UK New Entry Requirements 2026

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Anne Morris

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Key Takeaways

 

  • UK entry enforcement has tightened in 2026 through pre-travel checks.
  • ETA enforcement means permission or exemption is verified before boarding.
  • Proof requirements depend on the traveller’s status and category.
  • British and Irish citizens are ETA-exempt but still need recognised proof.
  • British citizens usually need a valid UK passport or Certificate of Entitlement.
  • Without accepted proof, airlines, ferry operators and rail carriers may refuse boarding.

 

UK entry has become far less forgiving in 2026.

From 25 February 2026, airlines, ferry operators and rail carriers are required to confirm permission or exemption before travel using automated checks alone. Where documentation or digital records do not align with what the system expects, travel can be refused, regardless of lawful status or past travel history.

British citizens, EU Settlement Scheme status holders, families and business travellers are increasingly being caught out by expired or incorrect passports, outdated digital accounts or relying on documents that are not acceptable for travel.

In this guide, we explain how UK entry requirements operate in 2026 and what these changes mean in practical terms for different types of nationality and immigration status.

If you have any questions about the UK entry requirements or how you need to prove your status when travelling to the UK, you can book a fixed-fee telephone consultation with one of our specialist advisers to discuss your circumstances and how to avoid refused boarding or entry issues.

SECTION GUIDE

 

Section A: UK border entry rules from February 2026

 

From February 2026, UK entry operates on a decisively pre-travel basis. The legal right to enter the UK has not been rewritten, but the way that right is checked and enforced has changed.

Airlines and other carriers such as ferry operators and rail carriers, are from 25 February 2026 required to confirm, before boarding, whether a passenger has permission to travel to the UK or is exempt from that requirement. As a result, decisions that were once resolved at the border are increasingly being made before a journey even begins.

The move is part of the expansion of automated screening and the wider rollout of Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) requirements for certain nationalities. ETAs are not the rule for everyone, but they are the enforcement mechanism that has moved checks upstream. Carrier systems now assess permission or exemption using document-based and digital verification, with limited tolerance for ambiguity. Where a traveller’s status or exemption cannot be verified in an accepted format, travel can fail at boarding rather than on arrival.

The practical consequence is that lawful status alone is no longer sufficient to guarantee smooth entry. What matters is whether that status can be evidenced in a way that carrier systems and UK border controls are designed to recognise. British citizens, Irish citizens, EU Settlement Scheme status holders, Right of Abode holders, visa nationals and non-visa nationals are all affected by this change in different ways. The common thread is proof. If the proof does not align with the system, discretion is minimal and explanations carry little weight.

Many of the problems now being reported are not the result of new legal restrictions. They arise from expired passports, mismatched documents, outdated digital records, reliance on certificates that are not travel documents, or assumptions based on how travel worked in the past. Families, frequent travellers and employers arranging business travel are particularly exposed because a single documentation issue can derail an entire itinerary.

 

DavidsonMorris Strategic Insight

 

The change in 2026 is fundamentally an evidential shift. There’s no change or movement in underlying immigration status or legal rights. What matters is being able to prove your status at the right time – when you’re boarding plane to the UK and at the UK border.

People who were previously able to travel to the UK using a different nationality passport, or who relied on carrier discretion when boarding, can no longer do that once these stricter permission-to-travel checks are fully enforced from 25 February 2026.

 

 

 

Section B: How pre-travel checks and carrier enforcement work

 

The most significant practical change to UK entry in 2026 is not who has a right to enter, but who makes the decision and when. Entry checks are now carried out primarily before travel, with airlines and other carriers required to confirm that a passenger has permission to travel to the UK, or is exempt from that requirement, before boarding takes place.

This obligation sits with the carrier, not the Border Force officer at the airport. Carriers face financial penalties and operational consequences if they transport passengers who do not hold the correct permission or cannot be verified through the relevant systems. As a result, carriers apply a cautious, document-led approach and will refuse boarding where the position is unclear or cannot be confirmed automatically.

Pre-travel checks rely heavily on automated systems. For travellers who require an Electronic Travel Authorisation, the system checks whether a valid ETA is linked to the passport being used. For travellers who are exempt, such as British citizens, Irish citizens or EU Settlement Scheme status holders, the system checks whether that exemption can be recognised based on the document or digital record presented. Where the system cannot confirm permission or exemption, carriers are not expected to exercise judgement or investigate further.

