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Portugal removed from the UK Green List – no countries added

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The Government has just given it first update to U.K. travel Green List.

After a lot of speculation in the media it looks like the Green List won’t be changing much – with one massive exception. Portugal will be demoted to the Amber, which will strike a blow to many people’s holiday plans.

Seven countries are being added to the Red list. Afghanistan, Bahrain, Costa Rica, Egypt, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Trinidad & Tobago have all been added today.

Back to Boris Bingo, baby

The change means we are back to the rigmarole of last summer – when countries were added and removed to travel corridors at very short notice. The government promised that it would be more consistent this year, which is why it set up the ‘Green watch list’. It looks like it is scrapping that plan, however.

Whilst the Government says it is ‘following the science’ it is not clear why destinations such as the Caribbean have been snubbed, despite many countries reporting extremely low case loads.

Half of all UK adults have had both vaccinations with 75% having received their first. It appears that the Government is trying its best to disincentivise travel as much as possible, whilst still claiming that you can travel. The big casualty will be the travel industry.

Portugal was pretty much the only country on the Green List welcoming UK travellers. Removing it from the Green List will put a spanner in a lot of holiday plans.

Anyone returning from Portugal from 8th June will now have to quarantine for 10 days or pay for additional testing to release early.

This applies only to England. Different rules may apply to those who live in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland but no announcements have been made yet.

Each country will be labelled ‘Green,’ ‘Amber’ or ‘Red,’ with varying entry requirements when you return to the UK.

11 countries and a number of territories are on the Green List. The next update will be in three week’s time on the 24th June.

This is how the categories are defined:

Green countries: You will need to take a pre-departure test (can be lateral flow) as well as a PCR test on or before day 2 of your return into England. You will not need to quarantine unless or take additional tests unless your tests come back positive.

Amber countries: You will need to take a pre-departure test before returning to England and must quarantine at home for 10 days, taking a PCR test on day 2 and day 8. You can choose to take an additional PCR test on day 5 under the optional ‘Test to Release’ scheme, which allow you to end your quarantine early.

Red countries: You will be subject to a 10-day quarantine in a managed quarantine hotel, with testing prior to your arrival in England as well as on day 2 and day 8. You cannot reduce your quarantine period and must pay for the hotel.

In addition to the three traffic light restrictions the Government has also promised a ‘Green watchlist’. This will be used to to indicate countries that are currently categorised as Green countries but are likely to drop to Amber or Red shortly. No countries are on this list so far – and it’s not clear whether this will be kept now that Portugal has dropped straight from Green to Amber.

Which countries are on the Green List?

Here are the countries on the initial UK Government travel Green List.

  • Australia
  • Brunei
  • Falkland Islands
  • Faroe Islands
  • Gibraltar
  • Iceland
  • Israel
  • New Zealand
  • Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
  • Singapore
  • South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

For clarity, just because a country is on the Green List does not mean that you will be allowed to enter.

You will need to meet the local requirements regarding vaccination and/or testing.

You should be able to access your vaccination status on the NHS app.

Which countries are on the Red List?

Here are the countries on the Red List. Afghanistan, Bahrain, Costa Rica, Egypt, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Trinidad & Tobago have all been added today. Anyone returning from these countries will be required to undertake 10 days of hotel quarantine.

  • Afghanistan
  • Angola
  • Argentina
  • Bahrain
  • Bangladesh
  • Bolivia
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Burundi
  • Cape Verde
  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Costa Rica
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Ecuador
  • Egypt
  • Eswatini
  • Ethiopia
  • French Guiana
  • Guyana
  • India
  • Kenya
  • Lesotho
  • Malawi
  • Maldives
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
  • Nepal
  • Oman
  • Pakistan
  • Panama
  • Paraguay
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Qatar
  • Rwanda
  • Seychelles
  • Somalia
  • South Africa
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sudan
  • Suriname
  • Tanzania
  • Trinidad & Tobago
  • Turkey
  • United Arab Emirates (UAE)
  • Uruguay
  • Venezuela
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe

What countries are on the Amber list?

Any country or territory not listed above will be on the Amber list. This will require 10 days of home quarantine.

You can see the full Amber list on this page of gov.uk.

What are the cheapest covid testing providers?

You will not be able to use NHS testing facilities for travel: you must pay for private tests.

The cheapest PCR test at present is provided by Eurofins, from £44.90 for an at-home test kit.

You can compare all Government-approved covid testing providers on this helpful page of gov.uk.

Comment

The travel industry has been unanimous in condeming the announcement. British Airways said:

“This is incredibly disappointing and confusing news, not just for aviation but also for our customers. The UK has reached a critical point and urgently needs travel with low-risk countries, like the US, to re-start the economy, support devastated industries and reunite loved ones.

With high levels of vaccinations in the UK being matched by other countries, we should see the UK Government adding destinations to ‘green’ as soon as possible – not turning its back on a traffic light model which we were led to believe was based firmly on scientific data.”

Whilst Shai Weiss, CEO of Virgin Atlantic said:

“UK Government’s risk-based traffic light framework won’t provide the clarity and certainty that consumers, families and businesses need if it does not follow the data. Its own evidence shows the US and Caribbean are low risk and should be added to the ‘green list’ now. We are yet to see clear and transparent guidance on the methodology and data the Government is basing these decisions on. It shouldn’t be a state secret.

“This overly cautious approach is failing to reap dividends from the UK’s successful vaccination programme, preventing passengers from booking with confidence and restricting £23 million in economic value each day with our largest trading partner. We urge UK Government to expedite talks with the Biden administration to lead the way in opening the skies ahead of G7 next week. There is no reason to delay, given that economic recovery and 500,000 jobs are at stake.”

