‘I was in tears’: Briton with valid passport
barred from flight over Brexit rules
Experts say it is vital to check you meet EU
requirements, or you could risk losing your holiday
Miles
Brignall
Sat 29 Apr
2023 07.00 BST
Travellers
who have not used their passport for a while were this week being urged to dig
it out and check it conforms to the post-Brexit rules for entering the EU –
because if it doesn’t, you will almost certainly be denied boarding this
summer.
Despite
previous warnings in Guardian Money and some other publicity, UK travellers
trying to enter the Schengen zone are being turned away on a daily basis by
airline staff at boarding gates – in most cases because their UK passport was
issued more than 10 years ago.
Rosi
Simpson, a teacher from Brighton, is one of the latest to be caught up in the
confusion. She says she was left “mortified and in tears” after easyJet staff
refused to allow her to board a flight to Paris to see her son, who is studying
there, because her UK passport had been issued 10 years and one day previously.
“I had no
idea of the 10-year rule,” she says. “I’d checked the expiry date, and my
passport had eight months remaining. What happened at the boarding gate was
absolutely awful. I lost the cost of the flight and the accommodation I’d
booked – I’d been so looking forward to seeing my son – all because a load of
wankers voted for Brexit. What I don’t understand is why this [rule change]
hasn’t had more publicity – an information campaign. I wasn’t the only one who
this had happened to at the airport that day,” she says.
In terms of
flights and ferries to mainland Europe, passengers will also be denied boarding
if their passport expires less than three months before their return date.
Previously, it was thought that UK travellers needed at least six months left,
although the EU has since clarified the three-month requirement.
Prior to
Brexit, UK passport holders could travel in and out of the EU as long as they
held a valid passport, even one that expired the day after their return.
The more
onerous rules, which came into effect in 2021, apply to UK passport holders
travelling to any EU country (except Ireland), plus the others in the Schengen
zone: Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Andorra, Monaco, San Marino, the Vatican
and Switzerland.
The “over
10-year” problem came about because, for many years, those renewing their
passport before the previous one expired were able to add any remaining time
left. Prior to September 2018, you could have up to nine months added to the
replacement’s 10-year length – meaning their passport could be valid for as long
as 10 years and nine months.
Passengers
may look at their passport, see that it does not expire until well after their
return, and conclude that all is well. However, they need to check the date of
issue. If the passport will be more than 10 years old on the day of entry, they
will not be allowed in.
The change
has caught out a great many passengers who were unaware of the change. Last
year, Guardian Money featured the case of Pat Cerely and her husband, Peter,
who were refused permission to board their plane to Madeira on the grounds that
Pat’s passport was not valid – even though it had another nine months
remaining.
If you have
a holiday planned this summer, check your passport now to make sure it meets
all the requirements
Jo Rhodes
of Which?
Every day,
others are falling foul of the rule – and if it happens to you, it can be a
financial disaster. Travel insurers will not pay out for a lost holiday if you
tried to travel with an invalid passport.
Jo Rhodes,
the deputy travel editor at Which?, says: “Recently, some travellers have been
caught out by EU passport rules, meaning they haven’t been able to go on
holiday as planned.
“Your
passport must have been issued in the past 10 years at the time of entering the
EU. Legally, you’re also required to have at least three months left on your
passport at the time you plan on exiting the EU. If you have a holiday planned
this summer, check your passport now to make sure it meets all the requirements
for your destination, so you don’t risk being turned away at the airport.”
She says
Which? advises travelling with at least six months’ validity “to be on the safe
side”.
She adds:
“Despite the legal requirement being three months, UK travellers are strongly
advised by the European Commission and the UK government to have no less than
six months on the end of their passports. This is because some border guards
believe that people tend to stay in the EU for longer than they say and so
they’re reluctant to grant you entry if you have less than six months.”
Countries
such as Romania, which is in Europe but outside the Schengen zone, stipulate
that UK passport holders are required to have at least six months on their
passports to enter the country. It is by no means alone.
To add
extra excitement to the story, Passport Office workers, who process
applications, are approaching the end of a five-week strike. It is thought that
up to a quarter of the agency’s 4,000 employees are not in work as normal.
However,
while the Passport Office says users should currently allow 10 weeks for their
application to be processed, most applications are being sorted out a lot more
quickly than that. The 10-week advice includes every kind of application,
including those for new passports or where the renewal requires a change of
name after a marriage or similar.
If you have
a straightforward renewal of an existing passport and your details are all the
same – name and address and so on – then people are reporting getting their
replacements in days rather than weeks.
The most
recent postings on the Passportwaitingtime.co.uk website – which tells you how
long it is likely to take to get your UK passport – suggested that simple adult
renewals were being processed in an average of 12 days, and often more quickly
than that. Adult first passport applications were typically being processed in
17 days (29 days with an interview) while one-week fast-track applications were
being dealt with in 5.7 days, it said this week.
Guardian
Money has heard similar reports. The online process is the quickest and
cheapest way to apply.
A Passport
Office spokesperson told us it “remains well positioned to deal with this
industrial action, and there is no change in our guidance … People are
receiving their passports in good time, with 99.7% of applications processed
within the published 10-week timeframe.”
The final
sting in the tail is that the passport fees all rose for the first time in five
years in February. The fee for a standard online application made from within
the UK rose from £75.50 to £82.50 for adults, and from £49 to £53.50 for
children. Postal applications went up from £85 to £93 for adults and from
£58.50 to £64 for children. If you were born on or before 2 September 1929, it
is free.
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