TOURISTS travelling to the South of Cyprus must pay to enter the island next year after an EU decision subjecting all third-country nationals to a visa waiver fee.
Under the European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS), charges are expected to be enacted in May 2023.
Plans to introduce a visa waiver security check will mean travellers must apply to enter the Schengen zone – which includes most EU nations in mainland Europe and pay a fee before travelling.
ETIAS affects UK travellers as, since Brexit, they are considered third-country citizens. The visa waiver will apply to travellers aged between 18-70. It is expected to cost around £6 or €7.
This will mean that while UK passport holders do not need a visa to visit EU Schengen zone countries as tourists, they can be turned away at the border if their ETIAS application is not approved before their trip.
The EU commission says a form should take 10 minutes to fill. Applicants will need a passport or equivalent document to apply.
According to its website: “The system will conduct checks against EU information systems for borders and security and, in the vast majority of cases, issue a travel authorisation within minutes.
“The ETIAS travel authorisation will be a mandatory pre-condition for entry to the Schengen area. It will be checked together with the travel documents by the border guards when crossing the EU border.”