ETIAS entry requirement for all holidaymakers from non-EU countries

ETIAS: Will British tourists need to pay a visa waiver to enter Spain?

ETIAS entry requirement for all holidaymakers from non-EU countries

ETIAS: Will British tourists need to pay a visa waiver to enter Spain?

The EU has plans to introduce an ETIAS entry requirement for all holidaymakers from non-EU countries – including Brits – when they enter the Schengen area. Here’s how it will work for people travelling to Spain.

There are two big changes afoot when it comes to travel into the EU Schengen area, including Spain, which will affect arrivals from the UK

Because the EU loves an acronym, both of them are known by their initials – EES and ETIAS. EES is essentially an enhanced passport check with fingerprinting.

But the one that will have the biggest effect on tourists and people arriving in France for short trips is ETIAS which stands for European Travel Information and Authorisation System. 

In short, it will require all arrivals into the EU and Schengen zone (not Ireland) to register in advance online, at a cost of €7 (free for over 70s and under 18s).

Who?

The ETIAS requirement applies to all arrivals into the EU from a non-EU country – including the UK – who do not have a Spanish (or other EU) visa or residency card.

It will therefore mostly apply to tourists, second-home owners or people on family visits.

At present Brits benefit from the 90-day rule, which allows people to spend 90 days out of every 180 in the EU without the need for a visa.

ETIAS is technically a visa waiver, rather than a visa, but it still spells the end of entirely paperwork-free travel.

How?

Travellers will have to fill out an online application before departure, giving their personal details such as name, age, address – if you’ve travelled to the US since 2009, it’s very similar to the ESTA system required by US authorities.

Once issued, the authorisation lasts for three years, so frequent travellers do not need to complete a new application every time, but it must be renewed every three years.

The online application is set up to give a rapid response, and people would generally not need to fill it in until about 72 hours before travel, although the full details of the system are yet to be revealed.

Anyone who has not completed the online process will be denied boarding at the airport/ferry terminal/station.

How much?

Each application costs €7, but is free for under 18s and over 70s. It lasts for three years and can be used for multiple trips.

When?

The introduction of the ETIAS system has been delayed several times and is currently scheduled for 2024, with no precise introduction date.

It will come into effect after EES is introduced – EES is currently set to be introduced some time in 2024, but the French are pushing hard for that to be after the Paris Olympics in summer 2024.

It’s therefore entirely possible that the start date of ETIAS will be pushed back again to 2025.

And the other way?

The UK has announced plans for a similar system for arrivals from EU countries – a visa waiver known as an ETA which costs £10.

Like the EU’s system, its start date has been delayed several times and it’s currently due to come into effect for citizens of Qatar from November 2023, with other nationalities added later, at a date still TBC.

These are all the EU and Schengen area countries that will require non-EU visitors provide an ETIAS visa waiver when arriving at the border: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.

Many thanks to THE LOCAL es