The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

France scraps testing requiremen­t for fully-vaccinated British visitors

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Fully-vaccinated British travellers heading to France no longer have to take a coronaviru­s test before departure, with travel rules easing just in time for the half-term holidays.

Guillaume Bazard, France’s consul-general in London, announced the change on Twitter: “Tests will no longer be necessary for travellers with a complete course of vaccinatio­n heading from the UK to France.”

France considers anyone who has received their most recent dose within the past nine months as fully vaccinated.

Unvaccinat­ed Britons still need to have a “compelling reason” to travel to France, as well as a negative Covid-19 test carried out less than 48 hours before departure.

Children under 12 are exempt from the requiremen­ts.

The move comes after the UK significan­tly eased its rules for arriving travellers from 4am on Friday.

People who are fully vaccinated no longer need to take a post-arrival lateral flow test, while unvaccinat­ed arrivals must still take tests but no longer need to self-isolate.

That means no tests are needed in either direction for jabbed holidaymak­ers.

Hundreds of thousands of people in the UK are embarking on foreign trips during half-term, with French ski resorts in demand.

Cross-channel train operator Eurostar said more than 125,000 people were booked to travel between the UK and the Continent during the school holidays.

France’s move came after Spain announced it will drop its entry requiremen­t for passengers aged 12-17 from non-eu countries, such as the UK, to be fully vaccinated against coronaviru­s.

The Spanish change comes into force today.

Tests will no longer be necessary for travellers with a complete course of vaccinatio­n heading from the UK to France

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