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Andy Eames

Travelling to the UK in 2025? You need the new ETA 72 hours before you fly...


New Zealanders travelling to London to see Big Ben, or maybe just changing planes en route to Cairo, will soon need to register online with the British Government before they start their journey.

 

From January 8, all visa-exempt travellers landing at an airport in the United Kingdom with non-European passports or who are not British and Irish citizens will need an “electronic travel authorisation,” or ETA, before they depart.

 

The application, which opened for New Zealanders on Wednesday, costs £10, or about $21. It can be done online or via an app. Once the ETA is approved, it is valid for two years and good for multiple entries of up to six months in Britain.

 

The ETA programme expands to all passports, including European ones, on April 2. Citizens of the UK and Ireland, as well as those with valid UK visas, are exempt.

 

The new UK travel requirements create more work for Americans and others used to unhampered transatlantic travel. The new ETAs could take up to 72 hours to process, throwing a potential wrench in any 11th-hour plans for travellers who were long able to hop on a plane at a moment’s notice.

 

The potential for travel disruption could be big. The United States-UK market is one of the largest international air routes in the world, with more than 20 million people flying between the countries last year, according to data from the US International Trade Administration.

 

Airlines offered around 150 daily flights between the countries this past northern summer, according to data from aviation analytics firm Cirium Diio.

 

The new UK requirement is part of a larger global shift towards digital border controls. Australia and the US already require foreigners who do not need a visa to register online for a small fee. And the European Union plans to implement its own digital entry requirement, or European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS), in mid 2025 (its been delayed again).


What makes the UK’s ETA different is the requirement that even connecting passengers secure one. Virgin Atlantic Airways, one of the largest airlines connecting the US and the UK said in an emailed statement the transit requirements risked “putting the UK and its respective carriers at a competitive disadvantage”. It added that the EU’s ETIAS plan exempts transfer passengers from the digital certificate.

Someone flying from, for example, Washington DC to Mumbai, India, has multiple connecting flight options, including Virgin via London. With the new ETA rules, travellers now have an extra digital hoop to jump through for the trip if flying via London rather than Dubai or Frankfurt.


A spokesperson for London’s Heathrow Airport, the busiest in the UK, said in August that the airport had lost an estimated 90,000 transfer passengers as a result of a pilot ETA programme covering six Middle Eastern countries. A UK Home Office spokesperson told the Guardian in August that the “Government is continuing to keep the requirement for transit passengers to obtain an ETA under review”.


Search for "UK ETA" on Google Play or the App Store, or get your UK ETA here;



Credit: NZ Herald.

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