Destinations that lift restrictions for fully vaccinated travelers

(CNN) – As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to wreak havoc on the travel industry, countless destinations around the world are launching vaccines at their most vulnerable citizens.

Meanwhile, Denmark has announced plans to launch a digital coronavirus passport in late February that will serve as documentation for the holder’s full vaccination against Covid-19.

While it is worth noting that the main vaccines against Covid are around 95% effective, which means that vaccinated people can become infected and spread the virus to other people, there is no doubt that these Successful implementations are a step in the right direction.

As a result, several destinations choose to remove border restrictions for travelers who have been fully vaccinated or to significantly alleviate them.

From Cyprus to the Seychelles, here are seven destinations that are reopening to tourists who have received the Covid-19 vaccine.

Cyprus

An aerial view shows the Akamas Peninsula along the west coast of Cyprus on 31 May 2020.

Late last year, a Cypriot official revealed his plans to lift restrictions on vaccinated travelers.

ETIENNE TORBEY / AFP via Getty Images

In December, Cyprus became the first destination to announce plans to allow travelers who have been fully vaccinated to enter without having to go to quarantine.

In addition, visitors proving that they have received both doses of a Covid-19 vaccine will be able to visit without providing a negative PCR test result on arrival.

Most likely, this will only apply to those arriving from destinations on the country’s safe travel list, which is updated regularly. However, Cyprus recently reached an agreement with Israel that allows vaccinated travelers to travel between countries without restrictions.
“The amended action plan is expected to further encourage the interest of airlines to carry out additional flights to Cyprus, improve connectivity and increase passenger traffic,” Transport Minister Yiannis Karousos told the Cyprus Mail newspaper when the plan was announced last year.

Although it was previously stated that the new rules would come into force on March 1, government officials have not confirmed it so far.

Currently, travelers who are allowed to visit Cyprus have the option of providing a negative PCR test performed within 72 hours prior to the trip or taking a test on arrival.

They must then be quarantined for two weeks in government-assigned accommodation. The period of isolation can be shortened slightly if travelers perform a molecular test on their tenth day of quarantine at their expense and receive a negative result.

Estonia

Visitors approach City Hall Square in the historic city center on March 24, 2017 in Tallinn, Estonia.

EU travelers arriving in Estonia and fully vaccinated should not be quarantined.

Sean Gallup / Getty Images

Estonia has not just abandoned the mandatory quarantine requirements for EU travelers, but has also abandoned them for those with evidence of recovery from Covid-19 in the last six months.

The European country also accepts those with vaccines from nine suppliers around the world instead of just Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech or Oxford-AstraZeneca, all three of which have been approved by the European Union.

Only vaccination certificates produced in Estonian, Russian, or English will be recognized, and visitors who have previously had Covid will be required to present a medical certificate, as well as a recent PCR test indicating that they are no longer infected with the virus.

“It’s about showing mutual solidarity. If we take into account the vaccines that are used in other countries, we could expect that the vaccines that are used in our country will also be taken into account in other countries,” said Hanna Sepp, head of the country’s infectious diseases. The epidemic surveillance and control department has reported to the Estonian television organization ERR News.
Estonia currently has a mandatory ten-day quarantine for arrivals, with exceptions for European countries considered low-risk, such as Bulgaria, Iceland and Norway, as well as evidence of a negative PCR test conducted three days after the arrival. Those arriving from the UK must also submit a negative PCR test performed no earlier than 72 hours prior to arrival.

Georgia

A photograph taken with a drone on August 23, 2017 shows a view of the Georgian capital of Tbilisi.

Visitors who provide evidence that they are fully vaccinated will be exempt from quarantine in Georgia.

VANO SHLAMOV / AFP via Getty Images

Georgia, located at the crossroads between Asia and Europe, has also opted to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated travelers.

The Georgian Foreign Ministry recently announced that all visitors who have received two doses of any Covid-19 vaccine are allowed to enter the country without producing a negative PCR test.

“Citizens of all countries traveling by air from any country may enter Georgia if they present the document confirming the full course (two doses) of any vaccine against Covid-19 at Georgia’s border checkpoints,” he said. say the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. in a statement.

