Dual Citizenship and ETIAS: Which Passport You Should Travel With
If you hold dual citizenship, understanding which passport to link with your ETIAS authorization is crucial for seamless European travel.
If you hold dual citizenship, understanding which passport to link with your ETIAS authorization is crucial for seamless European travel.
As the EU's Entry/Exit System approached launch, traveller concerns shifted from the headline to the practical details. The key issues were not only when EES would start, but how passport stamping, biometric checks, eGates and transit rules would work in everyday journeys.
In the weeks before the EES launch, confusion around post-Brexit travel rules was still widespread. The practical issue for British travellers was no longer whether the system was coming, but how the new border process would work and what would follow after it.
The first wave of EES disruption may not hit where passengers expect. According to the source analysis, airports with a steady flow of non-Schengen arrivals are more vulnerable than those that receive traffic in easier-to-manage peaks.
ETIAS is still a future step for UK travellers, but the shape of the system is already clear. The key is to understand what information the EU plans to collect, what the permit will cost, and why the official timeline matters more than speculation.
November travel to Germany will look a little different because the new EU system has started to appear at the frontier. The key point is that EES is about registration and tracking, not about buying a separate permit before you fly.
UK travellers visiting Europe should prepare for a new border process from October 2025. The EU's Entry/Exit System will gradually reshape checks at airports, ports and land crossings across the Schengen area.
A broad coalition from Europe’s tourism and travel sector is challenging the European Commission’s proposal to raise the ETIAS fee from €7 to €20. The group says the increase is disproportionate and calls for a transparent impact assessment before any decision is finalised.
The ETIAS application fee is set to increase from EUR 7 to EUR 20 before the system's launch in 2026.
The EU will start rolling out the Entry/Exit System (EES) from 12 October 2025, with full deployment expected by 10 April 2026. ETIAS is expected in late 2026 and the travel authorisation fee is set to rise to €20.