24/7 Emergency Legal Line · Istanbul Airports24/7 Emergency · IST & SAW
Istanbul Airport LawyerIST & SAW · 24/7 Legal Desk
Home / Guides / "What the British Embassy Can Do in Türkiye"
UK Citizens & Türkiye

"What the British Embassy Can Do in Türkiye"

An honest FCDO consular-assistance guide for British nationals: what the British Embassy in Ankara and Consulate General in Istanbul can and cannot do if you are detained in Türkiye.


If you are a British national detained or held at Istanbul Airport (IST), at Sabiha Gökçen (SAW), or anywhere in Türkiye, one of your first instincts is often to call the British Embassy or Consulate. That instinct is right — but it helps to know, honestly, what they can and cannot do. In short: the British Consulate General in Istanbul and the British Embassy in Ankara, working under the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (the FCDO), can be notified, can visit you, can check on your welfare, and can give you a list of English-speaking local lawyers — but they cannot act as your lawyer, get you released, or override Turkish law. This guide sets out the realistic picture so you use consular help well and put the right things in place alongside it.

This article is general information about Turkish law and procedure, not legal advice. Rules and government practice change, and every case turns on its own facts. Do not rely on it for your situation — speak to a lawyer. Nothing here implies that anyone has done anything wrong.

Where is British consular help located in Türkiye?

The United Kingdom maintains a diplomatic presence in Türkiye through the British Embassy in Ankara, the capital, and the British Consulate General in Istanbul. For most travellers who run into trouble at Istanbul Airport or Sabiha Gökçen, the Consulate General in Istanbul is the nearer post, though consular policy for British nationals across Türkiye is run centrally by the FCDO.

Which post handles your matter usually depends on where you are held. What matters most in the first hours is not which building you reach, but that the consulate is notified that a British national is being held — because notification is what opens the door to everything else the consulate can do. A local lawyer can help make sure that notification actually happens, rather than assuming it will.

Türkiye is one of the most popular destinations for British travellers, and British nationals are among the largest groups of foreign visitors to the country, so consular staff deal with a steady stream of British cases. Even so, contact details for British posts and the FCDO's emergency line change over time, so always confirm the current numbers directly through official UK government channels rather than relying on an old note or a third-hand number.

What is your right to consular access under the Vienna Convention?

As a British national detained abroad, you have a right, under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963), to have your consulate notified and to communicate with it. This is an international framework that both the United Kingdom and Türkiye recognise.

In plain terms, Article 36 of that Convention means that if you are arrested or detained, you can ask the authorities to inform the British consulate, and you have the right to communicate with consular officers. It is a protective right — its whole purpose is to make sure a foreign national does not simply disappear into an unfamiliar system with no one on the outside aware. If you are held, it is entirely reasonable to say clearly that you are a British national and that you wish your consulate to be notified.

Exactly how and when notification happens in practice can vary, and the precise procedural details are the kind of thing worth confirming for your specific situation. The core point is stable: as a British national, asking for the consulate to be told where you are is your right, not a favour. Our guide on whether family or the consulate can visit someone detained in Türkiye explains how that contact typically unfolds.

Stopped at the airport right now?Don’t sign anything before you speak to a lawyer — message us, day or night.

What can the British consulate actually do for you?

Quite a lot, within a defined welfare-and-contact role. The FCDO's consular service exists to look after British nationals abroad — but as a source of support and information, not as a legal representative.

In appropriate cases, a British consular officer can generally:

  • Be notified that you are detained and confirm your whereabouts and welfare.
  • Visit you where you are held and check on your treatment and conditions.
  • Provide a list of English-speaking local lawyers so you can choose your own lawyer.
  • Contact your family in the UK on your behalf and relay messages, so people who care about you know what is happening.
  • Monitor your welfare over time, including in detention, and raise concerns about conditions or treatment through appropriate channels.
  • Help with transferring funds from family in the United Kingdom in some situations, following the FCDO's own procedures.
  • Provide general information about the local process so you are not entirely in the dark.

For many British nationals and their families, simply knowing that a consular officer is aware, has looked in on them, and has passed word home is a genuine relief. It is worth involving the consulate, and worth doing so early. If you have been apprehended on a warrant, our page on arrest at the airport explains how that stage typically works and where consular contact fits.

What can the British consulate not do?

This is the part British nationals most often misjudge — and getting it wrong can cost precious time. It is just as important to be clear about the limits, so you do not wait on help that is not coming.

A British consulate, under FCDO policy, generally cannot:

  • Act as your lawyer or represent you in a Turkish court.
  • Give you legal advice about your case or Turkish law.
  • Get you released, drop charges, or intervene in the Turkish legal process to change the outcome.
  • Override Turkish law or secure special treatment that the law does not give to others.
  • Pay your legal fees, fines, medical bills, or any other costs, or post security for you.
  • Investigate your case or gather evidence on your behalf.
  • Guarantee any result — no consular officer can promise how a matter will end.

None of this is a failing on the FCDO's part; it is simply the boundary of the consular role. Türkiye is a sovereign country, and its authorities apply Turkish law to events on Turkish soil, British national or not. The consulate looks after your welfare and your line of contact home; the legal case itself has to be handled by someone who can actually act on it inside the Turkish system.

Why do you still need a Turkish lawyer alongside consular help?

Because consular assistance and legal representation are two different jobs, and only one of them moves your case forward. The consulate can check that you are safe and treated properly; a local lawyer can examine the legal basis for your detention and act on it where there are grounds.

