Passport Rules Could Catch Out Summer Travellers
British travellers are being warned to check passport rules before booking summer holidays, as expiry dates, issue dates and damage can still cause problems at the airport. For many European trips, a passport must be valid for at least three months after the planned departure from the destination and must usually have been issued less than 10 years before entry.
The 10-year rule can be confusing because some older UK passports were issued with extra months added. A passport may show a later expiry date but still fail entry rules if it was issued more than 10 years before the trip. The UK government advises travellers to check country-specific entry requirements before travel, rather than relying only on the printed expiry date.
Checks Before Booking
Holidaymakers should check:
- Expiry: some countries need three or six months left;
- Issue date: Europe usually applies the 10-year rule;
- Blank pages: some destinations require two or more;
- Condition: water damage, tears, stains, stickers or lifted laminate can lead to refusal;
- Destination rules: each country can set its own entry requirements.
These checks matter for beach breaks, city trips, cruises and multi-country holidays, especially where border rules differ between destinations. Popular routes to Spain, Italy, Greece, France, Germany and further afield may all involve different passport conditions. People planning longer trips should also check whether their passport has enough blank pages for stamps and visas along the route.
The safest time to find a passport problem is before paying for flights, hotels or tours. A damaged passport or one too close to the age limit can turn a cheap summer deal into a missed departure. The practical move is dull but necessary: check the issue date, expiry date, blank pages and condition before booking, then renew early if anything looks risky.