UK set to allow quarantine-free travel for the fully vaccinated
Vaccination will remove the need for isolation on return from over 150 'amber list' countries.
Boris Johnson’s government is preparing to allow Britons who have been fully vaccinated against coronavirus to travel to more than 150 countries without the need to quarantine on their return to England later this summer.
Officials expect the new policy to be signed off by government in the next few days, paving the way for the reopening of international journeys to popular destinations in Europe and the U.S.
But the change is unlikely to come into force before August, and ministers are expected to keep a tight limit on the number of destinations on the so-called green list for quarantine-free travel when they provide an update this week.
Final decisions on the quarantine policy and the green list have not yet been taken inside government, and both will be subject to scientific advice on the status of the pandemic.
Brighter skies
“The whole point of the vaccine program is to be able to remove restrictions,” Health Secretary Matt Hancock told LBC radio on Tuesday.
“We are working on a plan for double vaccinated people, using tests and to have that testing regime in place instead of having to have the quarantine in some circumstances.”
The aviation and tourism industry has been hammered since the start of the pandemic, after governments were forced to close down international leisure travel to try to stop passengers importing the virus.
A campaign from the travel industry is expected to be stepped up on Wednesday, amid warnings that up to 218,000 jobs are at risk from the ongoing restrictions.
‘Traffic light’ system
The U.K. government currently codes foreign destinations in a so-called traffic light system based on assessments of pandemic risk, including vaccination and infection rates.
The safest countries are on the “green list,” and passengers arriving in England from them do not need to quarantine.
People arriving from 167 destinations on the amber list are required to quarantine at home for 10 days and take tests after arriving, while those landing from red list countries – rated the worst-hit by Covid – must quarantine in a hotel.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is expected to publish an update to the lists on Thursday, though officials do not expect him to announce any major expansion of the list of safest countries.
The government is also due to give an update on rule changes, including exemptions for people who have been fully vaccinated, and this could also come on Thursday or on June 28, officials said.
Johnson said Monday ministers will be examining how to give more freedom to vaccinated travelers, but warned “this is going to be, whatever happens, a difficult year for travel” with disruption and delays likely to continue.
“The priority has got to be keeping the country safe and to stop the virus coming back in,” he said.
This article is published under license from Bloomberg Media: the original article can be viewed here