There is little discretion built into this model. Carriers are not permitted to assess immigration history, review supporting evidence or accept explanations at check-in. Certificates, screenshots, emails or assurances about status do not substitute for recognised proof. If the documentation or digital record does not align with what the system expects, boarding will usually be refused, even where the traveller is lawfully entitled to enter the UK.

This explains why travel disruption is increasingly happening before departure rather than at the UK border. Problems that might previously have been resolved through questioning on arrival are now stopping journeys altogether. For travellers and employers, the risk point has moved earlier, making preparation and document accuracy central to successful travel.

 

DavidsonMorris Strategic Insight

 

Under the stricter regime, carriers have effectively become the gatekeepers to UK entry. If you don’t pass the permission to travel check, you’re likely to be refused boarding. Carrier staff are only permitted to rely on the information available to them through the system at the point of boarding. If there are issues with that information, or if you’re not travelling with the correct, accepted form of proof for your status, there’s no scope to explain the position or to use alternative evidence. Boarding will be refused, and you’ll need to take steps to correct the issue before you can reattempt travel. Usually this will involve getting the correct form of evidence, such as a Certificate of Entitlement.

 

 

 

Section C: ETA requirements and exemptions in 2026

 

From February 2026, the UK entry system distinguishes sharply between travellers who require an Electronic Travel Authorisation and those who are exempt, but that distinction only works where the exemption can be verified before travel. Understanding how ETA requirements and exemptions operate together is central to avoiding disruption.

An ETA is a digital travel permission linked to a passport and required by certain non-UK nationals who do not need a visa for short stays. It does not replace a visa and it does not guarantee entry. It allows a carrier to confirm that the traveller has permission to travel to the UK so that the journey can proceed to the border for an entry decision.

Some travellers are exempt from ETA requirements, including British citizens, Irish citizens, people with status under the EU Settlement Scheme and individuals who hold the Right of Abode. Exemption does not remove checks. It changes what the system looks for. Instead of confirming the presence of an ETA, carrier systems look for recognised proof that an exemption applies.

This is where many travellers encounter difficulty. Exemption only operates where it can be verified automatically using the passport, identity document or digital record being presented for travel. If the document does not match the system, has expired, or is not the one linked to the traveller’s status, the exemption may not be recognised in practice. When that happens, the system does not default to discretion. It defaults to refusal.

ETA requirements and exemptions therefore sit within the same enforcement framework. Both rely on document accuracy and system recognition rather than explanation or intent. Whether a traveller needs an ETA or relies on an exemption, the practical question in 2026 is the same: can the carrier verify permission or exemption before boarding using the document being used for travel.

 

DavidsonMorris Strategic Insight

 

Being ETA-exempt doesn’t mean you’re free from checks or that any form of immunity applies. All travellers to the UK now need to prove their status. It’s just a matter of what form of proof is accepted.

Exemptions still require alternative evidence that can be recognised and verified by the system. This is why British citizens, Irish citizens and EU Settlement Scheme status holders are being affected despite not needing an ETA.

 

 

 

Section D: UK entry requirements by traveller type

 

UK entry requirements in 2026 apply differently depending on a traveller’s status, but the underlying enforcement model is the same. Permission or exemption is assessed before travel, using document-based or digital verification. Where the correct proof is not available or cannot be matched by the system, disruption is likely regardless of the traveller’s underlying rights. The categories below highlight how this plays out in practice and where the most common risks arise.

 

Traveller typeEntry position in 2026Key proof requirementMain risk if not met
British citizensNo ETA required, automatic right of entryValid British passport or Certificate of EntitlementRefused boarding due to unrecognised proof
Irish citizensNo ETA or visa under Common Travel AreaIrish passport or passport cardDelay or refusal if nationality cannot be verified
Dual British citizensNo ETA where British citizenship is recognisedBritish passport or Certificate of EntitlementExemption not applied when travelling on foreign passport
EU citizens with EUSS statusNo ETA where digital status is verifiedAccurate UKVI digital status linked to passportRefused boarding due to account mismatch
Right of Abode holdersNo ETA where Right of Abode is evidencedCertificate of Entitlement in valid foreign passportRefused boarding if certificate or passport is invalid
Visa nationalsVisa required before travelValid visa linked to passportRefused boarding due to missing or expired visa
Non-visa nationals and visitorsETA required for short visitsValid ETA linked to passportRefused boarding if ETA is missing or incorrect

 

 

1. British citizens

 

Many refusals now involve British citizens who assumed citizenship status would resolve issues on arrival. While British citizens do not need an ETA and have an automatic right to enter the UK, in practice, entry depends on travelling with a valid British passport or a valid Certificate of Entitlement to the Right of Abode endorsed in a foreign passport. Naturalisation or registration certificates, expired passports and foreign passports on their own are not accepted for travel.

