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Do Brits living in Germany still have to quarantine on trips to the UK?

The British government last Thursday announced a relaxation of its quarantine rules for fully vaccinated travellers - but not for most Brits who live abroad. Here's what it means and the reaction.

Do Brits living in Germany still have to quarantine on trips to the UK?
A passenger at Frankfurt Airport. Brits living abroad seem to be excluded from the UK's new travel rules. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sebastian Gollnow

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced that from July 19th, people visiting amber list countries including Germany would no longer have to quarantine on arrival back in England, as long as they were fully vaccinated.

However, this exemption is only aimed at UK nationals living in Britain and vaccinated there. That rules out the majority of Brits in Germany.

As it stands, they will still have to quarantine for 10 days – with the possibility of ending it in England after a negative test taken on the fifth day – when visiting friends or family in the UK, even if they are fully vaccinated.

But this could change if Germany is put on the green list when the UK reviews the country rules later this week. 

Shapps’ announcement came just one day after Germany downgraded the risk status of the UK, meaning that fully jabbed people can come to Germany without having to quarantine. 

UPDATE: What rules do European countries have for travellers from the UK?

Shapps said the exemption was for “residents returning to England”.

The Department for Transport confirmed to The Local that this exemption is for anyone who was vaccinated in the UK or part of a UK clinical trial on vaccines.

This means that any UK nationals living in Italy who had their jabs in Britain can travel quarantine-free. 

However, those vaccinated in Germany will still face a 10-day quarantine if they want to travel to the UK to visit friends and family, as well as needing to pay around £175 – or more – for the compulsory travel testing package.

What’s the reaction from Brits in Germany?

British citizens resident in Germany and other countries in Europe reacted with anger and sadness at the news that they would not be exempt from the UK’s quarantine requirement.

The campaign group British in Europe summed up the mood when they tweeted: “We just want to see our families.”

The move has thrown people’s plans into the air.

Ross Lowe said he was desperate to go home from Germany to the UK with his wife and new baby. The couple are fully vaccinated. However, the quarantine costs and timings “make it impossible”, he said. 

Matt Bristow, from rights group British in Germany, said British in Europe planned to write to Grant Shapps.

He said the group understood that public health has to remain a top priority.

“But what we can’t understand is that British citizens are being treated differently if they live in Germany or other parts of the EU compared to a British citizen who lives in England,” he said.

“There doesn’t seem to be a scientific or public health basis for that so that’s why it seem to be really confusing and feels rather discriminatory.

“For some people this could be a frustration but they’ll have family in the UK who can visit them instead. But that’s not possible for everyone.”

Bristow said people had contacted the group on Twitter saying their parents are seriously unwell in the UK – and they can’t visit them. 

Although there are exceptions on compassionate grounds, the rules are still very strict. 

“They’ll be people where a family member has had a baby and they’d like to have a visit and support the family,” added Bristow.

“For a lot of people this will cause some serious difficulty. It feels really unfair.”

‘Gutted’

Joe Lee-Dowd said on Twitter: “Gutted, as like many people I punched the air with joy when I saw the headline of the policy change this morning. Briefly thought that I would be able to make a camping trip for one of my best mate’s mini-stags after all!”

Others said they made an effort to get fully jabbed before travel – and planned their holiday days from work around not having to quarantine. 

Helen Albert said: “It’s pretty stupid to be honest. I can see that they might only want to accept UK-approved vaccines, but to restrict it to ones done in the UK only doesn’t make a lot of sense to me! As long as decent form of proof is used, like EU digital certificate, I can’t see the problem!”

People also questioned why some UK authorities had also agreed to let up to 1,000 football fans travel quarantine-free from Italy to London for Sunday’s Euro 2020 final.

The feeling from Brits in Germany –  many of whom haven’t seen their family in months or even years – is that they’ve been forgotten – and summer holidays for Brits in the UK have been put at the top of the agenda. 

However, there is some hope that things won’t stay the same. 

The Local spoke to an EU source about the mutual recognition of Covid certificates in the EU and the UK.

The European Commission source told us: “When it comes to the UK, the talks are ongoing at the technical level and are progressing well and going in the right direction.

“This is in particular because technically speaking the EU’s and the UK’s architectures are aligned.

