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Scheme charging people £10 to visit UK to be expanded from November

10 Sep 2024 3 minute read
A British Airways plane takes off from Heathrow

A scheme requiring people visiting the UK without a visa to pay £10 will be expanded to include travellers from most countries from November, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has announced.

The Conservative government introduced the electronic travel authorisation (ETA) system in November last year for people entering or transiting through the UK without legal residence rights or a visa.

ETAs, which cost £10, are currently required for nationals of Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

Closing the gap

Ms Cooper announced on Tuesday that the scheme will open up in November for all other nationals, except Europeans, and be required for entry from January 8 2025.

The programme will byeextended to European nationals in March 2025, and be a travel requirement for them from April 2 2025.

In a written statement laid before the House of Commons, Ms Cooper wrote: “Once fully rolled out, the ETA scheme will close the current gap in advance permissions and mean that for the first time, we will have a comprehensive understanding of those travelling to the UK.”

Heathrow airport blamed the ETA scheme for a 90,000 drop in transfer passenger numbers on routes included in the system since it was launched.

It described the programme as “devastating for our hub competitiveness” and urged the Government to “review” the inclusion of airside transit passengers.

Ms Cooper also announced the introduction of a visa requirement for all visitors from Jordan from 3pm on Tuesday due to breaches of visitor rules.

Jordanian nationals will no longer be able to travel to the UK with an ETA.

A four-week “transition period” will be in place for travellers who already hold an ETA and have confirmed travel bookings.

Ms Cooper wrote: “We are taking this action due to an increase in the number of Jordanian nationals travelling to the UK for purposes other than what is permitted under visitor rules since the visa requirement was lifted in February 2024.

“This has included a significant and sustained increase in asylum claims, and high rates of refusals at the border due to people travelling without the intention of visiting for a permitted purpose.”

This has “added significantly to operational pressures at the border”, Ms Cooper wrote.

She added that the decision to introduce a visa requirement was taken “solely for migration and border security reasons”, and the UK’s relationship with Jordan “remains a strong and friendly one”.


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Valerie Matthews
Valerie Matthews
3 hours ago

Nothing like making Tourists who put money into the National Pocket unwelcome whilst paying BILLIONS to accommodate Illegal Immigrants? Are they barking mad or have I got it wrong? Wales depends heavily on Tourism. They have not got a sane proposal amongst them!

hdavies15
hdavies15
2 hours ago

You got that wrong. Ms Cooper intends to charge £10 a head for anybody arriving by small boat from France. Claiming to be “European” won’t wash, allegedly.

Welsh Patriot
Welsh Patriot
49 minutes ago

“A British Airways plane takes off from Heathrow”

That 747 aircraft, which BA haven’t used for 4 years for infomation, is clearly on final approach and about to land.
Flap setting looks about 25 or 30 rear of the wings is a clue.
For take off, a 747 only uses a flap setting of 5

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