EU travel opens up with new digital certificate

All 27 member states must recognise the vaccine certificate beginning 1 July for the next 12 months.

All EU countries must recognise the vaccine certificate from 1 July, more information for how travellers outside the EU will qualify for the certificates should also come before then.
All EU countries must recognise the vaccine certificate from 1 July, more information for how travellers outside the EU will qualify for the certificates should also come before then. Photo Credit: Getty Images/anyaberkut

The European Union has approved the use of a new travel certificate, enabling those who have been vaccinated, tested negative or recovered from Covid-19 to move between countries.

With the EU digital Covid certificate visitors avoid extra coronavirus tests and quarantines, according to the Associated Press.

The EU took action on travel certificates in order to help the bloc’s struggling tourism industry. Countries heavily reliant on tourism such as Greece have led the effort to rapidly introduce the system, which will have both paper and digital forms.

The certificate will be issued for free by national authorities, in English and respective national languages.

Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Greece and Poland have already enacted the system. However, there are varying rules and regulations at play.

The new regulations approved at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, could streamline the system.

Starting 1 July and lasting 12 months, all EU countries must recognise the vaccine certificate. They will be free and certify that a traveller has either been fully vaccinated against the virus, has recently tested negative or has recovered from the disease.

The rules will not be heavily enforced for six weeks to allow countries to make preparations. Passes will be issued by individual countries, not by the EU and will contain a QR code. Personal data will not be shared.

“EU states are encouraged to refrain from imposing further restrictions, unless strictly necessary and proportionate,” said Spanish Socialist lawmaker Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar.

It is less clear how travellers outside the EU will qualify for the certificates but more information should be forthcoming before the 1 July launch.

Per the AP report, “People coming from outside the EU, the overwhelming majority of whom should be vaccinated to enter, will be able to get a certificate if they can convince authorities in the EU country they enter that they qualify for one."

As of 3 June, the countries for which travel restrictions to the EU have been lifted include Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, Japan, Israel and Rwanda.

Source: Travel Pulse