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How to get a second British passport for business reasons

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Did you know it is possible to hold two British passports at the same time?

If the ability to apply for a second British passport comes as a surprise to you, you’re not alone. The service is not advertised by Her Majesty’s Passport Office, nor is there an official application process. In fact, the top Google result for the topic is a PDF guide for HMPO staff on how to issue one.

Despite the semi-secrecy surrounding the service, there are a number of reasons why you might want – and be eligible for – a second passport:

  • you need to get a visa to travel for business, which takes your primary passport out of use for some time
  • you need to travel to incompatible countries (eg. Israel and Iran)
  • you are a frequent traveller and need to cross borders regularly, such as airline staff

Neither Rob nor myself have ever needed to apply for a second British passport (I hold a German and British one, and Rob just makes do with one, unlike his kids ….). Reader Chris recently went through the process of applying for a second UK passport and offered to write up his experience for us.

How to get a second British passport

Over to Chris:

“If you find yourself frequently travelling for business and needing a visa in your passport then you know the stress of waiting for your passport to be returned before you can fly. Pre-pandemic I spent a panicked morning tracking the delivery of my passport from the US Embassy for a flight that evening.

As travel starts to get back to normality I find myself with lots of international dates lined up [Chris is an entertainer]. Many of these require visas and the fear of being stuck without my passport has returned. Luckily there is a way round that. 

Although you’ll find almost no mention of this on the HM Passport site it is possible to get a second passport to avoid these situations. This isn’t a duplicate of your current passport, this is a brand new passport complete with a new passport number so if you’ve got Global Entry for the US be sure to update that.

With a lack of information online about the hoops you need to jump through to get a second passport, this guide should help.

Who can get a second passport?

HM Passport Office isn’t keen on giving out second passports to anyone who wants one, especially not leisure travellers. You need a legitimate reason and have to be over 16. 

Official advice says you can get an additional passport if you ’need to get visas to travel on business, travel to incompatible countries or are frequent travellers.’ You will need to prove why you need a second passport. 

How much does it cost?

The same as applying for a first adult passport. At the time of writing that’s starting from £75.50 but costs more if you need your passport sooner.

How long does it take?

It depends on the current passport office times. You can use the fast track service to get it back within a week and it’s possible to use the on-the-day service and get it back the same day.

How to get a second British passport for business reasons

How to apply for a second UK passport

You need to fill out the standard passport application form which you can get from the Post Office. You cannot print your own.

Even though you’re getting a second passport you need to fill in the form as if you’re getting your first passport. You must fill in the box in Section 1 for ‘Your First British Passport.’

Fill the rest of the form in as usual and in Section 8 note that you are applying for a second passport for business reasons and not to cancel your first passport.

As with a regular passport application, you will also need two identical passport photos and you’ll need to get a countersignature from a British or Irish Passport holder who you’ve known for over two years and isn’t related to you. This person needs to be in a recognised profession and will also sign the back of one of your passport photos. 

Once you’ve completed the form you will also need supporting documentation to prove that you need a second passport. You’ll need a supporting letter and your existing passport.

The supporting letter must be signed and on company headed paper with the company number clearly shown and explain the reasons why you need the second passport. It must be dated no later than four weeks before your the application.

If, like me, you’re the owner / operator of your own company then – despite what I was told on the phone by the Passport Office – you can not supply a letter written by yourself. I found out the hard way, but luckily was able to get an additional letter emailed to the passport office within ten minutes and continue with my appointment.

If you run your own company it is vital that your supporting letter is from an additional director or your accountant.  There are various drafts of the letter you can send doing the rounds on the internet, here’s a variation of what I used:

Her Majesty’s Passport Office

London

SW1V 1PN

To Whom It May Concern:

This is to confirm that NAME OF APPLICANT has been an employee of this company since DATE and is currently in the role of JOB ROLE. 

As part of HIS/HER job HE/SHE is required to frequently travel and therefore is in need of a second passport since we anticipate several trips over the coming years.

We have business lined up in many countries which require a visa and therefore we request a second passport so that HE/SHE may obtain the visas whilst still travelling internationally. Secondly there is planned travel to countries which are incompatible [only put this if it’s relevant to you.]

NAME OF APPLICANT is expected travel schedule over the next few years include ADD DETAILS HERE. 

Planned countries which will require visas include: LIST COUNTRIES HERE.

