A partire dal 25 febbraio, la maggior parte delle compagnie aeree, tra cui Aer Lingus e Ryanair, richiederanno ai cittadini irlandesi di presentare un passaporto irlandese o una carta passaporto validi per viaggiare tra l’Irlanda e il Regno Unito.

https://i.redd.it/n0j1umoprulg1.jpeg

di PoppedCork

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26 commenti

  1. AJurassicSuccess on

    I’ve never been able to travel without it, but I’ve not used Aer Lingus in years. Regardless we have to have some way of making Brits get in a separate queue lol

  2. smashedspuds on

    Passport card is sometimes not worth the stress unless you’re going from Ireland to UK only. Even though you can legally use it going between Spain and Ireland for example, lots of the older people working at airports are somehow convinced that it’s not eligible, I was nearly denied on a flight once due to someone at the checkin desk telling me that my “ID” (passport card) wasn’t valid. Best off just always having the passport book

  3. Unhappy-Avocado1531 on

    Oh no, a tragedy, I will have to do the thing I’ve always done for my entire life. How will I adapt to this

  4. MushuFromSpace on

    Was this not always the case or is just something they had to put in place because of a weird legal loophole that was being exploited?

  5. universalserialbutt on

    I’ve got me passport. I’m leaving it on the table in the hall so i don’t forget it in the morning. Actually I’m leaving it in front of the kettle. Or maybe next to my toothbrush.

  6. dragondingohybrid on

    My passport was stolen a few years ago when I was in London. The only way I had of getting home was booking a flight with Aer Lingus using my driver’s license because Ryanair would only accept a passport.

  7. Pristine_Remote2123 on

    Not exactly that much of an issue as we need ID to book in at most hotels and we should always have some ID on us when travelling.

  8. IrishFlukey on

    If you were an Irish citizen you could travel without a passport, but the best way to prove you were an Irish citizen was with a passport. Most people brought their passports, so this is no real change for most people.

  9. Does it mean we also need to get the visa to travel if we live in Ireland?

  10. fionnuisce on

    If you travel to British airports, they do not require you to show a passport as they have internal arrival gates which are utilised for Irish arrivals. This isn’t the case for Dublin, unfortunately. The airlines require it, the Irish State de facto requires it but there is no requirement under the Common Travel Area agreement. 

  11. Return_of_the_Bear on

    Anyone else wondering why it says Ireland and the harp?

    Doesn’t appear to be an official govt communication

  12. South-Cable5345 on

    I travel regularly enough to London and didn’t know that

  13. Cathal1954 on

    Can the CTA even be said to exist anymore. Maybe we should just join Schengen and have done with it.

  14. twistyjnua on

    Finally, it’s almost like they’re two different countries. Close the CTA now. Unite Ireland.

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