SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

TRAVEL NEWS

REVEALED: How to use France’s health pass using the UK’s NHS Covid QR code

A health pass is now compulsory to enter venues including bars, cafés, tourist sites and long-distance trains in France. So how does this work for travellers from the UK?

REVEALED: How to use France's health pass using the UK's NHS Covid QR code
Photo by DAMIEN MEYER / AFP.

People visiting or living in France can upload their vaccine certificates, negative test results taken within the previous 48 hours, or positive tests within the past six months to the TousAntiCovid app, which now acts as a health pass.

The pass is required to enter culture and leisure venues, cafés, restaurants, bars, shopping centres, hospitals, and long-distance coach and train travel.

For full details of where the pass is needed, click HERE.

The French Embassy in the UK has confirmed that the NHS app is compatible with with France’s TousAntiCovid app. In other words travellers vaccinated in England and Wales can upload their NHS QR codes onto the French app.

For people vaccinated in Scotland or Northern Ireland things are more complicated, since these countries do not use the NHS app – if you received your vaccination there, click HERE for the protocol.

The Local has tested this and heard from readers who have successfully uploaded their certificates. 

On August 4th, the French government announced that NHS QR codes now work with the TousAntiCovid verif app used by venues to scan QR codes before allowing entry. The verif app shows the user the name and date of birth of the person trying to get entry and gives a green tick if their QR code is valid.

You should be able to gain access simply by showing your digital NHS health pass or printed vaccination certificate. However, it’s a good idea to scan your certificate into the French app just to be safe.

Here’s how to convert your NHS vaccine certificate into a French health pass.

STEP 1

Get your NHS Covid pass QR code.

You can access your QR code through the NHS App or on the NHS website. First you will need to log into your NHS account.

Once you are logged in, you can download your health pass. According to the NHS website, “An NHS COVID Pass shows your coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination details or test results.”

Several readers of The Local have said that only the most recent version of the NHS Covid Pass works with the French app – the most recent versions have two scan codes instead of one, so people who got an earlier certificate may need to log into the app or website and download their certificate again.

If you have two codes, the one relating to your second dose of the vaccine is the one that you want.

Download the certificate or print it out.

You can also request an NHS Covid pass letter online HERE, and it will arrive by post.

STEP 2

Download the French app, which is called TousAntiCovid.

You can find it on your iOS device HERE, or on Android devices HERE.

This is the app you will use in France to prove you have been vaccinated. Most of the text in the app appears in the language your phone is set to, so if your phone is English then you will get the English version.

STEP 3

Scan your QR code into the app.

When you open the TousAntiCovid app, click on the option ‘Scan a QR Code’. Then, align the white square with your NHS QR code, which you should have on paper or on another device.

You should receive a message saying “Your health pass is valid with this certificate”. In which case, you’re good to go.

READ ALSO When, where and why you’ll need a health pass in France from July 21st

When you arrive in France, all you need to do is open the app, and click on “Open my wallet” to access your QR code, which venues will be able to scan.

Travel

The systems for the health passport once you are in France and the travel system are not exactly the same.

Fully vaccinated travellers arriving from the UK do not need to show a negative test or quarantine on arrival in France. But they do still need to provide a sworn statement (déclaration sur l’honneur) form self-certifying they are not suffering from symptoms associated with coronavirus and have not been in contact with confirmed cases in the preceding fortnight. This can be found on the French government’s website

They also need to provide proof of their vaccination status.

Travellers from the UK who are not fully vaccinated can only travel to France if they have an essential reason for their journey. They must provide a negative PCR or antigen test taken less than 24 hours before departure, and must quarantine for seven days upon arrival.

In travel terms, people are only ‘fully vaccinated’ 14 days after their final vaccine dose but the health pass works seven days after the final dose.

What to do if it doesn’t work

Some people have reported getting the error message, “Wrong format: This certificate’s format is not correct. Please try to scan it with more light, and moving slowly. And make sure you scan the QR Code of the right document.”

There are two possible reasons for this.

Downloaded NHS certificates are only valid for 30 days. So if you are unable to scan your QR code, try downloading a new certificate, which will provide you with a fresh code.

Alternatively it may be that you do not have the most up to date format of the certificate, which has two scan codes instead of one. If this is the case, you need to download a new version.

The app is looking for proof that you are ‘fully vaccinated’ so it will only accept a code from your second or final dose of the vaccine, codes from a first jab will not work.

Member comments

  1. I love in France have my paper certificate and the app Tous Anti Covid downloaded on my iPhone. But what ‘scan’ means exactly I’m not quite sure (duh! I know!). I’ve opened the app, scrolled down to ´ajouter un certificaté’, and found the white square. I’ve tried putting my iPhone with white square over the paper code and waiting, but nothing seems to happen! What am I missing?!

    1. Is the certificate already in the ‘wallet’? Click the Open My Wallet button and see if there is a QR code there, and your details below it. Worth checking. SB

  2. I was able to take my CDC card to a Pharmacie on day one of my vacation (20/7/21) and the Pharmacist was able to input my information from my card into the system which then generated a QR code for me. It took more than one pharmacie stops to do this, But the second pharmacie we stopped at did it without a problem. A huge relief for us and the pharmacie staff was very nice, understanding, and helpful.