We can confirm that HE/SHE will be returning to the United Kingdom to resume employment with this company after these trips. Please assist HIM/HER in obtaining a second passport allowing HIM/HER to travel.

If you require any further information please do not hesitate to contact me.

In practice I had to get my accountant to write the letter so the first part changed to the following:

This is to confirm that NAME OF APPLICANT is the owner and operator of NAME OF COMPANY since DATE. I am the registered accountant for his company and have been since DATE.

[EDIT: Reader experience is that, for your FIRST ‘second passport’ application, you must take along the ORIGINAL letter with an inked signature. A scanned signature / scanned letter is not acceptable. For renewals of second passports, a scanned letter is fine.]

To recap, you will need:

  • A completed application form for a first-time passport
  • Section 8 completed with details that this is a second passport application
  • Section 10 filled in by a counter-signer
  • Two passport photos (one signed)
  • Your original passport
  • A supporting letter

Once you have all that you need pay by cash, credit card or cheque and then either post off your form, photos, supporting documents and original passport or book an appointment online for the Fast Track Service.

Fast Track will involve you going to your nearest passport office with all the documents you require. They’ll do a short ‘in person’ interview with you. In my case this only involved flicking through my passport to check I was ‘well travelled’, as they put it, and got a manager to confirm I was allowed a second passport.

They took photocopies of my original passport, meaning I could take it back with me and my new second passport was to arrive within seven days. 

If you need a passport sooner you can make a same day appointment. To book this you need to call the passport advice line on 0300 222 0000 and ask for a Paper Premium Service. You cannot use the Online Premium service which is only for renewals. After your interview, which lasts around 30 minutes, you should get your new passport around four hours later.

What about renewals?

When it comes to renewing either of your passports you will once again need to submit a letter to explain why you need two passports. 

Once it arrives your second passport will operate exactly the same as a normal passport. Just be sure to use the same passport when travelling to and from a country – it’s wise to not travel with, or show both when going through immigration.

Comments (217)

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  • Stu says:

    No thanks, having one is bad enough …

  • Tim says:

    I’ve done this for those reasons ie getting visas whilst also needing to travel. It was pretty easy at the time, just a letter, application form and payment.

  • Gordon Leishman says:

    Her Britannic Majesty requests …………

    As we have come to expect from HM Government – it’s an extremely shabby procedure
    Renewing on line is less expensive than applying through the nations Crown Post Office – WH Smith – would you like a half-price Terrys chocolate orange with that application ?
    It’s a money maker for the Government, I don’t comprehend their reluctance
    The Passport Office is no longer staffed by Government Officers of high calibre, like many other nations.
    Why do you need a second passport ?
    I’m renewing the one issued nine years ago –
    I need a visa from the China / Russian embassy, while whooping it up on a BA sale break

    Furnish us with a list of dates you will be out of the country.

    Do they think it’s like getting your passport stamped for a week in Alicante ?
    If you are renewing your second passport – they do not credit the unused time on the old passport, in addition, the Passport office by mail, may take weeks to process your new blue document. That’s robbery – even your local council credit’s your bus pass replacement, though not the thiefs running the rail network.

    I had to request my old passport be returned to me.

    Yes, Dear Friends – the entire process stinks and mightily expensive to be under the protection of the UK.

  • Anthony says:

    I have had two for 20 years. Both will run out soon and I will not renew either. I’m fortunate enough to have a useful (Irish) passport which I applied for after the Brexit referendum. Quite why anyone who has a decent alternative would want a U.K. passport now defeats me.

    • John says:

      If you live in the UK the only”decent’ alternative is Irish.

    • lumma says:

      If you needed a second passport in the past, having dual nationality would make things a lot easier than going through the process of applying for a second UK passport.

      Or have you just posted this to make it about Brexit when the article isn’t?

      • Dev says:

        The only decent passport in the UK is a British Passport, end of!

        Having any other nationality means you are subject to control, and that includes Irish nationals who can be deported to the Ireland, and stripped of their British Nationality if circumstances and candour demands it.

        • Callum says:

          The odds of a dual British and Irish citizen being stripped of their British citizenship and banned from entry are miniscule. If you’re seriously considering risks on that magnitude then you should probably never leave your house – just in case. What if a car hits you?

