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Travel to France this Summer - new regs

(167 Posts)
Kali2 Mon 17-May-21 13:16:26

UK passport holders visiting France as tourists or private visitors (staying with family or friends) for a period of less than 90 days do not at present require a visa.

However, they are required to have the following documentation and they may be required to show all or some of it on entry into France.

A valid passport issued less than 10 years before and valid for at least 3 months after the envisaged departure date;

Proof of accommodation covering the whole duration of the stay (hotel reservation and/or certificate of staying with a relative validated in the town hall (Attestation d'accueil));

Sufficient financial means. The means of subsistence shall be assessed according to the duration and purpose of the stay and by reference to the average prices for accommodation and food in the Member States;

Your return ticket or the financial means to acquire one at the envisaged return date;

You must have an insurance certificate covering all medical and hospital expenses for which you may be liable for the duration of your stay in France, as well as medical repatriation costs and expenses in the event of death.

With regard to 'sufficient funds' the following levels apply

If you are staying in a hotel, you will need to provide a hotel booking as well as a minimum amount per day of stay

65 euros per day of stay in the case of presentation of a hotel booking;

120 euros per day in the case of non-presentation of a hotel booking;

In the case of a partial hotel booking: 65 euros per day for the period covered by the booking and 120 euros per day for the remainder of the stay.

If you are hosted by an individual, you must provide a certificate (Attestation d'accueil) of staying with a relative validated in the town hall at the request of the person who invited you (note: at the border crossing you must also prove that you have, in addition to this certificate, a minimum amount per day of stay - this minimum amount is €32.50 per day).

Alegrias1 Tue 18-May-21 09:31:16

Eeyore was depressed. Nice analogy though. hmm

Pollyannaism from Wikipedia: referring to someone whose optimism is excessive to the point of naïveté or refusing to accept the facts of an unfortunate situation.

Sounds about right.

sodapop Tue 18-May-21 09:29:21

Urmstongran

As our recent posts show ladies - some of us are Pollyannas.
?
Others are Eeyores. Always moaning.

A bit unfair Urmstongran a lot of us are just worried and stressed after not seeing our families since 2019.

Galaxy Tue 18-May-21 09:25:56

Oh crikey is that how you think it comes across. The pollyanna bit I mean.

nanna8 Tue 18-May-21 09:23:23

It depends on who is on duty at the airports,too. Some are friendly and welcoming, some are officious little twerps.

Urmstongran Tue 18-May-21 09:22:12

As our recent posts show ladies - some of us are Pollyannas.
?
Others are Eeyores. Always moaning.

Ellianne Tue 18-May-21 09:12:46

As someone who washeldin a Bulgarian police station ( before they joined the eu) for a couple of hours because of genuine mix up I know how frightening it can be.

Oh my goodness, you reminded me I was 17 and marched off a train in Halle, Germany, followed by my suitcase because of something to do with my ticket. It was all valid, bought in the UK at a travel agents and to this day I don't know what the problem was!
Solution, just buy another ticket and hop back on the next train. Tedious, but if that's what it takes.

MerylStreep Tue 18-May-21 09:04:23

As someone who was held in a Bulgarian police station ( before they joined the eu) for a couple of hours because of genuine mix up I know how frightening it can be.
When the problem was sorted, and I breathed a sigh of relief, and thought, no, they’re right, they want/need to know exactly who is in their country and what your doing there.

Ellianne Tue 18-May-21 09:01:35

Urmstongran

The voice of reason Ellianne ?
Some do like to get their knickers in a twist these days.

I forgot to add, we had to keep Monsieur le Maire well stocked with quality English marmalade and tins of shortbread biscuits every time we went back to the UK.

Where there's a will, there's a way!

Urmstongran Tue 18-May-21 08:48:40

The voice of reason Ellianne ?
Some do like to get their knickers in a twist these days.

Ellianne Tue 18-May-21 08:33:40

My family from New Zealand visited us in France a couple of times before Brexit and the rules were definitely in place for them then.
We went along to see our friend the maire and he said, just say they are paying you for their stay, (in meals out and a good bottle of wine!). We offered to pay the tiny tourist tax, but he answered with the gallic shrug. Everyone happy.

