Britain mulls easing COVID-19 travel rules for England

"There are hundreds of businesses out there who will not survive this winter unless changes are made," TUI UK managing director Andrew Flintham told Sky News on Friday. According to reports, the government will remove the requirement for fully vaccinated travellers to take a lateral flow test before departing their destination and a costly PCR test on their return into Britain, which can add hundreds of pounds per person to a trip.


Reuters | Updated: 17-09-2021 14:45 IST | Created: 17-09-2021 14:19 IST
Britain mulls easing COVID-19 travel rules for England
Image Credit: Wikipedia
  • Country:
  • United Kingdom

The British government will on Friday consider easing England's COVID-19 rules for international travel, a late-season boost for airlines, holiday, and tourism companies which say they will not survive another winter of onerous rules and red tape. While Europe has relaxed travel restrictions for the fully vaccinated, expensive COVID-19 testing requirements remain in place for fully vaccinated arrivals into Britain, preventing a travel recovery as the tougher winter period nears.

But a rule change could be announced later on Friday. "The COVID sub-committee of cabinet that decides these things will be considering that probably later today," Agriculture Secretary George Eustice told Sky News.

Airports, airlines, and travel companies have warned the government of more job losses if it does not scrap the private testing and so-called traffic light system which ranks destinations as green, amber, and red. "There are hundreds of businesses out there who will not survive this winter unless changes are made," TUI UK managing director Andrew Flintham told Sky News on Friday.

According to reports, the government will remove the requirement for fully vaccinated travelers to take a lateral flow test before departing their destination and a costly PCR test on their return to Britain, which can add hundreds of pounds per person to a trip. Ministers will also simplify the destination categories into either low or high risk, scrapping amber, reported the Times newspaper, with many countries, including popular destination Turkey, expected to be removed from the high-risk red list.

Flintham said any new system would be better than the current setup. "It will improve if we move anywhere away from the draconian measures that we are using at the moment," he said.

Data shows that Britain's recovery is lagging. UK flights were down 39% compared to pre-pandemic levels for the two weeks to early Sept. 6, while France, Spain, and Italy were down between 24-28%, according to Eurocontrol. On Britain's red list there are currently 62 countries, a designation that requires 11 nights in a quarantined hotel at a cost of more than 2000 pounds. Quarantine hotels are expected to remain in place for red list arrivals.

Any change to the travel rules will apply to England, but devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland could later follow suit. More than 135,000 people in Britain have died in the pandemic. ($1 = 0.7247 pounds)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Give Feedback