UK Passport Rule Catches Dual Nationals
Some British dual nationals are being stopped before they can travel back to the UK, after tighter document checks linked to the Electronic Travel Authorisation system. The issue affects people who hold British citizenship alongside another nationality and try to board using only a foreign passport. Airlines, ferry operators and train companies can refuse boarding when the correct proof of status is missing.
What Dual Nationals Need to Know Before Boarding
- Rule in force: since 25 February 2026
- Applies to: British and Irish dual citizens travelling to the UK
- Needed: valid British passport, valid Irish passport or another valid passport with a Certificate of Entitlement
- ETA: dual British or Irish citizens cannot get one
- Certificate cost: £589 outside the UK
- Risk: refused boarding by air, ferry or rail operators
The rule has caused problems for families who assumed a foreign passport would still be enough for a return journey. One reported case involved a British mother travelling with two children on Danish passports between Copenhagen and Manchester. Another involved a dual national using only an American passport after a holiday in Greece. In both situations, the missing UK proof became an issue before departure.
The change sits beside the UK’s wider ETA rollout, which requires many non-visa visitors to have digital permission before travelling. British and Irish citizens are exempt, including dual citizens, but that exemption creates a separate problem: they must prove that citizenship in a form carriers can check. The Home Office also says some temporary carrier guidance may allow alternative documents, though this remains at the operator’s discretion.
The rule matters most for people visiting relatives, returning after holidays, travelling with children or living abroad with more than one nationality. It can also affect routes through major airports, ferry ports and international rail terminals. Before booking, families should check every traveller’s passport, children’s documents, processing times and whether an emergency travel document is possible in urgent cases.
This is the kind of travel rule that feels small until it ruins the journey. A foreign passport may open the gate in one country, but it may not get a British citizen onto transport back to the UK. Anyone with dual nationality should sort the paperwork before the trip, not at the check-in desk while the flight is already boarding.