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In the UK, apparently you need to register your passport information at least 72 hours before arrival. Unfortunately, I didn't get an e-mail from the airline to remind me so I've only just done it (flying Thursday).

Am I still going to be able to fly home?

ediblecode
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1 Answers1

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I can find no evidence on the internet that any such requirement exists.

The UK government (in common with many others) appears to require Advanced Passenger Information (API) for arrivals (and, as of 2015, departures) by ferry, rail or air. However there appears to be no deadline for when this is provided other than the arrival or departure of the vehicle in question. Most airlines and rail providers say they will take this information either in advance (their preference) or at the point of check in.

The UK's API program previously seems to have gone by the name "e-Borders", although that scheme is now defunct.

The 72 hours requirement is presumably on the part of your airline. I can give no guarantees, but I strongly suspect that if you have failed to provide the data with that much notice, that they will tkae it from you wheneer possible and pass it on to the relevant authorities.

CMaster
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  • Seems odd right? I can book a flight today and provide that information – ediblecode Mar 14 '16 at 15:03
  • +1, but note... Not "appears to require", The requirement is part of a full on statutory instrument. And not 'presumably on the part of...', it is definitely so per the statutory instrument. – Gayot Fow Mar 14 '16 at 15:38
  • @gayot_fow If you can point me to the law, or openly published UK government information on the law, then great. The "appears" and "presumably" is because all I found was transport company websites mentioning the requirement – CMaster Mar 14 '16 at 15:56
  • @CMaster, all the relevant links and authoritative sources are here http://travel.stackexchange.com/questions/60584/do-the-immigration-agencies-of-eu-member-states-keep-records-of-eu-citizens-entr/60588#60588 – Gayot Fow Mar 14 '16 at 16:08
  • @GayotFow you're saying only that API (aka PNR) data are definitely required, as seen in the legislation mentioned in your linked answer, correct? In particular, I think you are not claiming that the legislation mandates a 72-hour deadline for providing the data, since I see nothing in the links to indicate that. (Some links are broken, by the way.) CMaster seems to think that you are saying that your answer concerns the 72-hour deadline ("presumably" appears in reference to that aspect of the question). – phoog Mar 14 '16 at 20:04
  • @phoog yes, the information is definitely required and there is no need to use hedging language like 'appears to' or 'seems to' or 'presumably'. These weakens the answer's canonical value. Also including the relevant authority in the body of the answer would be helpful because comments are sometimes swept out by moderators. – Gayot Fow Mar 14 '16 at 20:31