 

2. Irish citizens

 

Irish citizens continue to benefit from Common Travel Area rights and do not require an ETA or visa to enter the UK. However, carriers still need to be satisfied as to nationality before boarding. In practice, this usually means travelling on a valid Irish passport or passport card. Where nationality cannot be verified to the carrier’s satisfaction, boarding may be delayed or refused despite CTA rights.

 

3. Dual British citizens

 

Dual British citizens are particularly exposed to the 2026 enforcement model. Travelling on a non-UK passport without recognised proof of British citizenship can prevent the ETA exemption from being applied, even though the individual is British in law. This commonly affects travellers who habitually use a foreign passport and are unaware of the implications.

 

4. EU citizens with EU Settlement Scheme status

 

EU citizens with pre-settled or settled status rely on digital status rather than physical documents. Entry depends on the UKVI system being able to verify that status against the passport or identity document being used for travel. Where account details are outdated or do not match the travel document, carriers may be unable to confirm permission to travel. The Home Office has issued specific warnings on this point.

 

5. Right of Abode holders

 

People who hold the Right of Abode but do not travel on a British passport need to rely on a Certificate of Entitlement endorsed in a valid foreign passport. The certificate and the passport should both be valid at the time of travel. Where either has expired or is not presented, carriers may refuse boarding.

 

6. Visa nationals

 

Visa nationals continue to require a valid visa to enter the UK. An ETA does not replace a visa and does not create entry permission where a visa is required. Carriers will check that the correct visa is linked to the passport being used for travel and may refuse boarding where visa details are missing, expired or inconsistent.

 

7. Non-visa nationals and visitors

 

Non-visa nationals who previously travelled without advance permission now generally require an ETA for short visits. The ETA is checked before boarding and must be linked to the passport being used. Failure to obtain an ETA, or travelling on a different passport, will usually result in refused boarding. Visitor permission is still assessed on arrival.

 

 

DavidsonMorris Strategic Insight

 

The new system is more likely to catch out ordinary travellers than those with complex circumstances. People with complicated immigration or nationality histories are more likely to seek advice and check they have the correct proof before travelling, while travellers who’ve previously entered the UK without issue, and who hold full status, may assume nothing has changed. That’s now a risky assumption. Under the new regime, those travellers still need to take action to check they have the correct form of proof and to apply for whatever documentation is required before travel.

 

 

 

Section E: Common UK entry issues

 

Refused boarding and last-minute travel disruption are becoming more common in 2026 not because UK entry rights have been withdrawn, but because the enforcement model has changed. Entry decisions are now driven by pre-travel checks carried out by carriers using automated systems, with far less scope for discretion or correction once a journey has started.

Under this model, carriers are required to confirm permission or exemption before boarding. Where the system cannot verify that position, the safest operational response for the carrier is to refuse travel. That outcome is often triggered by issues that travellers previously regarded as minor, such as using a different passport, travelling with an expired document, failing to update a digital record, or relying on certificates that are not designed for travel.

Another factor is the collapse of informal problem-solving at the airport. Border Force officers no longer act as the first point of decision for many travellers. Explanations, supporting paperwork and assurances about lawful status are not part of the carrier’s assessment. If the document or digital status presented does not align with what the system expects, the journey ends before departure.

This development has caught out travellers who have relied on past experience to judge risk. British citizens who have always entered the UK without issue, EU citizens with long-standing residence rights, families travelling together, and employers arranging short-notice business travel are all discovering that lawful status alone does not prevent disruption. What matters is whether the right to enter can be verified automatically at the point the carrier is required to make a decision.

As UK entry controls continue to operate on a proof-based, pre-travel footing, refused boarding is likely to remain a feature rather than an exception. The practical response is preparation. Travellers and employers who treat documentation, passport choice and digital status accuracy as central to travel planning are far less likely to encounter disruption than those who assume issues can be resolved later in the journey.

 

DavidsonMorris Strategic Insight

 

Refused boarding is now an expected outcome, not an exception, because the system has been deliberately designed to remove any discretion or human override. Travellers are going to bear the cost of this trade-off between certainty and flexibility.

