Published On: Tue, Mar 18th, 2025
Education | 2,101 views

Foreign Office travel alert to UK tourists visiting France from October | Travel News | Travel

The UK Foreign Office has issued an alert to UK tourists visiting France from October this year amid a change in European Union (EU) travel rules.

A new Entry/Exit System (EES) is expected to start in October 2025 which will require British holidaymakers to register their fingerprints and a facial photo on arrival. The system applies to non-EU nationals visiting 29 countries in the Schengen Area, including popular tourist destinations like France, Spain, Portugal and Greece. The system was delayed in 2024 but is due to take effect later this year and will replace the current system of manually stamping passports with biometric data instead.

The UK Foreign Office updated its travel advice for France on March 17, 2025, warning UK tourists that the system is now expected to kick in from October.

It said: “The EU plans to introduce the Entry/Exit system (EES). This is a new digital border system that will change requirements for British nationals travelling to the Schengen area.

“If you are travelling to a country in the Schengen area using a UK passport, you will be required to register your biometric details, such as fingerprints or a photo, when you arrive. EES registration will replace the current system of manually stamping passports when visitors arrive in the EU. ​

“EES is expected to start in October 2025. It is not currently in operation. The European Union will inform about the specific start date of the EES before its launch.”

When the EES is introduced, travellers will need to create a digital record on their first visit to the Schengen area at the port or airport when they arrive, which will include submitting fingerprints and having a photo taken.

The Foreign Office warns holidaymakers may experience longer queues on arrival as the EES registration is completed, but added tourists don’t need to provide any information before travelling to a Schengen area.

The EES digital record will remain valid for three years, so if you visit a Schengen area again during this period you’ll only need to provide a fingerprint or photo at the border when you enter and exit.

The new system is designed to improve border security within the EU and its neighbouring countries by stopping visitors overstaying, and to reduce illegal migration within the Schengen area.

The EU says for the purpose of the EES, ‘non-EU national’ means a traveller not holding the nationality of any European Union country or the nationality of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway or Switzerland, and ‘short stay’ means up to 90 days within any 180-day period. This period is calculated as a single period for all the European countries using the EES.

Entries and exits, or entry refusals will be electronically registered in the EES, but in Cyprus and Ireland – despite being countries of the EU – passports will still be stamped manually.