What ETIAS is — and what it is not
ETIAS is a visa-waiver authorisation similar to the US ESTA — not a visa stamp in your passport. UK nationals visiting the EU for tourism, business, or transit for up to 90 days within any 180-day period will need approved ETIAS once the system is mandatory. It covers 29 Schengen countries plus Cyprus; Ireland has separate Common Travel Area rules for UK citizens.
ETIAS is a visa-waiver authorisation similar to the US ESTA — not a visa stamp in your passport. UK nationals visiting the EU for tourism, business, or transit for up to 90 days within any 180-day period will need approved ETIAS once the system is mandatory. It covers 29 Schengen countries plus Cyprus; Ireland has separate Common Travel Area rules for UK citizens.
ETIAS is not GHIC (healthcare access), not travel insurance, and not a replacement for a valid passport. You need all three layers for a typical UK-to-EU holiday once ETIAS is enforced: valid passport, ETIAS authorisation, GHIC for state healthcare, and comprehensive travel insurance for everything GHIC excludes.
The fee is expected to be €7 per application for adults (minors may be exempt per EU rules). Approved authorisations typically last three years or until passport expiry, whichever comes first — allowing multiple trips on one approval within validity.
Timeline: when UK travellers actually need ETIAS
The European Commission states ETIAS will start operations in the last quarter of 2026 (October–December). No exact launch date has been announced — the EU will publish it several months beforehand on travel-europe.europa.eu.
The European Commission states ETIAS will start operations in the last quarter of 2026 (October–December). No exact launch date has been announced — the EU will publish it several months beforehand on travel-europe.europa.eu.
After launch, a transitional period of at least six months follows during which travellers should apply but will not be refused entry solely for lacking ETIAS if other entry conditions are met. Full mandatory enforcement comes after additional grace periods — practical earliest compulsory date is often cited as April 2027, but verify official EU announcements before each trip from late 2026 onward.
Entry/Exit System (EES) biometric border checks at EU airports are a separate rollout that preceded ETIAS — allow extra time at Schengen borders regardless of ETIAS status during 2026.
Who needs ETIAS and who is exempt
Standard UK passport holders visiting Schengen countries or Cyprus for short stays need ETIAS once mandatory. Long-stay visas, work permits, and residence cards follow different immigration rules.
Standard UK passport holders visiting Schengen countries or Cyprus for short stays need ETIAS once mandatory. Long-stay visas, work permits, and residence cards follow different immigration rules.
UK nationals who are beneficiaries of the Withdrawal Agreement and hold a Withdrawal Agreement residence document in uniform format from an EU host country may be exempt when travelling within the EU under those rights — exemptions vary by host country and document type. Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries in Ireland or with Cypriot documents face different rules — check travel-europe.europa.eu for your situation.
Dual nationals holding an EU member state passport do not need ETIAS when travelling on that passport.
How to apply safely when the system opens
Use only the official EU portal at travel-europe.europa.eu — URLs must include europa.eu. Ignore paid copycat sites, "fast-track" offers, and email solicitations charging for applications or pre-registration before the system is live.
Use only the official EU portal at travel-europe.europa.eu — URLs must include europa.eu. Ignore paid copycat sites, "fast-track" offers, and email solicitations charging for applications or pre-registration before the system is live.
You will need a valid biometric passport (issued within the last ten years, valid at least three months beyond planned departure from the EU), an email address, and payment for the €7 fee. Applications are expected to take minutes online with most decisions within 96 hours.
If rejected, you may appeal or apply for a standard visa depending on grounds. Keep your ETIAS reference number with your travel documents — airlines and ferry operators may check authorisation before boarding.
ETIAS alongside passport, GHIC, and travel insurance
Passport validity: UK passports must be valid for at least three months after your planned departure from the EU and issued within the previous ten years — a common problem for burgundy passports issued before the 2020 design change. Check issue date, not just expiry.
Passport validity: UK passports must be valid for at least three months after your planned departure from the EU and issued within the previous ten years — a common problem for burgundy passports issued before the 2020 design change. Check issue date, not just expiry.
Apply for a free GHIC at NHS.uk before EU travel — it complements but does not replace insurance. See /guides/ghic-ehic-uk-travellers-guide.
Buy travel insurance when booking non-refundable flights — ETIAS authorisation does not cover cancellation, medical evacuation, or airline failure. See /guides/compare-uk-travel-insurance-2026 for a flight-first comparison checklist.
UK261 delay compensation rights are unchanged by ETIAS — EU and UK passenger rights apply to covered flights regardless of entry authorisation paperwork.