The only viable response is prevention. You need to ensure you have the correct proof of status and the correct travel document before you travel, because issues can’t be resolved at the airport.

 

 

 

Section F: Summary

 

UK entry requirements in 2026 are defined less by changes to legal status and more by changes to how those rules are enforced. Entry decisions are now made earlier in the journey, with carriers required to confirm permission or exemption before boarding using automated, document-based checks. Where that confirmation cannot be made, travel is likely to fail regardless of the traveller’s underlying rights.

The rollout of Electronic Travel Authorisation requirements for certain nationalities has accelerated this shift, but ETAs are only part of the picture. British citizens, Irish citizens, EU Settlement Scheme status holders, Right of Abode holders, visa nationals and visitors are all affected by the same enforcement model. The difference lies in what proof is required and whether it can be verified in the format the system expects.

Most travel disruption now arises from avoidable issues, such as expired passports, mismatched documents, outdated digital records or reliance on certificates that are not designed for travel. The common mistake is assuming that lawful status will resolve problems at the airport. In a proof-based system, that assumption no longer holds.

Understanding the UK’s new entry framework means identifying which category a traveller falls into, confirming what evidence is required for that category, and ensuring that documentation and digital records are aligned before travel. Where that preparation is done properly, most of the disruption now being reported can be avoided.

 

 

Section G: Need assistance?

 

If you are unsure how the UK’s new entry requirements apply to your situation, or if you or your staff have experienced delays or refused boarding when travelling, taking advice before travel can help avoid unnecessary disruption and cost.

This is particularly relevant for families travelling together, EU Settlement Scheme status holders relying on digital records, dual nationals choosing which passport to use, and employers arranging short-notice business travel. Small documentation issues can now derail entire itineraries, with little opportunity to fix problems once travel has begun.

Our advisers can assess your circumstances, confirm what proof or permission is required for UK entry in 2026, and identify any risks before bookings are made. Fixed-fee telephone consultations are available for individuals and employers who need clarity in a proof-based border system.

 

 

Section H: FAQs

 

What has actually changed with UK entry requirements in 2026?

The underlying immigration rules have not been rewritten, but how they are enforced has changed. Entry checks are now carried out before travel, with carriers required to confirm permission or exemption using automated systems rather than relying on decisions at the border.

 

Why are airlines refusing boarding more often?

Airlines are legally responsible for ensuring passengers have permission to travel. If the system cannot verify a traveller’s permission or exemption using the document or digital record presented, the airline will usually refuse boarding rather than risk penalties.

 

Do all travellers need an Electronic Travel Authorisation?

No. Some travellers require an ETA, while others are exempt. British and Irish citizens, EU Settlement Scheme status holders and Right of Abode holders do not need an ETA, but their exemption still has to be verified before travel.

 

If I am exempt from ETA, does that mean no checks apply?

No. Exemption changes what the system checks for, not whether checks take place. Carriers still need to verify that an exemption applies, using recognised documents or digital records.

 

Why can’t issues be resolved at the airport anymore?

Decisions are now made earlier in the journey. Carriers are not permitted to investigate status, review evidence or accept explanations. If permission or exemption cannot be confirmed before boarding, the journey usually ends there.

 

What causes most UK entry problems in practice?

Common issues include expired passports, travelling on the wrong passport, outdated UKVI digital records, mismatched document details and reliance on certificates that are not travel documents.

 

Are families and children affected by these changes?

Yes. Children are subject to the same proof requirements as adults. If one family member does not have the correct documentation or digital record, the entire trip can be disrupted.

 

How can travellers reduce the risk of disruption?

Travellers should confirm which category they fall into, check what proof or permission is required for that category, and ensure passports, visas or digital records are accurate and valid before travel is booked.