JackyB Tue 18-May-21 08:11:54

But it wasn't like that before we joined the Common Market in 1973. We didn't have to fill in all those forms back in those days.

And I don't remember (e. g.) Americans saying anything about all this red tape for visits to France at any time in the last 40 years. When were these regulations introduced?

We used to just chuck a tent in the car and stop at any campsite. (OK we were coming from Germany but I still had a British passport).

Having to give the address you will be staying at in advance, on entering the country - sounds like entering East Germany back in the day.

Ellianne Tue 18-May-21 07:55:50

That article is so laughable. Everyone of those 20 year olds is either on blood pressure medication, antibiotics, sedative pills or medication for polycystic ovaries. I feel sorry for anyone with health problems, but really?

Mamie Tue 18-May-21 05:27:34

More here:
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/may/17/handcuffed-detained-denied-medicine-eu-citizens-uk-border-ordeals

Lin52 Tue 18-May-21 05:18:57

vegansrock

U.K. as welcoming as ever? You are joking - Tell that to the young Italian girl ( and others) locked up in a detention centre, phone taken off her( so she couldn’t photo the prison like accommodation) put on the plane back after 48 hours for having the temerity to come to the U.K. to help look after her NHS doctor brothers children. She had a letter from the brother saying she would be staying with him but not good enough

So ok for France to requested proper documentation, but not us. Anyone could have written that letter, we do not know all the story, only her version.

Lin52 Tue 18-May-21 05:11:04

Mamie

You are joking Urmstongran?
www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/may/14/hostile-uk-border-regime-traumatises-visitors-from-eu

Did they follow these rules though. The same happened in Spain to British people. www.gov.uk/guidance/visiting-the-uk-as-an-eu-eea-or-swiss-citizen?back=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2Fsearch%3Fclient%3Dsafari%26as_qdr%3Dall%26as_occt%3Dany%26safe%3Dactive%26as_q%3DCan+EU+Nationals+now+just+travel+and+look+for+work+in+the+UK+without+a+Visa%26channel%3Daplab%26source%3Da-app1%26hl%3Den

vegansrock Tue 18-May-21 04:53:33

U.K. as welcoming as ever? You are joking - Tell that to the young Italian girl ( and others) locked up in a detention centre, phone taken off her( so she couldn’t photo the prison like accommodation) put on the plane back after 48 hours for having the temerity to come to the U.K. to help look after her NHS doctor brothers children. She had a letter from the brother saying she would be staying with him but not good enough

Mamie Tue 18-May-21 04:32:13

You are joking Urmstongran?
www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/may/14/hostile-uk-border-regime-traumatises-visitors-from-eu

Galaxy Mon 17-May-21 20:42:28

I dont care if I have to paint myself blue, I will be in France as soon as I can.

Ashcombe Mon 17-May-21 20:33:17

My comment was in response to Ellianne

Ashcombe Mon 17-May-21 20:32:16

The border twixt Spain and France?

Callistemon Mon 17-May-21 20:30:04

Sounds like a lot of faff

We have to do something similar when we go to Australia; it's just routine.

However, yes, the UK has so many beautiful places to visit (and good wine and food too!).

Lollin Mon 17-May-21 20:26:07

Really depends which country you are travelling from as to how welcome you are made to feel. Not saying it’s a bad thing it’s just life as we haven’t known it til now.

mokryna Mon 17-May-21 20:20:16

Thank you Dinahmo.

Urmstongran Mon 17-May-21 20:04:14

And yet the UK is as welcoming as ever. Our doors are wide open whether it’s for tourists or for families visiting relatives. Strange (but good) that we don’t impose reciprocal restrictions and tariffs with the EU. And pettifogging bureaucracy.
?

Lollin Mon 17-May-21 20:01:27

Many visitors have had bigger hoops to jump to holiday or visit family when coming into the UK. I don’t understand why people didn’t realise this was going to happen. We are no longer part of the group so cannot travel freely as we used to. It will become the norm soon enough.