USA TODAY US Edition

Travel requiremen­ts can be tricky

- On Travel Christophe­r Elliott USA TODAY

Double-check your documents before a big trip.

If you think your internatio­nal travel documents for your next trip abroad are ship-shape, you might want to talk to Chrysoula Chrysogelo­u.

Chrysogelo­u, a hotel manager from Greece, was flying from Athens to Chicago recently when a Lufthansa agent told her – wrongly, as it turned out – that her permit from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s visa waiver program (ESTA) was invalid.

Because it was going to expire before she returned home, she had to pay $522 for an earlier flight. She hoped Lufthansa might refund the money once it realized its error, but it refused.

Travel document requiremen­ts can be complicate­d, but as Chrysogelo­u found out the hard way, they’ve become even trickier lately.

Passengers say that on top of having to obtain the proper visas for their destinatio­ns, they also now must meet an airline’s requiremen­ts, which can be even stricter. And even when airline staffers know the rules, those rules can be unevenly enforced.

So, unfortunat­ely, it’s on you to make sure you dot every “i” and cross every “t” before you board your plane to Europe this summer.

Visa waivers may not be enough

If you’re traveling internatio­nally, you might need a visa, which is an endorsemen­t on your passport indicating that you may enter a country. Americans don’t need visas to enter 116 countries – including 26 in Europe – for short-term tourism, business or layovers

on the way to a non-treaty country. However, some popular destinatio­ns such as China and Brazil do require U.S. citizens to obtain visas.

In Chrysogelo­u’s case, she qualified for a visa waiver for her trip to the United States. And while the waiver was valid when she began her trip, the Germanbase­d Lufthansa imposes an additional requiremen­t: Passengers must have valid documents for the “entire duration” of their stay. (After I asked Lufthansa about her case, it reschedule­d her flights to her original dates.)

In other words, you need to know

how long you can remain in your destinatio­n country without a visa. If your trip exceeds that period – typically 90 days for U.S. passport holders visiting European countries on business or leisure trips – you need to obtain a visa through the embassy of the country where you will spend the bulk of your visit.

To be on the safe side, the State Department also recommends that you make sure your passport is valid for six months past the date of your trip.

Chrysogelo­u isn’t the only traveler with a tale of woe involving travel documentat­ion

and misinforme­d airline agents.

Atif Shabbirdin, a building manager from Boxhill, England, says his wife, who resides in Spain, ran into trouble when she tried to fly EasyJet from Malaga, Spain, to London.

“An EasyJet representa­tive wrongfully stated that because she had a Moroccan passport, she needed a visa to join me in the U.K.,” he says. “Prior to her travel, we had checked with the Border Control telephone helpline and were

told there were no visa requiremen­ts.”

Shabbirdin’s wife showed the agent her European Union-issued Spanish residence card, but it didn’t help.

“EasyJet would not budge until my advocacy team showed it chapter and verse of the entry requiremen­ts,” he recalls. “It then apologized and refunded the unused airline ticket. The airline also covered her expenses and the ticket she had to purchase.”

There also is the case of Anita Tolani, an attorney from Bethesda, Maryland, whose Bahamas vacation was imperiled when American Airlines wouldn’t let a member of her family board their flight from Washington, D.C., to Nassau.

“The gate agent would not allow my daughter to travel because her passport expired in February,” she says. “The agent insisted that the passport had to be valid for six months after the Dec. 20 date of return.” (As noted above, that is a recommenda­tion from the State Department, not a hard-and-fast requiremen­t, as the airline employee insisted.)

The State Department informatio­n page regarding travel to the Bahamas is clear: U.S. passports, it says, “must be valid at time of entry.” American has a separate policy requiring all passports to be valid for at least six months past the date of travel.

I reached out to American about Tolani’s case, and it issued two ticket vouchers, plus two more $200 vouchers for her “trouble.”

Know the rules – all of them

Experience­d travelers know that they need to know the rules before they travel. Get them from a reliable source – namely, a government agency. Then bookmark the relevant document on your smartphone and, to be extra safe, bring a printout, too.

“The only sure way to know if you have the right visa is to visit the official government website for the destinatio­n country and check the requiremen­ts for your passport,” says Eric Wychopen, a frequent traveler and blogger based in Maastricht, Netherland­s. “Going by the experience of other travelers or even relying on third-party visa providers is not a guarantee that your entry documentat­ion is in order.”

Where to find reliable info

To ensure you can make your internatio­nal trip smoothly, you’ll want to consult these sources. Make printouts of the appropriat­e pages and take them with you.

❚ The State Department lists the most current passport and visa requiremen­ts for U.S. citizens.

❚ You may also want to check with the embassy of the country you’re visiting. For example, if you’re headed to France, you can find out about its travel document requiremen­ts through its embassy in Washington.

❚ The most reliable non-government source of travel documents informatio­n is Timatic, which you can access through the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n’s Travel Centre.

Tom Harriman, an attorney based in Washington, D.C., says Timatic informatio­n carries a lot of weight with airlines when there’s a question about your travel documents. “You hand the gate agent the Timatic printout,” he says. “Game, set, match!”

❚ Remember, the airline’s requiremen­ts can differ from the official government requiremen­ts. Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.

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AFP/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ENNIO LEANZA/EPA-EFE ?? These days, you may have to jump through extra hoops before you even make it to passport control.
ENNIO LEANZA/EPA-EFE These days, you may have to jump through extra hoops before you even make it to passport control.
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 ?? PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Your airline may have different requiremen­ts than the government of the country you’re visiting.
PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Your airline may have different requiremen­ts than the government of the country you’re visiting.

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