 

 

Section I: Glossary

 

 

TermMeaning
Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA)A digital travel permission required by certain non-UK nationals before travelling to the UK. It is linked to a passport and checked by carriers before boarding, but it does not guarantee entry.
Carrier liabilityA legal obligation on airlines and other carriers to ensure passengers have permission or exemption to enter the UK. Where this cannot be verified, carriers may refuse boarding to avoid penalties.
Pre-travel checksImmigration checks carried out before departure rather than on arrival, requiring carriers to confirm a traveller’s permission or exemption using automated systems.
ETA exemptionA status that removes the need for an ETA, applying to certain travellers such as British citizens, Irish citizens, EUSS status holders and Right of Abode holders, provided the exemption can be verified.
EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS)A scheme granting digital immigration status to eligible EU, EEA and Swiss citizens and their family members, replacing physical residence documents.
eVisaA digital record of UK immigration status held in a UKVI account, used to prove permission to enter or stay in the UK instead of a physical document.
Right of AbodeA right allowing a person to enter, live and work in the UK without immigration restriction, usually evidenced by a British passport or a Certificate of Entitlement.
Certificate of EntitlementAn endorsement placed in a foreign passport confirming the holder’s Right of Abode in the UK, used where a British passport is not held.
Visa nationalA person who must obtain a UK visa before travelling, regardless of visit length, and cannot rely on an ETA instead of a visa.
Non-visa nationalA person who does not require a visa for short visits to the UK but may still need an ETA before travel under the 2026 entry system.

 

 

Section J: Additional resources and links

 

 

ResourceDescriptionLink
UK Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA)Official guidance on the UK ETA scheme, including who needs an ETA, how to apply and how it is checked before travel.https://www.gov.uk/guidance/apply-for-an-electronic-travel-authorisation-eta
Check if you need a UK visaGOV.UK tool to confirm whether a visa or other permission is required for your nationality and purpose of travel.https://www.gov.uk/check-uk-visa
Visit the UK as a Standard VisitorOfficial visitor route guidance, including permitted activities and key conditions that affect entry decisions on arrival.https://www.gov.uk/standard-visitor
Entering the UKGOV.UK overview of the UK border process and what travellers should expect when entering the UK.https://www.gov.uk/uk-border-control
Prove your immigration statusService for viewing and proving digital immigration status, including share codes for employers and other checks.https://www.gov.uk/view-prove-immigration-status
Update your UKVI account detailsService for updating passport or identity document details linked to a UKVI account, including eVisas and EUSS status.https://www.gov.uk/update-uk-visas-immigration-account-details
Updates on the move to eVisasHome Office updates on the move to digital status, including practical implications for travellers and status holders.https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/updates-on-the-move-to-evisas/updates-on-the-move-to-evisas
EU Settlement Scheme overviewOfficial guidance on EUSS status, including how status is held digitally and what status holders should do to keep details current.https://www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-citizens-families
Apply for a Certificate of Entitlement to the Right of AbodeOfficial Home Office guidance on applying for a Certificate of Entitlement, used to evidence the Right of Abode in a foreign passport.https://www.gov.uk/right-of-abode/apply-for-a-certificate-of-entitlement
Apply for or renew a British passportOfficial guidance on applying for, renewing or replacing a British passport, including applications from outside the UK.https://www.gov.uk/apply-renew-passport
Foreign travel adviceGOV.UK travel advice hub, including entry requirements and document expectations that can affect boarding and travel planning.https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice
Common Travel AreaOfficial overview of Common Travel Area arrangements affecting travel between the UK, Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man.https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/common-travel-area-guidance

 

About our Expert

Picture of Anne Morris

Anne Morris

Founder and Managing Director Anne Morris is a fully qualified solicitor and trusted adviser to large corporates through to SMEs, providing strategic immigration and global mobility advice to support employers with UK operations to meet their workforce needs through corporate immigration.She is recognised by Legal 500 and Chambers as a legal expert and delivers Board-level advice on business migration and compliance risk management as well as overseeing the firm’s development of new client propositions and delivery of cost and time efficient processing of applications.Anne is an active public speaker, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals.
Picture of Anne Morris

Anne Morris

Founder and Managing Director Anne Morris is a fully qualified solicitor and trusted adviser to large corporates through to SMEs, providing strategic immigration and global mobility advice to support employers with UK operations to meet their workforce needs through corporate immigration.She is recognised by Legal 500 and Chambers as a legal expert and delivers Board-level advice on business migration and compliance risk management as well as overseeing the firm’s development of new client propositions and delivery of cost and time efficient processing of applications.Anne is an active public speaker, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals.

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Legal Disclaimer

The matters contained in this article are intended to be for general information purposes only. This article does not constitute legal advice, nor is it a complete or authoritative statement of the law, and should not be treated as such. Whilst every effort is made to ensure that the information is correct at the time of writing, no warranty, express or implied, is given as to its accuracy and no liability is accepted for any error or omission. Before acting on any of the information contained herein, expert legal advice should be sought.