated, unless the family requests the return of the body for a private burial or cremation. Medical schools may also hold a committal, memorial or thanksgiving services. Further information on local arrangements can be obtained directly from the medical school.

Are there any costs or payments involved?

You will not receive any payment for donating your body. Some medical schools may request that the donor’s estate contribute to the cost of transporting the body, particularly if the donation falls outside of the medical school’s local area. Full details can be obtained directly from the medical school.

Body donation in Scotland

The HTA has no role in regulating anatomy teaching in Scotland. If you live in Scotland and wish to donate your body, you can find further information on the Scottish Government website.

You will need to ensure that you discuss your wishes with your next of kin, include your wishes in your Will, and contact a university that has an anatomy department. There are five universities in Scotland with anatomy departments which receive bodies donated for anatomical examination, and their details can be found on the ‘University Contact Details’ page when you go to the above website:

• Aberdeen

• Dundee

• Edinburgh

• Glasgow

• St Andrews

Body donation in the Isle of Man or Channel Islands

The Isle of Man and Channel Islands have no body donation process of their own. It might be possible for a medical school on the UK mainland to accept a body donation from the Isle of Man or Channel Islands, as long as the requirements of the Human Tissue Act 2004 are met.

If you live in in the Isle of Man or Channel Islands and are considering body donation, you may need to make financial arrangements with a local funeral director in relation to the transportation of your body to the medical school of your choice. To enquire about whether this is possible, please contact the medical school.

Can I donate my body from abroad?

Body donations are required for training and education worldwide so you may wish to consider donating your body in your current country of residence. Where ‘anatomical examination’ is concerned, the Human Tissue Act 2004 (the ‘HT Act’) does not apply in areas outside England, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, the HT Act does allow ‘imported’ bodies and other human material to be stored and used for anatomical examination in England, Wales or Northern Ireland.

Although imported bodies and material are exempt from the HT Act’s requirements for consent, death certification and registration, a medical school might ask potential donors to follow their usual consent procedures before a donation may be accepted.

It is possible that an anatomy establishment might not accept a donation from someone who has died abroad.

Body donor cards

We currently send body donor cards with our body and brain donation information pack to members of the public who want to donate their body. We also give these to anyone who specifically requests one.



After you have registered with your local medical school and signed a consent form, a body donor card works in the same way as an organ donor card. It represents your decision and wish to become a body donor, and can be carried with you in your purse or wallet.

You are also able to include the contact details of the medical school you have registered with; this will make it easier for your family to contact the right medical school and make suitable arrangements as soon as possible.

Please note that these body donor cards do not replace the existing consent requirements - anyone wishing to become a body donor must still register with their local medical school and sign a consent form first.

It also does not guarantee that the medical school will be able to accept the body.

If you would like us to post you a copy of our body donor card, please email us at enquiries@hta.gov.uk.

Further information

Further information is available in our FAQs. You can also download a body and brain donation information pack (PDF), which is a printable version of the information held on this website.

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