“On the US, the EU continues exchanges with the US on the use of (vaccination) certificates to facilitate travel. We are also following closely how the debate on the certificates evolves in the US.”

The UK’s Department of Transport said that a further announcement on fully-vaccinated non-EU residents is expected before the end of the month.

Shapps said that ministers are “actively working” on proposals to allow people who’ve received their jabs outside the UK to be exempt from quarantine rules when travelling from amber list countries. 

He suggested people in the EU could be allowed in sooner than those in the US due to the digital vaccine pass scheme being rolled out. 

What are the rules for travelling from the UK to Germany?

On July 7th, Germany eased travel rules for the UK – along with four other countries where the Delta variant of Covid is widespread. The UK is now in the the ‘high incidence’ risk category rather than on the ‘virus variant’ list. 

People who are fully vaccinated or have recovered from Covid-19 coming from high incidence areas like the UK do not have to quarantine on arrival. They can also show their proof of vaccination/recovery before boarding a flight to Germany instead of a negative Covid test. 

People coming from high incidence areas who aren’t vaccinated have to show a negative Covid test before departure to Germany, and quarantine for 10 days on arrival with the option to end it after five days with a negative Covid test. 

Everyone has to log proof of test, vaccination or record on Germany’s entry registration portal before travel.

The German government still warns against travel to high incidence areas, but there are no bans in place. 

READ MORE: Germany’s new travel rules for the UK, Portugal and India

Member comments

  1. I watched Grant Shapps announce this in Parliament yesterday and was shocked and angry when it sunk in that it was only for Brits that have been fully vaccinated by the NHS. That it was yet another opportunity snatched by the despicable and divisive Tories to snub the EU and reinforce the imperial mindset that is Britishness at its worst. I can only hope that Spain, Portugal and Greece change their policy when the British are in mid flight and make them quarantine for 10 days once they’ve landed!

  2. This is the most ridiculous thing since Brexit. All UK citizens living in Europe and having had the 2 jabs are being persecuted when consideration is now being given to allow non-EU residents to travel without having to quarantine. Talk about feeling like second-class citizens. We have not seen our parents since November 2019 and last year was my mother’s 90th. Birthday which we celebrated on Skype. It is time the European Union acted on our behalf. If we were diplomats’ action would be taken as reciprocation.

    1. Yes my brother and I haven’t seen our Dad and the rest of the family since the beginning of September. My brother is doubled jabbed. I am not having any jabs after being very seriously ill from a flu jab after which I was told not to have any flu/pneumonia or similar by the Doctors in my then employers health clinic. Trying to get an exemption certificate is almost impossible. My Dad is 99 and refused it. We need to get over to Wiltshire to assist our sisters on clearing the house of all the accumulated junk. My brother can’t have 4 weeks off work 2 of them in quarantine in the UK. He has so much work backlog (as a building tech). I’m retired so it doesn’t matter for me. Last time I came they didn’t even bother to look at my form at Heathrow they just brushed it aside. Germany should be on the Green List. As for only NHS jabs accepted that’s ridiculous it’s medical apartheid/discrimination. The AstraZ jab is no different in Germany to the UK AZ jab.

  3. Ludicrous UK policy, but then it is typical of the shambolic approach displayed by the so-called government in response to the pandemic. I can well appreciate the distress caused to those awaiting family reunions, but for myself I wouldn’t in any event go near the place with the current infection rates there.

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For members

EES PASSPORT CHECKS

How will the new app for Europe’s EES border system work?

With Europe set to introduce its new Entry/Exit biometric border system (EES) in the autumn there has been much talk about the importance of a new app designed to help avoid delays. But how will it work and when will it be ready?

How will the new app for Europe's EES border system work?

When it comes into force the EU’s new digital border system known as EES will register the millions of annual entries and exits of non-EU citizens travelling to the EU/Schengen area, which will cover 29 European countries.

Under the EU Entry/Exit System (EES), non-EU residents who do not require a visa will have to register their biometric data in a database that will also capture each time they cross an external Schengen border.

Passports will no longer be manually stamped, but will be scanned. However, biometric data such as fingerprints and facial images will have to be registered in front of a guard when the non-EU traveller first crosses in to the EU/Schengen area.

Naturally there are concerns the extra time needed for this initial registration will cause long queues and tailbacks at the border.

