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Anyone flown to the UK recently
Hi all
I normally put all our Canadian passport details in the airline booking. I have done this for our upcoming trip. But should I have put the British passport details in instead because of the new UK ETA? Or is it sufficient to do as I have done.and simply. present the UK passports at check-in? (And on arrival of course!). Thank you! |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
This should help. According to their information, you do not need an ETA if you are travelling on a British passport. Just enter on your passport.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/apply-fo...horisation-eta |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Thanks for the link... but will it matter that I've put our Canadian passports in the airline booking?
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Snowy560
(Post 13303184)
Thanks for the link... but will it matter that I've put our Canadian passports in the airline booking?
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Thank you Pollyanna.
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
You can travel on one passport and enter the country on another. I applied for the ETA - which bizarrely and rather offensively requires you to pay in USD as a Canadian! - simply for the ease of being able to travel on my Canadian PP . The cost was $12.83 USD by the way.
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat
(Post 13303637)
You can travel on one passport and enter the country on another. I applied for the ETA - which bizarrely and rather offensively requires you to pay in USD as a Canadian! - simply for the ease of being able to travel on my Canadian PP . The cost was $12.83 USD by the way.
Thank you! |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Pollyana
(Post 13303226)
No. When you check in just use the British one.
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat
(Post 13303637)
You can travel on one passport and enter the country on another. I applied for the ETA - which bizarrely and rather offensively requires you to pay in USD as a Canadian! - simply for the ease of being able to travel on my Canadian PP . The cost was $12.83 USD by the way.
How does it take to actually apply and submit the application? |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by morpeth
(Post 13303679)
I have relative travelling this week from the states. Her American passport was entered online on her last trip to the USA, now airline website won't let her transfer back - so if she enters on UK passport. I am curious whether airline booking information gets transmitted to UK government. If she shows UK passport at check in will airline note discrepancy ? O thought US passport holder had to exit using US passport ? I can;t seem to get clear answers from airline or any government website. Does anyone have a link ?
For instance, coming from Australia I rarely had to enter passport details when booking, If I did then I always entered my British one, cos I prefer to use it. However I would then have to use the Aus one to go through Immigration when leaving Aus, and again when checking in for the return flight. However I would use the UK one checking in in Australia, and when entering the UK. Even if the details are passed to the UK govt, the thing they are interested in is - when you check in, and when you arrive, at either end, do you have in your possession a passport and/or visa that allows you entry to the country. Also, the airline will not know which passport you produce when you actually enter the country (either country). Thats government information, not airline. The airline only knows which passport you used to check in for the flight, and which passport you may have entered into a booking system If you think about it logically, how would people cope if they put a passport number in a booking system and then got a new/replacement passport? |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Pollyana
(Post 13303721)
There is no rule that says if you put passport info into an airline booking, then you MUST use that passport.
For instance, coming from Australia I rarely had to enter passport details when booking, If I did then I always entered my British one, cos I prefer to use it. However I would then have to use the Aus one to go through Immigration when leaving Aus, and again when checking in for the return flight. However I would use the UK one checking in in Australia, and when entering the UK. Even if the details are passed to the UK govt, the thing they are interested in is - when you check in, and when you arrive, at either end, do you have in your possession a passport and/or visa that allows you entry to the country. Also, the airline will not know which passport you produce when you actually enter the country (either country). Thats government information, not airline. The airline only knows which passport you used to check in for the flight, and which passport you may have entered into a booking system If you think about it logically, how would people cope if they put a passport number in a booking system and then got a new/replacement passport? Just seems odd to me - if airline says someone with American passport on a plane going to UK, but the that person does not pass customs. but insteads enters with UK passport I would jave thought in this computer age that would raise a question. |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
A friend sent me this:
https://uk-eta.com/understanding-the...ual-nationals/ I think the choices are either put UK PP numbers in the.airline booking or get.an ETA on the CAN.PP. |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
As the link you've posted says- just present the British passport on the other side and you are fine.
"Those who hold British passports are exempt from the ETA requirement. UK citizens can enter the UK without any additional travel authorization." You can fly on whatever passport you choose. |
Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Yes but the airline might not let you board on a Canadian PP with no ETA. That's my concern.
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Re: Anyone flown to the UK recently
Originally Posted by Pollyana
(Post 13303721)
There is no rule that says if you put passport info into an airline booking, then you MUST use that passport.
For instance, coming from Australia I rarely had to enter passport details when booking, If I did then I always entered my British one, cos I prefer to use it. However I would then have to use the Aus one to go through Immigration when leaving Aus, and again when checking in for the return flight. However I would use the UK one checking in in Australia, and when entering the UK. Even if the details are passed to the UK govt, the thing they are interested in is - when you check in, and when you arrive, at either end, do you have in your possession a passport and/or visa that allows you entry to the country. Also, the airline will not know which passport you produce when you actually enter the country (either country). Thats government information, not airline. The airline only knows which passport you used to check in for the flight, and which passport you may have entered into a booking system If you think about it logically, how would people cope if they put a passport number in a booking system and then got a new/replacement passport? |
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