How Someone Else Can Apply for ETIAS on Your Behalf
When ETIAS launches, you will not need to submit the application yourself. A trusted person or travel agent can do it on your behalf — but there are important safeguards to follow.
When ETIAS launches, you will not need to submit the application yourself. A trusted person or travel agent can do it on your behalf — but there are important safeguards to follow.
ETIAS is still a future step for UK travellers, but the shape of the system is already clear. The key is to understand what information the EU plans to collect, what the permit will cost, and why the official timeline matters more than speculation.
ETIAS has drawn heavy attention, but UK travellers do not need to rush into applications or unofficial websites. The immediate priority is understanding that ETIAS depends on EES and that only confirmed official information should shape travel plans.
The EU's revised border-tech timetable made one point clear: ETIAS could not start on its own. Before travellers would need the new online authorisation, the Entry/Exit System had to be built and operating first.
Misinformation about ETIAS is widespread. From which countries require it to how long it is valid, many common claims are simply wrong. Here are seven myths — and the facts behind them.
As the EU's Entry/Exit System approached launch, one point stood out: not every Schengen country would begin at the same level of readiness. Estonia's full preparation made it an important signal of how the first phase of rollout would work in practice.
The update moved the debate from theory to timetable: some travellers would encounter EES from 12 October 2025, while the full border rollout would continue into April 2026. It also pointed to a later ETIAS launch with a higher fee than previously planned.
A long-running uncertainty over Europe's next border systems narrowed in mid-2025 when the EU set a firm EES start date and confirmed a higher ETIAS fee. For UK travellers, the change meant more clarity on timing, but not a simpler border process.
As the EU's Entry/Exit System approached launch, traveller concerns shifted from the headline to the practical details. The key issues were not only when EES would start, but how passport stamping, biometric checks, eGates and transit rules would work in everyday journeys.
Before the planned 2024 launch of the EU's Entry/Exit System, ABTA's message was clear: travellers needed to expect a new border routine, not just another headline. The biggest early change was the first-time registration process, which was expected to slow some crossings before the system settled in.