Get well soon.To my surprise, my PCR test came back positive
Get well soon.To my surprise, my PCR test came back positive
Would you interpret this to mean that an Australian or New Zealand passport holder who flies direct from Buenos Aires to Madrid with a valid PCR but without a vaccination and presents his or her Australian or New Zealand passport at the immigration control would be let into Spain without quarantine?Travelers from the UK will be able to freely enter Spain from Monday with no restrictions and no coronavirus test
Speaking on Friday at the Fitur tourism fair, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in English that the country “will be delighted to receive British tourists”english.elpais.com
Note that Spain doesn’t do quarantine, except for arrivals from India, they just have not been allowing non-EU foreigners in for tourism.Would you interpret this to mean that an Australian or New Zealand passport holder who flies direct from Buenos Aires to Madrid with a valid PCR but without a vaccination and presents his or her Australian or New Zealand passport at the immigration control would be let into Spain without quarantine?
That was going to be my next question, not because of the problem at Ezeiza you point out but because it would be implausible at the moment to present an Australian passport in Madrid and maintain I had traveled from Australia. However, since I am not a resident in Argentina, but do (also) hold a UK passport I interpret your information as meaning I could well be fine, at both ends.Note that Spain doesn’t do quarantine, except for arrivals from India, they just have not been allowing non-EU foreigners in for tourism.
The tricky part is getting on your flight to Spain where it is your residency that matters. It might be difficult convincing a check in agent at Ezeiza that you are a resident in Australia at these times...
While in Spain they do often ask for your boarding pass on arrival, or what flight you came in on, if flying via Paris or Frankfurt it might not raise an eyebrow. The issue is actually on departure since airlines need to verify and input all of this information into timatic to avoid fines from breaches in transit countries and final destination according to the booking.That was going to be my next question, not because of the problem at Ezeiza you point out but because it would be implausible at the moment to present an Australian passport in Madrid and maintain I had traveled from Australia. However, since I am not a resident in Argentina, but do (also) hold a UK passport I interpret your information as meaning I could well be fine, at both ends.
Also note that any immigration department has all that information electronically available to them in the form of APIS (advance passenger information) sent to them by the airline at the time of check-in. That means they can see your full itinerary, booking information such as payment details and information of nationality and residence. They screen passenger lists electronically for “suspicious” or “wanted” persons. Whether they stop to check the details for each “non-suspicious” passenger is another story.That was going to be the next question: do they ask at Madrid where you came from? Seems like they do, which is good information. The entry stamp to be presented at Ezeiza is in the UK passport, so that wouldn't present a problem. The problem, as you say, would be their (Ezeiza's) definition of residency, which we can't know. It is neither Migraciones nor tax residency, but that doesn't mean they couldn't deem it be a residency under some other criteria known only to them on the day. Maybe the US is the best option. Going there to get a vaccine makes me nervous because of lack of health coverage. The UK would be of course the logical place to get a vaccine but the 14-day quarantine is off-putting. That's why the news about Spain seemed encouraging, but perhaps not practical in the end (and probably they wouldn't give a tourist a vaccine anyway). I´ll probably just sit tight here and wait for my turn.
I am taking that route as well in Sept.....I am going to have a vacation at a CVS in MIA. One can get travel insurance for the US. I expect Argentina to stay on most red-lists around the world including UK for at least the rest of this year making travel abroad in the meantime much more limited without a full course of a globally recognized vaccine than it is for mere residents of Argentina.
Need to be quick as availability is virtually zero but some last minute seats do pop up once in awhile.
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