          Not to mention, the British government has demonstrated that they are willing to revoke British citizenship and make people stateless on the assumption that they’re eligible to apply for citizenship elsewhere – so if you qualify for Irish citizenship but don’t take it up, you’re still “at risk”…

          And finally, you are making the assumption that the person being deported from the UK wouldn’t be happy in the other country. I’m a bad example as I dislike the UK, but I can assure you that even if I did, if I was being personally targeted for punishment by the Secretary of State, I wouldn’t have to think twice about leaving!

          • Callum says:

            * Home Secretary

          • Ian says:

            If you dislike the UK so much, why don’t you leave?

          • Dev says:

            The point I was making is that I’m proud to be British and live in the UK!

            I hate nothing more than people complaining about how embarrassed they are to be British, proudly display their second nationality and generally moan about the UK, but ultimately are happy to earn their daily bread and more in the UK.

          • Callum says:

            Ian – I spend far more time abroad than I do in the UK.

            Dev – Then you should have made that point instead of your absurd story about risking deportation if you dare take a second nationality!

            I hate nothing more than the people professing their love for Britain and its ideals getting upset at others for holding a different opinion to themselves (you know, freedom of thought/speech – that fundamental British right). With your friend Ian’s message there, we’re getting close to the old classic “don’t like it, then get out my country!” I’ve received on this site numerous times (isn’t tolerance another British value?).

            Despite it getting worse, I can only be thankful it’s nowhere near US levels.

          • Alex Sm says:

            Secretary of State for the Home Department 😉

        • Paul says:

          Well that’s tosh as our dear chancellor has just proved

        • Paul says:

          I am utterly embarrassed to be British and dred the day I need that pathetic symbol of stupidity, the little blue passport.
          The country is diminished morally, ethically and financially as well as chronically divided.

          Posting the dumb leader holding that passport was always going to incite a response both positive and negative. But I loath everything he stands for and represents.

          I moved heaven and earth to obtain an Irish passport, sadly failing.

          My next move is to retire to Ireland or an independent Scotland to regain the rights I have lost.

          As for leaving if we are so unhappy! I’d just point out that the decision to leave the EU removed my opportunity to live, work, travel and retire freely in 27 countries. Hey ho!

          • Matarredondaaa says:

            Agree totally.
            Why post a picture of the biggest liar ever to have been PM?
            Like you I hate the Tory Government with every fibre of my body and that is after voting for them at all local and national elections for over 40 years so I have left!

          • Mike says:

            It didn’t remove your ability to live and work in 27 countries, it gave you a four year window to do it, which you wasted it seems. You couldn’t even sort out Irish citizenship after moving “heaven and earth”, surely just reading the .ie website would have given you the information on whether you were entitled or not. The country is divided because of people like you, you aren’t the hero of the story you think you are.

        • QFFlyer says:

          How exactly could an Irish National be stripped of British Nationality?

    • Alan says:

      Sadly most people don’t have any alternative! The British passport used to be an excellent one to have pre-Brexit.

      • lumma says:

        How is the British passport any worse than any of the other non EU good passports post Brexit? It still offers “visa free” entry to all of the same countries it did before. No one says, for example, that a Japanese passport is dreadful even though a holder is also only allowed 90 days in every 180 in the Schengen area.

        • Callum says:

          I think the fact that you’ve deliberately excluded the many countries that you know they think have better passports shows that you are fully aware of the answer to this question…

          • Nick says:

            @lumma because I now have to count the days I’m in schengen to make sure I don’t overstay, and pay extra for a bigger passport to cope with all the extra stamps I shouldn’t need. I no longer have the right to live freely in 27 countries. Yes it was a sad, unnecessary and closed-minded decision to leave. Unlike others I don’t qualify for any other passport – not unless I marry for one, which morally I’m not prepared to do. I would qualify for Scottish though, so hold out a faint (but tangible and growing) hope that they do set up on their own very soon.

          • lumma says:

            Singapore, Korea Republic, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, United States, many Caribbean nations.

            None are bad passports.

        • Alan says:

          @lumma I never said it was, but the loss of the EU component is a pretty damn major one given it’s on our doorstep!

        • Paul says:

          Visa free?? Not for much longer

    • Charles Martel says:

      Passport Index suggests there’s not a lot between them (unless you’re planning to go live on the continent of course): https://www.passportindex.org/comparebyPassport.php?p1=gb&p2=ie

      • KK says:

        There you go. the RIGHTS to work and live in 27 countries were stripped by a bunch of looneys.
        just because a bunch of looneys are happy to stay in where they are, the rights of 60 million people were stripped. Not to mention many of them are immigrant travellers too.

