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Brexit and landing cards
Puerto Rico visa (or visa waiver) requirements for EU citizensFilling a UK landing card for sleeping in airport for transitStrange landing interview at LGW for an EEA nationalWhat to do in case of lost landing card in UK?Are UK Landing Cards handed to passengers on WizzAir flights arriving at London Luton?Brexit passport renewal - Will I need to pay again?UK Standard visitor Visa & the brexitWhat do I need to travel to London during the scheduled Brexit transition date?EU citizens entering the UK after 29 March 2019 (policies as of 25 February 2019)How will Brexit affect flight transits through the UK/London?
As of today, both in case of a no-deal, a yes-deal, or a delayed Brexit, will EU citizens be required upon entering the UK after 29 March 2019 to fill in a landing card? If yes, how does it look like?
uk eu-citizens brexit
New contributor
add a comment |
As of today, both in case of a no-deal, a yes-deal, or a delayed Brexit, will EU citizens be required upon entering the UK after 29 March 2019 to fill in a landing card? If yes, how does it look like?
uk eu-citizens brexit
New contributor
1
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago
add a comment |
As of today, both in case of a no-deal, a yes-deal, or a delayed Brexit, will EU citizens be required upon entering the UK after 29 March 2019 to fill in a landing card? If yes, how does it look like?
uk eu-citizens brexit
New contributor
As of today, both in case of a no-deal, a yes-deal, or a delayed Brexit, will EU citizens be required upon entering the UK after 29 March 2019 to fill in a landing card? If yes, how does it look like?
uk eu-citizens brexit
uk eu-citizens brexit
New contributor
New contributor
edited 4 hours ago
Uciebila
53614
53614
New contributor
asked 5 hours ago
user92766user92766
311
311
New contributor
New contributor
1
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago
add a comment |
1
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago
1
1
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I'm afraid that this falls into the category of "we don't know at the present." If free movement persists under the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 or successor legislation, the landing cards will not be required. But the timing of the repeal of that legislation appears uncertain in the event of a no-deal departure. If there is a deal, the timing will depend on the precise details of the deal, which are as yet indeterminate. The prospect of a delay, of course, makes the already uncertain timing even less certain.
Once the EEA regulations are repealed, EU-citizen visitors are likely to be required to fill out the landing card, but the cards are also likely to be scrapped entirely (perhaps only after immigration authorities have had a chance to catch their breath in the wake of departure from the EU). In August 2017, the Home Office announced plans to stop using the cards, expecting to implement those plans by the autumn of 2017, but this never happened.
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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I'm afraid that this falls into the category of "we don't know at the present." If free movement persists under the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 or successor legislation, the landing cards will not be required. But the timing of the repeal of that legislation appears uncertain in the event of a no-deal departure. If there is a deal, the timing will depend on the precise details of the deal, which are as yet indeterminate. The prospect of a delay, of course, makes the already uncertain timing even less certain.
Once the EEA regulations are repealed, EU-citizen visitors are likely to be required to fill out the landing card, but the cards are also likely to be scrapped entirely (perhaps only after immigration authorities have had a chance to catch their breath in the wake of departure from the EU). In August 2017, the Home Office announced plans to stop using the cards, expecting to implement those plans by the autumn of 2017, but this never happened.
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm afraid that this falls into the category of "we don't know at the present." If free movement persists under the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 or successor legislation, the landing cards will not be required. But the timing of the repeal of that legislation appears uncertain in the event of a no-deal departure. If there is a deal, the timing will depend on the precise details of the deal, which are as yet indeterminate. The prospect of a delay, of course, makes the already uncertain timing even less certain.
Once the EEA regulations are repealed, EU-citizen visitors are likely to be required to fill out the landing card, but the cards are also likely to be scrapped entirely (perhaps only after immigration authorities have had a chance to catch their breath in the wake of departure from the EU). In August 2017, the Home Office announced plans to stop using the cards, expecting to implement those plans by the autumn of 2017, but this never happened.
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm afraid that this falls into the category of "we don't know at the present." If free movement persists under the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 or successor legislation, the landing cards will not be required. But the timing of the repeal of that legislation appears uncertain in the event of a no-deal departure. If there is a deal, the timing will depend on the precise details of the deal, which are as yet indeterminate. The prospect of a delay, of course, makes the already uncertain timing even less certain.
Once the EEA regulations are repealed, EU-citizen visitors are likely to be required to fill out the landing card, but the cards are also likely to be scrapped entirely (perhaps only after immigration authorities have had a chance to catch their breath in the wake of departure from the EU). In August 2017, the Home Office announced plans to stop using the cards, expecting to implement those plans by the autumn of 2017, but this never happened.
I'm afraid that this falls into the category of "we don't know at the present." If free movement persists under the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 or successor legislation, the landing cards will not be required. But the timing of the repeal of that legislation appears uncertain in the event of a no-deal departure. If there is a deal, the timing will depend on the precise details of the deal, which are as yet indeterminate. The prospect of a delay, of course, makes the already uncertain timing even less certain.
Once the EEA regulations are repealed, EU-citizen visitors are likely to be required to fill out the landing card, but the cards are also likely to be scrapped entirely (perhaps only after immigration authorities have had a chance to catch their breath in the wake of departure from the EU). In August 2017, the Home Office announced plans to stop using the cards, expecting to implement those plans by the autumn of 2017, but this never happened.
answered 4 hours ago
phoogphoog
73k12158233
73k12158233
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
add a comment |
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
In 2017, the UK Govt was looking at scrapping Landing Cards for all non-EU travelers. There is an article (on line) in the Times dated 8 Aug 1017. The plan at that time was to scrap them from Oct.'17 but there were concerns regarding border security.
– canonacer
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
@canonacer but I could find no indication that the plan was definitively abandoned because of those concerns. Rather, it appears simply to have fallen off the agenda. There's nothing to suggest that they won't bring it up again once they have time to do so in a couple of years.
– phoog
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
phoog, sorry I messed up my edit and had meant to include something along your lines of "pending" or "gone quiet".
– canonacer
2 hours ago
add a comment |
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1
Why wouldn’t it look like the one that already exists? There are lots of examples online, they seem to be pretty generic and suitable for post-Brexit use eg goo.gl/images/NYCf6c
– Traveller
5 hours ago
It's not likely. The most likely scenario is you continue going through the ePassport gates as you currently do now. The UK is even expanding the use of the gates to various non-EU nationals this year.
– Michael Hampton
55 mins ago