Major change as passport stamps set to be scrapped from European holidays | The Sun

PASSPORT stamps will be scrapped for Brits returning from a holiday in Europe holidays later this year.

Brits heading to destinations like Spain and France will not have their passports stamped from November after a digitised shake-up.

After the UK left the European Union, British holidaymakers have needed passport stamps whenever they've entered or exited the Schengen Area.

This is because the stamps act as proof that Brits haven't outstayed their visa-free welcome because they log any entry and exit dates.

Passport stamps are given by border officials at security checkpoints, but the act will become digitised later this year.

Set to launch in November 2023, an automated entry and exit system (EES) will digitally register non-EU visitors – removing the need for physical stamps.

Read More on Passports

A look at what to do if you lose your passport while on holiday

Passenger barred from flight because she had novelty stamp in her passport

According to Euronews, a statement from the European Commission’s department for Migration and Home Affairs said: "EES will replace the current system of manual stamping of passports, which is time consuming, does not provide reliable data on border crossings and does not allow a systematic detection of overstayers."

Instead holidaymakers will be required to scan their passports, as well as other travel documents, at automated self-service kiosks before entering the Schengen Area.

The system will then register the person's name, travel document, fingerprints, facial images and the date and place of entry and exit.

This data will be erased from the system three years after the last trip to a country using the EES system.

Most read in News Travel

FLY RIGHT

The big mistake passengers make when trying to get better plane seats

BAG IT UP

The clever travel item that will change the way you pack for a holiday

BOOZE CRUISE

Cruise guests are going to extreme lengths to smuggle booze on board ships

PLANE PACKAGING

I live on an island so remote I have to fly to return my ASOS parcels

Despite the move away from physical stamps, holidaymakers should think twice before getting a novelty stamp in their passport.

Popular tourist attractions, like Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin, offer souvenir stamps so travellers can commemorate their trip.

But joke stamps could see Brits banned from travelling as they can invalidate passports.

Sixty-year-old Tina Sibley found out the hard way when she wasn't allowed to board her flight from Madrid to Phuket because of a novelty stamp in her passport.

To keep holiday stress at bay, Brits will need to allow 10 weeks for passport applications to be processed ahead of summer holidays.


Source: Read Full Article