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Key definition
Extradition definition

What does Extradition mean? Extradition is the cross‑border process by which a person in one state is arrested and surrendered to another state to be prosecuted or to serve a sentence for conduct within the requesting state’s jurisdiction. In practice it is governed by statute and international agreements: in the UK, principally the Extradition Act 2003 (including arrangements now operating with EU member states under the UK–EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement), and in Ireland the Extradition Act 1965 and, for intra‑EU cases, the European Arrest Warrant Act 2003. Proceedings are partly judicial and partly executive. Courts test identity, whether the conduct amounts to...

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Extradition in the UK: Extradition Act 2003 framework, EU surrender post-Brexit, Part 1/2 procedures, provisional arrest, red notices and human rights

Practice notes
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What is Extradition?

Extradition is the formal legal mechanism by which one Territory requests another to hand over a person sought so they can face trial or complete a sentence imposed by the requesting territory.

The UK’s statutory framework

The UK’s extradition system is governed by the Extradition Act 2003 (EA 2003). The UK maintains extradition arrangements, under multilateral conventions and bilateral extradition treaties, with more than 120 territories. Under the EA 2003, these territories are designated as either Part 1 or Part 2.

Part 1 territories are listed in the Extradition Act 2003 (Designation of Part 1 Territories) Order 2003, SI 2003/3333, as amended. See further below: Part 1 territories. Notwithstanding the UK’s departure from the EU, this list continues to include the remaining 27 EU Member States.

Part 2 territories are identified in the Extradition Act 2003 (Designation of Part 2 Territories) Order 2003, SI 2003/3334, as amended. See further below: Part 2 territories. Territories not appearing as either Part 1 or Part 2 may still submit an extradition request to the UK, and any accepted request will be processed as if it were...

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Charlotte Evans
Charlotte Evans

Charlotte is an experienced Associate, advising individual and corporate clients across a broad range of practice areas, including criminal fraud, Serious Fraud Office (SFO) investigations, private prosecutions, INTERPOL red notice, extradition and mutual legal assistance matters, internal investigations, bribery offences, sanctions and general crime.Charlotte often advises clients facing investigation/action brought by UK and overseas governments or enforcement agencies, including the UK’s SFO, Financial Conduct Authority, HM Revenue and Customs and the US Department of Justice (DOJ). She also has experience of advising on internal investigations, particularly where fraud or corruption are suspected and there is a risk of civil, criminal, or regulatory proceedings, as well as reputational/commercial risk.Her private prosecution experience includes assisting the team that successfully prosecuted two individuals on behalf of Inkorporate Ltd, who were found guilty of fraud and money laundering offences in May 2022 following a lengthy...

Web page updated on 21/05/2026

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