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Non-EU travellers will need to pay £10 'ETA' to enter UK

Ben McPartland
Ben McPartland - ben.mcpartland@thelocal.com
Non-EU travellers will need to pay £10 'ETA' to enter UK
Non-EU travellers will need to pay £10 ‘ETA’ to enter UK from Wednesday (Photo by Ben FATHERS / AFP)

Non-EU nationals living throughout Europe now have to pay for an electronic travel authorisation (ETA) to enter the UK. EU nationals will also soon have to pay the £10 fee - which is set to rise to £16.

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Comments (9)

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Kathy Tanner 2025/01/21 19:39
We travel from the US to Rome on British Air, changing planes at Heathrow. It is not unusual to miss our connection in London, due to delayed departure from US, and spend the night at an airport area hotel. Officially, then, we are not in transit, having to exit the airport. This is an unforeseen circumstance. Will it be possible to obtain the ETA at the airport in such a case?
  • Ben McPartland, Editor, The Local Europe 2025/01/22 09:05
    Hey Thanks for your question. We'll try and get an answer for you because it's quite a specific case, but it must happen fairly frequently. There will likely be special procedures in place and reports say it's possible to get an ETA very quickly at the airport.
Khalid 2025/01/09 17:33
What about UK ex-pats living in Norway? Do they require this to visit back? If they are still a British Citizen.
Catalina 2025/01/08 21:35
Question: Spanish nationality through residency. British nationality renounced before Spanish judge, not recognised in the UK. In Spain now only Spanish whereas in the UK apparently now a dual national. The ETA application asks whether you have an additional nationality. Does one say “no” and risk being accused of lying to the UK, or say “yes” and risk problems with Spain?
Tony Jay 2025/01/08 20:56
No doubt the staff of Ryanair and Easyjet will be unable to understand the new rules and are likely to deny boarding to some unfortunate travellers.
Avinash 2025/01/08 19:27
Hi, as a non-EU, (Indian Nationality) with German Residence Permit will we still need to apply for a UK visa (tourism purpose) or this ETA is sufficient. This I could not understand.
  • Emma Pearson 2025/01/09 08:44
    Hi, ETA does not change the situation with regards to visas for the UK, so if you previously needed a visa to visit the UK for short stays, then that remains the case. ETA applies to people who previously benefited from visa-free travel to the UK
Avinash 2025/01/08 19:12
Hi, as a non-EU, (Indian Nationality) with German Residence Permit will we still need to apply for a UK visa (tourism purpose) or this ETA is sufficient. This I could not understand.
OSVALDO BARSI 2025/01/08 17:25
I tried to apply for an UK ETA on 7 Jan 2025 using a phone app on a Iphone 16 and the app crashed at the payment screen. Hopefully this was a one time problem. I will try again ina few days.
Iva 2025/01/08 09:51
The article doesn't mention that this is only valid in case you don't need a visa to enter the UK. If you need a visa, you still have to apply and if you get it, you don't need this. The way it is worded here made me think that if you are a non-EU citizen living in the EU, you only need this, which is not true if you need a visa to enter the UK.
  • Emma Pearson 2025/01/08 10:20
    Hi, as the article says, if you have a visa for the UK or a residency permit (eg UK Settled Status) then you don't need an ETA. ETA is a visa waiver, so it doesn't apply to people who already have a visa for the UK. The key point is that it's to do with the passport you're travelling on - where you live and whether you have a residency permit for an EU country is not relevant.
bobbie 2025/01/07 18:22
The article does not say if non-EU citizens who have a residence permit in a European country need to obtain this permit. Ex: American citizen with residence permit in Germany.
  • Ben McPartland, Editor, The Local Europe 2025/01/07 22:00
    Hiya The article has the line : "So even if you are living in the EU, if you are a non-EU national and don't have an EU passport you'll need an ETA from January 8th." So an EU residence permit doesn't make any difference, you'll still need the ETA.

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