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-   -   Documents to be presented upon arrival in France. (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/documents-to-be-presented-upon-arrival-in-france-1697436/)

devops7954 May 18th, 2021 12:24 AM


Originally Posted by BritishCaicos (Post 17242771)
RialtoGrl

That's pretty much what I experienced last month.
At the height of the Covid restrictions and post Brexit I was required to carry 12 separate documents. On entry, immigration officers only wanted to see two - a negative Covid test and my passport. Haven't said that , there's no way I would suggest winging it and not taking the required documents, entry always seems to be down to the discretion of each officer.

Yep, going to wait and see when this becomes a bit easier before heading there.

Sarastro May 18th, 2021 04:27 AM

Just to point out that this law was not in effect last month, so experiences before 1 May may not be indicative of what the future may hold. Additionally, I understand that any police official may ask for these items at any time, not just when you pass through border control.

It's just too early to know the full impact. This might turn out to be similar to the IDP requirement when driving. IDP´s were only recently required in France, within the last few years. Much has been written about IDPs on travels forums, but I have never heard of anyone being asked for one by the police.

rialtogrl May 18th, 2021 06:20 AM

On that webpage it says you need to show you have 65 euros per day after hotel. Just carry the documents or have them on your phone. The title is a bit misleading here, maybe they will ask, maybe not.

StuDudley May 18th, 2021 07:00 AM

I still don't know what papers I need to carry to verity the 65E per day stuff. My bank/brokerage account statement, my credit card statement showing the credit card credit amount remaining, or do I need to carry cash???? And the travel insurance? Do I show them the 5 page document that indicates my Medicare coverage in Europe. I can just see me standing in line at immigration at CDG with 2,000 people in front of me in the same line. And if I bring the wrong document - do they deny me entry?

Stu Dudley

BritishCaicos May 18th, 2021 07:52 AM

E65?

You can't get a decent bottle of Bordeaux for that.

kerouac May 18th, 2021 08:51 AM

And so the snobism begins.... My decent Bordeaux starts at about 6 euros at Monoprix.

Fra_Diavolo May 18th, 2021 09:20 AM


Originally Posted by kerouac (Post 17242900)
And so the snobism begins.... My decent Bordeaux starts at about 6 euros at Monoprix.

Wow. How much for a decent Burgundy?

BritishCaicos May 18th, 2021 09:32 AM


Originally Posted by kerouac (Post 17242900)
And so the snobism begins.... My decent Bordeaux starts at about 6 euros at Monoprix.

It was a joke!


balthy May 18th, 2021 10:56 AM

A credit card is usually sufficient to prove that you have financial means.

And yes, it is my experience as well travelling during these times is that you have printed lots of documents and then no one asks for them (eg legal reason to leave the UK, no one asked anything, COVID test to enter DK, no one asked for the test certificate but they made you take an antigen test at the airport on arrival) and then you get asked for something that you didn't know you had to have (eg receipt for the UK's day 2 & 8 tests, booking ref was not enough apparently so had to fumble thru my credit card statement on my iphone looking for proof of payment).

Coquelicot May 19th, 2021 10:18 AM

How is this going to work for visitors coming from the US to France via Iceland ? Passengers enter the Schengen zone in Iceland, which believe me is a cakewalk compared to the passport control lines at CDG. In the past we haven't gone through any further formalities when we reached CDG. We just got off the plane and headed directly to the luggage carousels.

I can't see Iceland doing France's border checks for them, so is it likely TCNs coming to France from elsewhere in the Schengen zone will be interviewed on arrival at CDG?

I'm not taking this too seriously. By the time we get to France it will all have shaken out. But it does cause us to start thinking: Icelandair or Air France? Which is less of a hassle?

Fishnlines29 May 19th, 2021 12:27 PM

Wow, thanks for this note. I guess more research is needed on how to prove funds.

What health insurance do people prefer to enter/meet the EU requirement?

thanks

gooster May 19th, 2021 02:31 PM

They seem to have left out several accommodation situations, most notably, what if your accommodations is your own secondary residence, but you are not staying beyond your Schengen limits (for a residence permit or other type of VISA)? I reviewed the link in french, but it seemed only to cover hosted stays. Do I bring my habitation tax bill? Executed acte de vente? Get an attestation from the Mairie without entering the country?


tomboy May 19th, 2021 05:02 PM


Originally Posted by chrisgeorge0662 (Post 17243379)
I think france is not a good country

-1

Leely2 May 19th, 2021 06:20 PM

Oh the aggrievement. Oh the humanity.

Sarastro May 19th, 2021 10:41 PM


Originally Posted by gooster (Post 17243383)
Do I bring my habitation tax bill? Executed acte de vente? Get an attestation from the Mairie without entering the country?

You keep a copy of your taxe d´habitation. An acte de vente doesn´t prove anything in reference to where you stay.

rialtogrl May 19th, 2021 10:41 PM

Do you know about the wayback machine internet archive? There are snapshots of this page going back to August 2018. These requirements have been there. The health insurance requirement is fairly new (2020?) It came in after Covid started I bet.
The August 2018 snapshot:
https://tinyurl.com/8f99wncz

this is all much ado about nothing...certainly bring paperwork or have things available on your phone if you feel more comfortable but it’s not new and unless you look like a hobo probably no one will ask for anything.

Sarastro May 20th, 2021 12:32 AM

My post of 17 May links to the changes dated 16 December 2020, effective 1 May 2021.

rialtogrl May 20th, 2021 01:32 AM

I read an article in the Guardian this morning about this. Because British citizens are now third country nationals, it is new for them. Maybe that it is why it is news. https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...brexit-changes

Christina May 24th, 2021 07:42 AM

Proving financial means isn't that difficult, no need to get out all your retirement account statements, it is financial means to last your trip, not for the rest of your life or for moving there. Generally, it's around 125 euro per day, I think. Copy of a recent bank statement showing enough balance should do it. I don't know how credit cards work as you'd have to prove your limit, but maybe they are loose on that and think any credit card is ok.

However, these are the official rules that make it clear, I imagine they would be the same for France specifically in this case.

https://www.schengenvisainfo.com/sch...s-subsistence/

Michael May 25th, 2021 08:29 AM


Originally Posted by gooster (Post 17243383)
They seem to have left out several accommodation situations, most notably, what if your accommodations is your own secondary residence, but you are not staying beyond your Schengen limits (for a residence permit or other type of VISA)? I reviewed the link in french, but it seemed only to cover hosted stays. Do I bring my habitation tax bill? Executed acte de vente? Get an attestation from the Mairie without entering the country?

Just one bank statement showing a payment for utilities.


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