Comments (198)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • LS says:

    This ultimately does seem sensible – the cases in Portugal are higher than those in the UK. We still have 1000 people in hospital, and it is increasing with our increasing cases. The reduction that we have seen over the last few months have been down to the lockdown, not vaccines.
    Our corona response has been utterly littered by decision made far too late by those braying that there’s ‘no evidence’ for tightening up restrictions, and then acting far too late when theres no other choice. Refreshing to see this might be beginning to change.

    Going forward, pragmatically, I see that the traffic light system will differ depending on your vaccination status – ie there will be more (or some) countries on the green list for those fully vaccinated, and none for those not vaccinated.

    • Travel Strong says:

      “The reduction that we have seen over the last few months have been down to the lockdown, not vaccines.”. Source for this? Or just opinion piece?

      • James says:

        There’s plenty of evidence for this, open your eyes. It is clearly the case the reduction in cases is largely due to lockdown. If you don’t believe that, that’s your own problem.

        • Lord Doncaster says:

          So vaccines are useless?

        • Sneakster says:

          nasty

        • Travel Strong says:

          “There’s plenty of evidence for this” Source? I haven’t stated a belief either way, I am genuinely interested in the data / sources that support this.

        • Stephen says:

          Clearly if everyone stayed at home and there are no infections you can argue its because everyone is at home but with most people now being out and about a lot more the fact that the 70+ age group who have overwhelmingly had both jabs infection rates are now almost zero….whereas the highest infection rates are amongst those with zero jabs, with the 1 jab brigade somewhere in the middle is rather suggestive

          • Travel Strong says:

            The logic is undeniable if “everyone stayed at home” – but that is what interests me. In reality, the ‘lockdowns’ and ‘rules’ across the world have been very different, and most countries had substantial amount of people not staying at home (at a minimum – healthcare… food… manufacturing… some retail… some education… training… services… etc), so I am interested in data that reflects the impact of the restrictions when so much of life is continuing. I am very lucky to have not lost anyone close to me to Covid, but I have lost a lifelong friend to suicide and I cannot imagine it having happened in a time where we were free to go to the pub, roadtrip the USA, and visit our friends and family.
            Therefore I hope there are objective studies that enable evidence based decision making for the future.

          • Lady London says:

            Sorry to hear that Travel Strong

        • James says:

          Calm down James.
          You’re giving me a bad name 🤣

  • Cup says:

    Still thinking about Spanish/Greek islands even though it’s on the amber list. Am I still covered by Amex platinum travel since FCO advice allows travel to them?

    • meta says:

      Simple answer is no.

      • James says:

        Amex told me the opposite. The platinum travel insurance is invalidated if the destination is on the FCO advisory list. The Greeks islands are not on the list, so you would be covered. Not sure if the Spanish islands are treated differently by FCO

        • meta says:

          You were told wrong and not the first time that Amex is wrong. It is clear in the wording any government agency.

          • Cup says:

            Who did you contact that said that said Amex platinum travel insurance would not cover?

    • GeorgeJ says:

      I am currently in Greek islands and Amex platinum are my insurer. They confirmed to me that the FCO advice is the driving factor for their cover, FCO allows travel then you are covered (I have this on two recorded calls). The Amber list for Greece is considered to be for return purposes only, not departure and vacation.

  • bafan says:

    So I’m going to visit my fiancé in Sweden on June 23rd regardless of country status. Could I move my Funchal trip to return on June 22nd to avoid testing by leaving the next day? I’d have it all documented etc.

    • Save East Coast Rewards says:

      You will still need to do a pre-departure test but if you’re only in the UK one day you don’t need to book your day 2 and 8 tests. You will need to mention you’re in transit on the PLF and I would advise printing out your eticket for your flight the next day in case Border Force asks for evidence

  • Russ says:

    It isn’t going to be long before dodging the curfew is going to be seen as a national sport rather than a problem:
    ‘The O’Leary challenge’ – get in and out of a country before a country moves to red and get a ‘Ryan Air saved my life’ T shirt.

  • Track says:

    I have kept repeating that Portugal being on Green list means nothing and things will change on short notice.

    Much of “Green List” means nothing as those countries don’t let anyone in, even quota their own citizens/family members.

  • James VICKERS says:

    Interesting today the daily covid figures are delayed, what are the chances they show something unpleasant? Possibly another insight in to today’s decisions

  • stevenhp1987 says:

    What are the odds of BA (and other airlines naturally) cancelling flights to countries that were Green List candidates. E.g. Malta, Caribbean etc.

    BA currently re-starts flying to Malta on June 10th which, to me, looks like they were preparing as if they were going on the Green List.

  • The cyclist says:

    Biden will announce the lifting of travel restrictions to the USA next week if in receipt of a PCR test and proof of vaccination in time for Independence Day weekend.

    • bafan says:

      Is that from somewhere? Game changer if true.

      • bill says:

        its an opinion

      • Rupert One says:

        How is it a game changer? US is still an amber country.

        • bafan says:

          We are not currently allowed in for the most part, if they lift the ban then we would be. I’d be happy to do a quarantine after a few weeks in the U.S., not so much so for a weekend in the Algarve.

      • James says:

        Please can we stop using ‘game changer’ as a term, and it’s use has exploded here this past week. I find it oddly and really nauseating.

      • Rui N. says:

        Game changer for whom? The average UK holiday goer is much more likely to go to Portugal or any other “sun” destination in Southern Europe than to the US. Probably even the average HfP reader is more likely to go to Portugal.

        • bafan says:

          It was the fourth most visited destination in the world in 2019 for U.K. tourists, so thanks for the misguided but rude tone. Spain, France, Italy, the U.S. and Ireland are the Top 5 Most Visited, in that order.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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