Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

How to get a second British passport for business reasons

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

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)

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

  • A says:

    i wish the brextards would take a deep deep breath, take a step back and literally go f*** themselves. Stupid useless, wetherspoon drinking, neckless gammon faced cnuts have no business spouting their rubbish on a travel site.

    • Ben says:

      Someone had a bit too much to drink with their Sunday lunch?

    • Joe says:

      Brexit was wonderful. Not least for upsetting all the right people. Don’t agree with the hardcore anti immigration stuff but watching angry entitled middle class lefties howl with anger brings me nothing but deep pleasure.

      • Matarredondaaa says:

        Weird

      • Mike says:

        Joe + 1. Some woke lefties feel like they have a sense of entitlement to be in the EU

        • John Bull Banana says:

          So your motivation for leaving the EU was to spite your compatriots?

          How very patriotic. At least you know who the real enemy is, that’s the main thing.

        • KK says:

          if you dont like UK in the EU so much you should just move to china or russia or whereever where they dont have EU membership.

          • John says:

            I would like to move to Switzerland (and I supported having a Swiss type of relationship with the EU for the UK).

    • Mayfair Mike says:

      You lost. Now disappear to calais with the other middle management, points scrounging lefties 😃

      • Vladimir Johnson says:

        You literally supported Putin’s desire to destabilise and divide Europe.

        You probably thought it was paitwiotic. Instead, there’s a little bit of the invasion of Ukraine that was encouraged by people like you.

        Don’t believe me? Note how the Tory press are sobbing that Brexit had nothing to do with Russia. Why yes, they do indeed protest too much…

    • Mike says:

      A go and have a lie down and contemplate the freedom from the EU we have achieved!

      • John Bull Banana says:

        Yes! Now we’ve left the EU we have the freedom to… to…

        (Psst. Help me out here, Mike. What’s freedoms have we got now? Obviously the political elite have done very well. But what can you and I do that we couldn’t do before? C’mon – there must be something!)

        • KK says:

          the freedom to reduce VAT for gas and fuel, which the treasury could always have done.

          • Rob says:

            VAT in the EU only had a floor of 5% I think. Nothing stopped Governments from reducing it to that on specific items if they wished.

        • Mike says:

          Freedom to spend our money as we want and not be dictated to by a European Parliament

          • kk says:

            yes. spend more on corruption to get failed ppe from china that uses north korean slaves.

            very good.

    • KK says:

      I agree with you

  • ADR says:

    Perhaps going back to the original article, you can in fact have 3 UK passports. You do however basically have to be a war correspondent or cameraperson with lots of conflicting visas and so on. When renewing just one of the three, you have to hand over all three to the Passport Office but I’ve seen it all done in a day when needs must. Just trying to lighten the mood, however dull my comments are.

  • WaynedP says:

    Neither Rob nor *I* *has* ever needed…

    The “has” not “have” is a little pedantic, I grant you, but you would never say “Myself have never needed…” so why on earth do so when adding a second subject at the beginning of the sentence ?

    Frankly, Rhys, I’m a little shocked that you hold a German passport and can still make these grammatical errors.

    I learnt more about correct English grammar from studying German with its declensions than I ever did in English Grammar classes.

    For a start, the word “myself” is invariably better replaced by the shorter, more grammatically correct “me” in the majority of cases that you hear these days.

    I always so enjoy your reviews and contributions to HfP for their interesting content and thoughtful insights – this article being another prime example.

    I just wish you’d succeed a little more often to apply matching diligence to your grammar and spelling, especially if you speak (or are learning to speak) Standard German and can appreciate how much DNA it shares with modern Standard English.

    • Ali B says:

      You need to get out more

      • WaynedP says:

        😆 Dead right, how very perspicacious of you !

        I wonder if you are able to focus your razor sharp intellect on identifying exactly what has clipped my wings these last tedious two years ?

    • Rhys says:

      I never studied German so that’ll be it 🙂

      • WaynedP says:

        Ah, pity, such a rich culture and definitely worth closer inspection by any non-native privileged enough to hold a German passport.

  • kevind says:

    Most of us British Citizens in Northern Ireland are also eligible for an Irish Passport. Very useful as we can be non-EU and EU depending on where we are traveling to.

    • John says:

      Is there any country where being specifically “non-EU” is an advantage?

      • KK says:

        Russia

        • John says:

          Correct but not an answer to the parent comment.

        • NFH says:

          Why do you say Russia? All EU nationalities (except Italy) can enter Russia with a free e-visa via a long list of crossing points. Nationals of the UK, US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand cannot do so. Ireland, an EU member, is the only majority English-speaking country on the list.

  • Johnny5a says:

    My wife had 2 passports at one time, a government department in the country she was working in would hold onto her passport for weeks/months to process a simple work permit, rumour has it, the company she worked for refused to go via backdoor methods to speed things up. My wife needed a 2nd passport so she could come home and go on holiday.

  • Ian M says:

    “If you run your own company it is vital that your supporting letter is from an additional director or your accountant.”

    This is the not true, you can write your own supporting letter for a 2nd passport.

    • John says:

      You can, but you won’t be getting the second passport, at least under the present policy.

      • KK says:

        John is correct. The person I called to ask about second passport reminded me of that, and is on multiple online guide that YOU NEED SOMEONE ELSE TO WRITE THE LETTER TO SUPPORT.

        Nothing stops anyone doing something else but it would not be the SOP of getting a second passport.

  • mutley says:

    Feeling rather smug that I had the foresight to obtain an Irish passport in 2015. Irish passport comes in very handy, just on practical level, I was departing Copenhagen last week, the EU passport line was 4 or 5 people, the non EU snaked around for about 100 metres ( 110 yards for those that prefer it) I visit Israel on my Irish Passport, but all trips to Middle East / North Africa have been on my UK document. Now I’m off for 568 ml of of the black stuff.

    • NFH says:

      Thanks. That’s interesting. Do you use Irish or British for the US, and why?

  • mutley says:

    Irish, but I have global entry and the US authorities want you to declare all passports, so they are aware of both documents.

    • KK says:

      never knew. (never had to get a US Visa to go into the USA) but is there any benefit to go to USA with Irish Passport?

      • John says:

        If your CBP officer identifies as Irish they may go easy on the grilling

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.