  • Kiwi says:

    “ You need to fill out the standard passport application form which you can get from the Post Office. You cannot print your own.

    As with a regular passport application, you will also need two identical passport photos and you’ll need to get a countersignature from a British or Irish Passport holder who you’ve known for over two years and isn’t related to you. This person needs to be in a recognised profession and will also sign the back of one of your passport photos.”

    Lol. Compared to New Zealand where I applied for my child’s first passport completely online together with a digital photo uploaded to the secure portal. Welcome to the Dark Ages, your name is HM Passports.

    • Rob says:

      You can do this in the UK now. Snappy Snaps sent my sons picture directly to HMPO.

      • Panda Mick says:

        Came here to say this: And the person countersigning can do this remotely too.

        • Johnny5a says:

          Yes you can do everything online, I completed my son’s passport with countersigner who happened to be awake at the time in 25 minutes.

  • Lux says:

    It’s actually possible to have three UK passports at the same time in exceptional circumstances.

    • Danny says:

      Fascinating. Do tell us more ….

      • Lux says:

        It was in the back of an armoured vehicle somewhere hot on government business, I’ll leave it at that…

    • Nick says:

      I was told that in Germany you can have up to 5 passports!

      • HBommie says:

        Mr Bond, we’ve been expecting you.

      • Rob says:

        But all must be German …. dual nationality is banned except for other EU countries. At 18 my kids will probably need to give up one of their passports. (My wife is grandfathered under EU rules.)

        • S says:

          I believe this was one of the things that was being discussed as likely to change – i.e. so your children wouldn’t have to give up German citizenship – as part of the ‘traffic light’ coalition (along with making it easier to apply for citizenship if you live in Germany). I’ve not seen anything recently about this, but perhaps worth keeping an eye on.

        • J says:

          I’m fairly sure this no longer applies to children who get their nationality from descent.

          I know when my wife did the research she was surprised to find our kids would keep it for life (although this may have been because they were born in Germany). I can’t find much either way in English (except the source below, which I don’t necessarily trust).

          The law will like change in the next year or so anyway, so that anyone (who is eligible) can retain dual citizenship.

          https://se-legal.de/immigration-lawyer-germany/dual-citizenship-in-germany-an-overview/?lang=en#Does-Germany-Allow-Dual-Citizenship-for-German-Citizens-born-Abroad

          “Does Germany Allow Dual Citizenship for German Citizens born Abroad?
          Should a child have at least one German parent, they are entitled to German citizenship. So, in the case of a child born in Canada with a German mother and a non-German father, the child would be entitled to German citizenship. In previous times, before 2014, the law stated that the child in question would have German citizenship up to their 21st birthday but would then have to choose. However, the law has since changed on this matter, and now there is no requirement to give up the other citizenship under German law. This law was introduced in 2014, but it applies retroactively to those born in the 1990s and any child born afterwards.”

  • Paul says:

    I too have had 2 passports for many years
    Obtained due to weekly flying and the need to obtain entry visas .Indeed Israel was stamping passports and second was needed to enter countries who wouldn’t accept such a stamp
    I now need to renew one so will see if it’s a simple process and still need to prove a reason

    • KK says:

      you have to show a reason for any subsequent renewals as long as you want to keep “the second” passport

  • riku says:

    I used to have two passports like this and eventually didn’t need the second one and let it expire – thinking I then just had one valid passport.
    When I went to renew my remaining passport they said I needed the letter from the employer again because I had “two passports”. I had to submit in writing a request to “cancel” the second passport even though it had expired a year earlier. They told me all this 2h before my appointment at the passport office to get a same day renewal of my remaining passport, so it was somewhat of a surprise. So if you go through the steps to get two passports you forever have two “passports” even when one of them expires – unless you explicitly cancel the second one.
    The second passport concept seems like some kind of IT hack in their system and two entries get created as if you are two people rather than just multiple passport entries for the same person. It took a long time to get my head around the idea that an expired passport hasn’t really expired and still affects handling for the remaining passport.

    • Mike says:

      Riku – how long ago was your “ incident” as I let my second passport lapse naturally then renewed the remaining one when that expired without any requirements for an explanation.

    • Lux says:

      Similarly, when I applied for my second passport there was confusion as my previous passport, replacement for which was issued at an embassy abroad, was never cancelled.

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