To help alleviate those likely queues and prevent the subsequent frustration felt by travellers the EU is developing a new smartphone app.

READ ALSO: What will the EES passport system mean for foreigners living in Europe?

The importance of having a working app was summed up by Uku Särekanno, Deputy Executive Director of the EU border agency Frontex in a recent interview.

“Initially, the challenge with the EES will come down to the fact that travellers arriving in Europe will have to have their biographic and biometric data registered in the system – border guards will have to register four of their fingerprints and their facial image. This process will take time, and every second really matters at border crossing points – nobody wants to be stuck in a lengthy queue after a long trip.”

But there is confusion around what the app will actually be able to do, if it will help avoid delays and importantly when will it be available?

So here’s what we know so far.

Who is developing the app?

The EU border agency Frontex is currently developing the app. More precisely, Frontex is developing the back-end part of the app, which will be made available to Schengen countries.

“Frontex is currently developing a prototype of an app that will help speed up this process and allow travellers to share some of the information in advance. This is something we are working on to support the member states, although there is no legal requirement for us to do so,” Uku Särekanno said in the interview.

Will the 29 EES countries be forced to use the app?

No, it is understood that Frontex will make the app available on a voluntary basis. Each government will then decide if, when and where to use it, and develop the front-end part based on its own needs.

This point emerged at a meeting of the House of Commons European scrutiny committee, which is carrying out an inquiry on how EES will impact the UK.

What data will be registered via the app?

The Local asked the European Commission about this. A spokesperson however, said the Commission was not “in a position to disclose further information at this stage” but that travellers’ personal data “will be processed in compliance with the high data security and data protection standards set by EU legislation.”

According to the blog by Matthias Monroy, editor of the German civil rights journal Bürgerrechte & Polizei/CILIP the Frontex app will collect passengers’ name, date of birth, passport number, planned destination and length of stay, reason for travelling, the amount of cash they carry, the availability of a credit card and of a travel health insurance. The app could also allow to take facial images. It will then generate a QR code that travellers can present at border control.

This, however, does not change the fact that fingerprints and facial images will have to be registered in front of a guard at the first crossing into the Schengen area.

So given the need to register finger prints and facial images with a border guard, the question is how and if the app will help avoid those border queues?

When is the app going to be available?

The answer to perhaps the most important question is still unclear.

The Commissions spokesperson told The Local that the app “will be made available for Schengen countries as from the Entry/Exit System start of operations.” The planned launch date is currently October 6th, but there have been several delays in the past and may be another one.

The UK parliamentary committee heard that the prototype of the app should have been ready for EU member states in spring. Guy Opperman, Under-Secretary of State at the UK Department for Transport, said the app will not be available for testing until August “at best” and that the app will not be ready in time for October. The committee previously stated that the app might even be delayed until summer 2025.

Frontex’s Särekanno said in his interview: “Our aim is to have it ready by the end of the summer, so it can then be gradually integrated into national systems starting from early autumn”.

READ ALSO: How do the EES passport checks affect the 90-day rule?

Can the system be launched if the app is not ready?

Yes. The European Commission told The Local that “the availability of the mobile application is not a condition for the Entry/Exit System entry into operation or functioning of the system. The app is only a tool for pre-registration of certain types of data and the system can operate without this pre-registration.”

In addition, “the integration of this app at national level is to be decided by each Schengen country on a voluntary basis – as there is no legal obligation to make use of the app.”

And the UK’s transport under secretary Guy Opperman sounded a note of caution saying the app “is not going to be a panacea to fix all problems”.

When the app will be in use, will it be mandatory for travellers?

There is no indication that the app will become mandatory for those non-EU travellers who need to register for EES. But there will probably be advantages in using it, such as getting access to faster lanes.

As a reminder, non-EU citizens who are resident in the EU are excluded from the EES, as are those with dual nationality for a country using EES. Irish nationals are also exempt even though Ireland will not be using EES because it is not in the Schengen area.

Has the app been tested anywhere yet?

Frontex says the prototype of the app will be tested at Stockholm’s Arlanda Airport, in Sweden. Matthias Monroy’s website said it was tested last year at Munich Airport in Germany, as well as in Bulgaria and Gibraltar.

According to the German Federal Police, the blog reports, passengers were satisfied and felt “prepared for border control”.

This article is published in cooperation with Europe Street News.

 
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