The list of lawyers a consulate provides is exactly that — a starting point for you to instruct your own lawyer. A Turkish lawyer can gain access to you, make sure you understand your right to stay silent and not to sign anything you do not understand, look at why you are being held, and challenge it where the facts and the law provide a basis. Depending on what you are facing, that could involve a refusal of entry, administrative detention, or a matter that begins in police custody (gözaltı), each of which runs on its own rules and, often, its own short clock.

This is why we say the two work best side by side. Lean on the consulate for welfare and contact; instruct a lawyer for the legal work. Relying on the consulate alone to fix a legal problem usually leaves the most important task undone. If you are a British national detained at Istanbul Airport, that early legal contact is often what matters most.

What if you are a dual British–Turkish citizen?

Then the consular picture changes in an important way. In Türkiye, a person who holds both British and Turkish citizenship is generally treated as a Turkish citizen, and Turkish law governs their situation.

The practical consequence is that a country generally does not extend full consular protection to someone in the country of their other nationality. So if you are a dual British–Turkish national held in Türkiye, the access and assistance the FCDO can offer may be more limited than it would be for a British national who is not also Turkish. Turkish authorities may deal with you first and foremost as one of their own nationals — and ideally you would enter and leave on your Turkish passport or identity card. On top of that, dual nationals can face issues that are entirely Turkish in nature — an old wanted record or name match surfacing at passport control, an unresolved case, or, for men, a military-service obligation whose current rules on age and exemption are best checked rather than assumed.

If you carry both passports, it is genuinely worth understanding this before you travel. Our dedicated guide for dual British–Turkish citizens at Istanbul Airport goes into these triggers in more depth, and a lawyer can help you understand how your dual status affects both consular access and the legal options open to you.

How should you use consular help and legal help together?

Treat them as a team with clear roles. Ask for the consulate to be notified and let it do its welfare-and-contact work; instruct a Turkish lawyer to do the legal work; and let the two run in parallel rather than waiting for one before starting the other.

A sensible sequence, if you are held, is roughly this: say clearly that you are a British national and want your consulate informed; be careful about signing or agreeing to anything you do not fully understand; and get a lawyer involved as early as you can, because the opening hours often shape what follows. A lawyer can also liaise sensibly with the consulate so welfare support and the legal case reinforce each other instead of working at cross purposes. Whatever happens, no honest lawyer and no consular officer can promise a particular outcome — what a lawyer can commit to is to protect your rights and act where the law allows. For the wider picture, our overview for British nationals needing legal help at Istanbul Airport ties these threads together.

Frequently asked questions

Will the British consulate be told automatically if I'm detained?

Notification is your right under the Vienna Convention, but it is safest to ask for it plainly rather than assume it happens on its own. State clearly that you are a British national and that you want your consulate informed. A lawyer can also help confirm that the consulate has actually been notified of where you are.

Can the British Embassy get me out of detention in Türkiye?

No. The FCDO cannot secure your release, drop charges, or change the legal outcome — Turkish authorities apply Turkish law. The consulate can check on your welfare and give you a list of English-speaking lawyers, but the work of challenging your detention has to be done by a lawyer acting within the Turkish system.

Does the consulate provide a lawyer for me?

Not exactly. The consulate can give you a list of English-speaking local lawyers to choose from, but it does not represent you, pay for a lawyer, or supervise the legal work. You instruct and work with your own Turkish lawyer directly. Think of the consulate's list as a starting point, not a substitute for legal representation.

I'm a dual British–Turkish citizen — can the FCDO still help me?

It can offer welfare contact, but its help may be more limited. Türkiye generally treats dual nationals as Turkish citizens, so full consular protection may not apply while you are in Türkiye. Understanding this before you travel is wise; a lawyer can explain how your dual status affects both consular access and your options.

Can the consulate pay my legal fees or a fine?

No. A British consulate does not pay legal fees, fines, medical bills, or other costs, and does not post security. In some situations it can help arrange a transfer of funds sent by your family in the United Kingdom, following the FCDO's own procedures, but the money itself comes from your own resources, not the government.

Should I wait for the consulate before contacting a lawyer?

No — the two can and should run in parallel. Waiting on consular help before getting legal advice can cost time you may not have, especially in the early stages. Involve the consulate for welfare and contact, and instruct a lawyer for the legal case at the same time.

The British Embassy in Ankara and Consulate General in Istanbul can be a real source of support — notification, welfare visits, a list of English-speaking lawyers, contact with your family — but they cannot act as your lawyer, get you released, or override Turkish law, and their help may be narrower for dual nationals. If you are a British national facing a problem in Türkiye and want to understand how consular help and legal help fit together, guidance can begin by phone or WhatsApp on +90 850 242 40 43. You can also read our overview for British nationals needing legal help at Istanbul Airport or our page on detention at the airport.

Av. Onur Çalışıcı, İstanbul Barosu attorney
Av. Onur ÇalışıcıFounding partner · İstanbul Barosu, Sicil No. 83426LinkedIn
Av. Oruç Aygün, İstanbul Barosu attorney
Av. Oruç AygünFounding partner · İstanbul Barosu, Sicil No. 83427LinkedIn

This page is general information about Turkish law and procedure — not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship. Laws and practice change and every case turns on its own facts, so please do not rely on it for your situation; speak with a lawyer first.

We're ready now

Speak with a lawyer

One call or message is all it takes. We answer 24 hours a day, every day of the year — for IST and Sabiha Gökçen.

Call nowWhatsApp