The Mail on Sunday

Your ticket to sun, safaris and surfing

-

EVERY week, our Holiday Hero NEIL SIMPSON takes an in-depth look at a brilliant holiday topic, doing all the legwork so you don’t have to. This week: Long-stay visas for adventurou­s tourists.

DO YOU dream of spending more than just a week or two exploring the bustling cities, beautiful coasts and wild interiors of a vast, ancient country such as Thailand?

Would you like to spend a few months visiting the farmers’ markets and waterside restaurant­s of sunny Cape Town? Or to really take your time experienci­ng life amid the skyscraper­s and shopping malls of Dubai? Then the new generation of long-stay tourist visas are worth a look.

Thailand is leading the pack. For just £30, it’s doubling the former 30-day maximum stay to encourage visitors to really get to grips with the country and its culture.

The idea is that travellers can start off slowly, exploring the golden temples and palaces, the reclining Buddhas and madcap markets of Bangkok before heading out to tour the country’s interior and islands at their leisure.

A top tip is to make for the Khao Sok National Park, where you can hike through some of the oldest evergreen forests on the planet before taking a boat ride past jagged peaks of rock rising almost vertically out of the ocean.

With a long- stay visa in your passport, you can also bide your time on a Thai safari, waiting for wild elephants to stride by.

South Africa’s long-stay tourist visa is even more generous for travellers who are not in a hurry to return home.

It now gives up to 90 days to explore the country – from the wine lands around Table Mountain and the surfing beaches of Durban to the arty, urban scene in Johannesbu­rg. Better still, while visitors need to show a negative Covid test to enter South Africa, there is no quarantine on arrival.

Dubai in the United Arab Emirates is also getting in on the act with extended tourist visas that can last up to 90 days for about £150.

Alternativ­ely, get a tour firm to help you find a perfect long-stay break. Co-op Travel, Jet2holida­ys and Saga all have specialist department­s for those who prefer not to holiday on a hurry.

Experts say that as well as the chance to get to know a destinatio­n properly, a long-stay holiday can offer great value. A deep discount can normally be negotiated with a hotel or apartment, and escaping tourist traps and using local supermarke­ts and restaurant­s will also make holiday money go further.

Perhaps surprising­ly, the one part of the world where long-stay holidays are set to get harder is Europe – and that’s before the news t hat we may be denied entry altogether due to our high Covid count. From New Year’s Day, countries in the Schengen area, which include tourist favourites France, Spain, Italy, Portugal and Greece, will limit the number of days sun- loving Britons can spend there visa-free.

The new rules set the maximum stay at 90 days in any six-month period, and it will have implicatio­ns for those who like to escape the gloomy British winter by spending our coldest months golfing on the Algarve or relaxing on Spanish beaches. Do that for the first (and coldest) three months of 2021 and the new rules mean you will not be able to enter any Schengen country again (even for a day trip) till July.

Get informatio­n on the new rules by searching ‘entry requiremen­ts’ for any country at gov.uk.

 ??  ?? RIDING THE WAVES: A three-month stay in South Africa could see you surfing off the beaches of Durban
RIDING THE WAVES: A three-month stay in South Africa could see you surfing off the beaches of Durban

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom