Americans are still not welcome to travel direct from the US to most of Europe. That’s despite the EU being the new disease epicentre – again. But there are ways–legitimate ones–of winging your way to Europe if you’re hell-bent on it. Here they are:
1. Traveling US Europe Via UK, Ireland
Flying in directly from the U.S. and other “red list” countries to most of the EU is out. But neither the UK nor Ireland are enforcing the EU travel ban. Nor are their authorities policing it.
Many Americans are not even staying over in the UK on their way to France, or elsewhere. Quarantine is not required when in transit. You still must fill out a Passenger Locator Form online before you arrive in England. Once in France, it’s easy to travel off in the Schengen zone.
Travel by plane on to the continent is far riskier–but not out of the question.
“I was surprised when an acquaintance boarded a plane in the UK and gained entrance to Spain with only a U.S. passport,” says one American in France. “I thought Spain wasn’t allowing U.S. citizens in as tourists.”
Note in the case of Ireland, Americans can fly in from “Green List countries” quarantine-free. But these do not include the US. Still you can transit as described above.
2. Traveling From The EU Schengen Zone
It is possible. According to the government tourism office, Spain is basing entry on the country you’re traveling from, not your country of origin.
“You can travel to Spain if you are travelling from the European Union, from a country in the Schengen area, or from another country which has a reciprocal agreement with Spain for accepting travellers,” it says.
All travelers must fill out a health control form 48 hours prior to travel. Then you receive a QR code to present to border officials. On arrival, everyone will undergo temperature scans and “a visual health assessment”.
Note, the UK quarantine on Spanish arrivals is not reciprocal. That said, I can’t personally vouch for the entry process being leak-proof.
French immigration officials too say they allow American passport holders to land in France from the Schengen zone.
“Once you’re in Schengen there’s no passport control internally unless a country has raised internal borders,” says Joey Pham who’s been traveling in Europe since August.
While airline staff may be strictly monitoring EU travel rights for Americans flying out of the States, those within Europe are not.
“Flight wise, airlines check your passport but it’s not their responsibility to act as border control,” Pham says. He’s taken several flights–to Italy, Hungary and elsewhere–and faced no questions about his U.S. citizenship. “They just make sure your papers are not expired.”
Many other EU members do not show the same openness. Some are even banning fellow high-risk Europeans. Greece is one country taking a hardline approach to enforcing the travel ban–and like Italy has largely avoided a second wave.
3. The 14 Day Rule: Landing In Europe From US Via Travel Corridors
Schengen member Malta has been open to U.S. citizens for months, despite the ban. If they first spend 14 days in a safe corridor country. Passenger Locator and Public Health Travel Declaration Forms must be filled out ahead of arrival.
Other countries including Italy too seem to be leaning towards the 14 day rule. Bans on third party nationals are definitely becoming more elastic, though not overtly.
Another example of this is Slovenia. According to the U.S. Embassy in Slovenia, travel by air or land border may be possible when coming from a green list country where no quarantine is required.
My inquiry to the Interior Ministry confirms this. “Though conditions for border crossings are changing daily,” it emphasises. If you are travelling from an amber country, “You will be treated as though you were coming from a country with a high risk of infection.”
The government website shows travelers coming even from red list countries such as the U.S. can travel there with 10 day quarantine on arrival.
4. Fly Into The EU From Other Low-Risk Countries
Even with air travel, some Europeans are basing the EU ban on your country of departure, not your passport. This means Americans could probably fly into France via Tunisia for example, which is on the EU’s safe list of countries.
More surprisingly, some have even flown in seamlessly to France from Turkey, which is still subject to the EU travel ban.
5. Europe Traffic Light System Should Give Green Light To Americans
There has been no update on the EU travel restrictions for weeks. Europe is up to its neck in trying to work out a whole muddle of internal travel restrictions, as Covid across the continent flares. In some cases such as France, to unprecedented proportions.
Under the planned traffic light system – approved by members last week – the EU wants testing and quarantine to prevail, rather than total bans. The system should extend to the US and others, especially now that the EU average infection rates have outstripped those in the States.
Meantime individual European countries are moving to giving higher-risk zones a green light to travel, with testing and other requirements. Still, this is the most bona fide and foolproof method to bank on. And it will save you from taking nerve-wracking risks.
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Glad to find your site, Tamara, as I’ve really appreciated your responses and posts on Facebook. Your insight and research are very valuable to us as we work towards getting to our home in France.
Thank you so much Anne! I am glad you found me too! Please reach out with any particular questions. I hope to keep up the good work informing you now here on Tamara Thiessen Travels! #staysafe!
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Tamara, I’m really grateful to have found out about you during the pandemic. I’ve been following you on your social media to get information on the possibility of traveling from the US to Europe. I really appreciate the balanced information you provide. I’m very surprised to read your fifth point above. I realize that US and European infection rates are now similar, but I assumed with Europe spiking that there would be no opening to America for some time. Do you think this will happen in the next few months?
Hi Scott, thank you so much for your interest. I am so glad you have followed me on from Forbes and I am in the midst of trying to get indexed on Google news to take this to another level. Re your question – oh my, can of worms now with the 1 month French lockdown 2, Germany ditto … I will try to look into these issues by Monday as it’s getting very complex again. I think for sure now that lockdowns are back in force in Europe, that the external borders will stay pretty firmly closed for now. The speed with which things change – well the past 3 days (well after writing the post you refer to) have put a whole new (darkish) light on this. Let me try and address this more in my next story – meantime stay safe and be in touch! Tamara https://tamarathiessen.com/travel-news/