Travelers who are not vaccinated will be required to submit a negative PCR test result performed within 72 hours of the trip and will also be required to take a second test “at their expense” on the third day of their stay.

Those who have traveled to the UK within 14 days of their visit must pass a mandatory 12-day quarantine on entry.

Iceland

Tourists watch Skogafoss waterfall on September 2, 2018 near Skogar, southern Iceland

In May, Iceland waives border restrictions for those who have had a full course of the Covid vaccine.

Maja Hitij / Bongarts / Getty Images

From 1 May, fully vaccinated travelers from European Union countries, as well as Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, can skip quarantine when they arrive in Iceland and will not be required to present any evidence of Negative PCR.

Visitors who can provide a paper vaccine in Icelandic, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish or English demonstrating that they have had two doses of one of the three main vaccines against Covid-19 will be exempt from border restrictions.

However, those who present an “invalid” document will have to “undergo double tests with quarantine in between,” according to the Icelandic Health Directorate.
The popular destination also plans to issue digital “vaccination certificates” to Icelandic citizens who have been vaccinated “to facilitate the movement of people between countries”.

Unvaccinated arrivals from destinations where travel to Iceland is allowed must take a Covid test on arrival, before entering quarantine for five to six days and taking a second test.

Exceptions will be made in some circumstances, such as those that have a valid medical reason.

Poland

On February 5, 2020, there will be horse-drawn carriages near the Cloth Hall building in the center of Kraków’s Old Town.

Poland allows travelers to enter without being quarantined since 28 December.

LUDOVIC MARIN / AFP via Getty Images

Travelers from EU countries can visit Poland without undergoing the mandatory ten-day quarantine “on the basis of a certificate confirming vaccination against Covid-19”.

Those who provide a negative SARS-CoV-2 test on arrival are also exempt as long as no more than 48 hours elapse between the time they receive the test result and the time they cross the border.

Romania

A general aerial view of the village Garnic, Romania, July 17, 2020.

Fully vaccinated visitors arriving in Romania can also avoid having to be quarantined.

IONUT IORDACHESCU / AFP via Getty Images

All travelers arriving in Romania from permitted destinations and who have been completely vaccinated from Covid have been exempted from being quarantined on arrival since 18 January.

The new rules were announced by the National Committee for Emergency Situations (CNSU) of the European country, which stipulated that returning visitors and residents will have to show evidence that they have had two doses of the vaccine to prevent isolation. obligatory.

The second dose should have been given at least 10 days before your arrival.

“The vaccination test, including the date on which the second dose was administered, should be done through the document issued by the health unit that administered it, either in Romania or abroad,” he said. CNSU in a statement.
Currently, travelers arriving from countries on Romania’s “yellow list”, which consists of high-risk epidemiological destinations, have to quarantine for 14 days.

Those who present a PCR performed at least 72 hours before entry should be quarantined for 10 days.

The Seychelles

A photograph taken on November 21, 2019 shows a hawk turtle nesting beach on Cousin Island, a nature reserve island managed by Nature Seychelles, a national environmental NGO, Seychelles

Vaccinated travelers can visit the Seychelles without having to isolate themselves, but a negative PCR test has yet to be presented to them.

Yasuyoshi Chiba / AFP via Getty Images

Fully vaccinated visitors are now allowed to enter the remote destination off the coast of Tanzania without having to quarantine for 10 days.

However, those who have received a full course of any Covid-19 vaccine must still present a negative PCR test result within 72 hours of travel, as well as a certificate from their national health authority verifying that they have been completely vaccinated.

Unvaccinated travelers on the Seychelles Category 1 and 2 list and those arriving by private jet should be isolated for 10 days and provide a negative PCR result within 72 hours of arrival.

The 115-island nation aims to become the first nation to vaccinate its entire population after receiving a 50,000-dose donation from the UAE government.

President Wavel Ramkalawan expects more than 70% to be vaccinated by mid-March. Restrictions will be further relaxed if this goal is achieved, meaning those who are allowed to enter the Seychelles will only need to submit evidence of a negative Covid-19 PCR test performed within 72 hours of the trip.

.Source