UK on
verge of deal with EU to let Britons use European passport e-gates
Exclusive:
Agreement could cut airport queues, caused by need to have passports stamped
after Brexit
Eleni Courea
and Lisa O'Carroll
Sat 17 May
2025 22.30 BST
British
holidaymakers could face shorter airport queues this summer with negotiators on
the verge of striking an agreement for UK passport holders to use e-gates
across Europe.
Downing
Street said on Saturday that it was poised to strike a deal with the EU that
would improve things for British families facing “queues on holiday”.
The Guardian
understands officials on both sides are in talks about allowing British
travellers to use e-gates reserved for people from the EU or European Economic
Area when arriving at airports in Europe, ending the current two-queue system.
The issue
forms part of negotiations ahead of the highly anticipated UK-EU summit in
London on Monday, which will focus on a security and defence pact.
Since
Brexit, British travellers have had to queue to have their passports stamped
when arriving in many European airports, with e-gates reserved for EU passport
holders and members of the European Economic Area.
Some
airports in Portugal and Spain have introduced e-gates that accept British
passports, though the Foreign Office still encourages UK travellers to get
their passports stamped.
Rishi
Sunak’s government sought an agreement to open e-gates across the EU to British
passport holders, but this never materialised. Travellers from the EU have
continued to have access to UK e-gates, despite Brexit, without needing to have
their passports stamped or checked by a border officer.
An agreement
enabling British travellers to use European e-gates could reduce airport
queueing times considerably, particularly if it lifts the requirement for
passport stamping.
The EU is
preparing to set up a new entry and exit system that will apply to British
travellers in October. The scheme, which was meant to be launched in 2022 but
has been delayed several times, would replace passport stamping but would
require British travellers to provide biometric data at the border, such as
fingerprints and face scans. A separate EU travel authorisation system is also
being developed, and is expected to be operational before the end of the year.
The UK has
already set up its own travel authorisation scheme for EU and other
international travellers which came into force last month. Modelled on the
system used by the US, it costs £16 and allows multiple visits to the UK of up
to six months over a two-year period.
Several
other mobility-related issues are also under discussion by British and European
negotiators ahead of Monday’s summit.
The UK is
eager to make it easier for musicians and other performing artists to tour in
Europe without undergoing an onerous visa process. The EU has long pursued a
youth mobility deal to allow young Europeans to temporarily live and work in
the UK, and vice versa.
The prime
minister indicated this weekend that he was open to a youth mobility agreement.
Ministers want any such scheme to be time-limited and capped, however, because
of Labour’s manifesto commitment to reduce net migration.
Visa
barriers for touring artists are unlikely to be lifted on Monday but are
expected to be among the issues the two sides agree to explore further.
The two
sides are also in talks over a veterinary agreement to reduce barriers for the
farming and food industries. Downing Street said the deal would bring
improvements for UK producers and supermarkets.
It will be
the third trade deal announced by the government in a fortnight, after the
conclusion of a multibillion-pound free trade agreement with India and a deal
to lift steel and aluminium tariffs and reduce car tariffs with the US.
Speaking
ahead of the EU summit, Starmer said an agreement with Brussels was “another
step forward” for the UK and would “be good for our jobs, good for our bills
and good for our borders”.
“In this
time of great uncertainty and volatility, the UK will not respond by turning
inwards, but by proudly taking our place on the world stage – strengthening our
alliances and closing deals in the interests of British people,” he said.
Rachel
Reeves, the chancellor, told the Guardian this weekend that the deal would be a
“step towards” a deeper and ongoing partnership with Europe. “I am ambitious
for our future. This isn’t a one-off. There will be things that we achieve,
some concrete outcomes on Monday, but there will also be a step towards where
we want to go next,” she said.
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