  3. Not yet working for the Certificate of Covishield obtained in India. I tried to scan the QR code but the app froze and didn’t do anything. Sad 🙁

  4. This may be all very well for NHS ENGLAND and its QR codes, but NHS Scotland doesn’t have such a scheme, using paper certificates instead – which they won’t send to France. Why does the local france confuse England with the UK and with Britain??

    1. Perhaps we, in Scotland, should be pressing the Scottish Government to issue a QR Code instead of a piece of paper to allow us to move freely in France.

  5. So UK residents can have their vaccinations recognized in France, but Brits vaccinated in France – even with the Oxford AZ vaccine – won’t have their vaccinations recognized in the UK? What are we supposed to do – get vaccinated a third and fourth time in Britain?

  6. I have successfully uploaded the NHS QR code into the wallet, and everything suggests that it will work, but has anyone actually used it successfully in France?

  7. It unfortunately does not work for QR codes from the NHS. It will load into the TousAntiCovid app fine but anywhere which then checks it with the TAC Verif app will not recognise it.

    This is apparently because of a technical issue from the NHS app where the QR codes are not being signed correctly. Venues will not be able to accept UK NHS Vaccine passports in the app. A fix is expected this week.

    https://twitter.com/iroughol/status/1418163480985841665

  8. As of 28 July the NHS QR code still does not work with TousAnti Covid app, nor the NHS app alone. Any update on when the NHS will fix their QR code ?

  9. Does anyone know how it works for someone vaccinated in Scotland, I have tried the pharmacy route and was told it has changed again and is not possible for them to issue a French QR code for the app. I’m here as a second home owner and cannot even meet friends for coffee as locals only want to see the app, not a Scottish bit of paper!

  10. Excellent article. Easy to follow. Downloaded the French app today (21 August) and scanned NHS QR vaccination code. It works! (Although haven’t actually tried using it in France yet! Still in Italy.)

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

FRANCE WEATHER

Thunderstorms, floods and traffic: France’s last holiday weekend in May 

The final holiday weekend of May in France is set to be marked by bad weather and difficult driving conditions on busy roads.

Thunderstorms, floods and traffic: France’s last holiday weekend in May 

Monday, May 20th is a holiday for most of France, marking the Christian festival of Pentecost, which means that many people will enjoy a three-day weekend.

This is the last of four public holidays in France in May 2024, now we need to wait until August for another extra day off work (since the Fête National on July 14th falls on a Sunday this year).

So what can we expect for the long weekend? Well, bad weather and heavy traffic, unfortunately.

The Moselle département, in north-east France, was placed on red weather alert on Friday after hours of heavy rain caused flash flooding.

The red weather alert initially runs until 9pm on Friday, with between 80mm and 100mm of rain expected, while between 70mm and 90mm are predicted in the far north of the neighbouring Bas-Rhin, with up to 70mm expected further south – figures national forecaster Météo-France said approached records for daily rainfall figures in the region.

Orange alerts in the area remain in place on Saturday.

Image: Météo-France

Rain and occasional storms, some bringing hail, are expected to develop across large parts of the country throughout the weekend, with only the Mediterranean areas likely to remain dry on Saturday.

Showers and sunny spells will continue into Sunday and Monday, with occasional thunderstorms in the south-west. Temperatures throughout the weekend should rise to between 15C and 22C.

To make family getaways on the final long weekend of the month even more difficult, roads watchdog Bison Futé predicts ‘difficult’, or ‘very difficult’ travel conditions on key routes across the country. 

Image: Bison Fute

On Friday, traffic is expected to be heavy on routes heading away from major cities towards popular holiday destinations until well into the evening – especially on Paris’s Périphérique and the A86 and A6B, the A7, along the Mediterranean Arc and on the Atlantic seaboard (A11, N165 and A63). 

The A13 is likely to remain closed to traffic between Paris and Vaucresson across the holiday weekend, so drivers from the Paris region wishing to reach Normandy are advised to take the A14, A15 or N12

On Saturday, May 18th, conditions on the roads will be difficult nationwide, particularly on roads serving the Mediterranean arc (A7 and A9) and the Atlantic coast (A63 and N165). In the Île-de-France region, traffic will be heavy from early morning onwards on the A6 and A10. From mid-morning onwards, traffic is expected to intensify significantly. 

Image: Bison Fute

Routes converging on the A10 and A6 could also see traffic problems on Saturday, Bison Futé warned.

No major forecastable traffic problems are expected on Sunday – but, on Monday, May 20th, short breakers will be returning home, leading to heavy traffic across the country, notably on A7 and A9, in the Mediterranean region, and routes serving the west of the country.

Traffic will be heavy on the A10 and A6 in the Île-de-France region from late morning into the evening. The A13, which should be open, could also experience traffic problems from mid-afternoon onwards, and could continue to do so well into the evening.

Across the country banks and public administration offices will close. Some independent shops may close, while larger stores and chains are more likely to be open, but probably with altered opening hours.

Most bars, restaurants and cafés will remain open while public transport will run as normal. 

SHOW COMMENTS