List of diplomatic missions in Bosnia and Herzegovina

This article lists diplomatic missions resident in Bosnia and Herzegovina. At present, the capital city of Sarajevo hosts 45 embassies. Several other countries have non-resident embassies accredited from other regional capitals, such as Vienna and Budapest, for diplomatic and consular purposes.[1][2]


Map of diplomatic missions in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Embassies in Sarajevo

Country Mission type Photo
 Algeria[3]Embassy-
 AustriaEmbassy -
 AzerbaijanEmbassy -
 BelgiumDiplomatic Office -
 BrazilEmbassy -
 BulgariaEmbassy-
 ChinaEmbassy-
 CroatiaEmbassy -
 Czech RepublicEmbassy -
 EgyptEmbassy -
 FranceEmbassy -
 GermanyEmbassy -
 GreeceEmbassy -
 Holy SeeApostolic Nunciature -
 HungaryEmbassy -
 IndonesiaEmbassy -
 IranEmbassy -
 ItalyEmbassy -
 JapanEmbassy -
 KuwaitEmbassy-
 LibyaEmbassy -
 MalaysiaEmbassy -
 MontenegroEmbassy-
 NetherlandsEmbassy -
 North MacedoniaEmbassy -
 NorwayEmbassy -
 PakistanEmbassy -
 PalestineEmbassy -
 PolandEmbassy -
 QatarEmbassy-
 RomaniaEmbassy -
 RussiaEmbassy -
 San MarinoEmbassy -
 Saudi ArabiaEmbassy-
 SerbiaEmbassy -
 SlovakiaEmbassy -
 SloveniaEmbassy -
 Sovereign Military Order of MaltaEmbassy-
 SpainEmbassy -
 SwedenEmbassy -
  SwitzerlandEmbassy -
 TurkeyEmbassy -
 UkraineEmbassy Branch Office-
 United KingdomEmbassy -
 United StatesEmbassy -

Missions in Sarajevo

Mission Mission type Photo
 European UnionDelegation -
 United NationsMission -

Embassy Branch Offices in other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Country Mission type City Photo
 United KingdomEmbassy Branch OfficeBanja Luka-
 United StatesEmbassy Branch OfficeBanja Luka-
 United StatesEmbassy Branch OfficeMostar-

Consular missions in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Country Mission type City Photo
 CroatiaConsulate-GeneralBanja Luka -
 CroatiaConsulate-GeneralLivno-
 CroatiaConsulate-GeneralMostar -
 CroatiaConsulateOrašje-
 CroatiaConsulate-GeneralTuzla -
 CroatiaConsulateVitez-
 SerbiaConsulate-GeneralBanja Luka -
 SerbiaConsulate-GeneralMostar -
 SloveniaConsular OfficeBanja Luka-
 TurkeyConsulate-GeneralBanja Luka-
 TurkeyConsulate-GeneralMostar -

Non-resident embassies accredited to Bosnia and Herzegovina

Resident in Budapest unless otherwise noted

Closed missions

Host city Sending country Mission level Year closed Ref.
Sarajevo  Albania Embassy 2014 [8][1]
 Belgium Embassy 2003 [1]
 Canada Embassy 2010 [1][9]
 Denmark Embassy 2011 [1]
 Portugal Embassy 2012 [1][10]
Banja Luka  France Liaison office 2010 [1]
 Germany Liaison office 2010 [1]

See also

References

  1. "In Bosnia and Herzegovina, embassies have been closed by five countries so far" (in Serbo-Croatian). 072info. 1 August 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  2. "Diplomatic and Consular Corps and International Organizations in Bosnia and Herzegovina" (PDF). Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina. February 2023. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  3. "Džaferović receives the credentials of the newly appointed ambassadors of Angola and Algeria". Retrieved 2023-03-03.
  4. "Diplomatic And Consular Corps And International Organizations In Bosnia And Herzegovina" (PDF). Department of Diplomatic Protocol, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina. July 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  5. Phontham Visapra (2 November 2022). "Lao Embassy in Hungary to Start Operations in November". The Laotian Times. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  6. "Accreditation". Embassy of the United Republic of Tanzania in Italy. 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  7. "Посольство України в Республіці Хорватія - Новини". www.mfa.gov.ua. Archived from the original on 10 December 2008. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  8. "Albania closes its embassies in Lisbon, New Delhi, Sarajevo and Kuala Lumpur". Independent Balkan News Agency. 21 July 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  9. "Canada to close embassies in Cambodia, Bosnia-Herzegovina". CBC News. 24 April 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  10. "Portugal encerra embaixadas vice-consulados e um escritório consular" (in European Portuguese). Mundo Português. 24 November 2011. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
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