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-   -   Questions on my First international Trip (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/questions-on-my-first-international-trip-1724347/)

Starman32 Jul 30th, 2024 09:15 PM

Questions on my First international Trip
 
This will be my first time traveling international, I am from the US and have friend that lives in Luxembourg currently and want to tour the country and plan to visit Germany and Belgium. Planning on mid-October.
  1. What is the best place to get plane tickets?
  2. When going through immigration, what questions do they usually ask?
  3. Are there any recommended credit cards international that would be good for international travel?
  4. Do you recommended using an international pass plan or getting a eSIM for calling?
  5. I have some medications that I take, taking the pill bottle with the label of what it is and doctor information is good enough or do I need something more from the doctor?
  6. I would go through immigration at my final destination which would be Luxembourg since I have one stop in Paris first.
  7. When returning to the US, is it the first airport destination that will be going through immigration? In my case, it is Chicago before going to a smaller airport which would be my final stop. Read about the CBP Declaration Form 6059B, there anything else?

Sorry for all the questions :)

bilboburgler Jul 30th, 2024 09:41 PM

immigration questions.

What is your purpose for being here? say 20% of the time
Where are you staying? say 5% of the time
Do you have a return ticket? say 1% of the time
Do you have enough money? say 1/2% of the time

Going through immigration place. It depends on where you technically enter Shengen. So if your flight to Paris is followed by a train to Luxembourg. Then Paris. If your flight to Paris is followed by a Domestic flight to Luxembourg (most likely). Then Paris. If your flight to Paris is followed by an International flight to Luxembourg. Then Luxembourg. But at the end of the day it doesn't matter. You just do it. You walk up to a person, you smile, you hand them your passport (open at the face page) and you wait for them to decide your fate.

Medication. I take a stock of all medication for any holiday with me in my on board bag, so it can never get lost. I also have a prescription APP which I can show to any Doctor or Pharmacist if I need replacement. I don't know how your system works but access to a prescription would be sensible.

Welcome to Fodors

janisj Jul 30th, 2024 11:16 PM

Welcome. Just very quick - "6. I would go through immigration at my final destination which would be Luxembourg since I have one stop in Paris first.flying from the States." No, you will go through Immigration the first time you set foot in Schengen (in this case that would be Paris). It makes no difference how you travel onward. .

But I am a bit confused because you ask where to buy your plane tickets . . . but if you haven't booked the flights how do you know you will land in Paris first?? Flights from various cities in the US and on to Luxembourg can connect in lots of different cities - London, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdam, Zurich and others.

hetismij2 Jul 31st, 2024 01:45 AM

You will go through immigration - passport control - in Paris as your point of entry into Schengen, regardless of how you are going on to Luxembourg, if that is where you land first. You will go through customs in Luxembourg if you fly there, assuming you are on the same ticket and it is a straight transfer, not two tickets when you need to reclaim any bags for the next flight, but customs is a non event. If you land in London first, ie a non Schengen country, you will go through immigration and customs in Luxembourg.

Depending on your medication you may need something from the doctor to allow you to import it not all medication available in the US is legal in the EU. You can check this with your doctor or look online.

Returning to the US you will go though immigration and customs at your first point of arrival.

If you already have a credit card it will work just fine - you may have to let them know you are travelling abroad, ditto your bank since you can use you bank card to get cash at an ATM.

It depends oon how much you plan on using your phone whether an e-Sim or an international plan is better for you. I expect you can use your friends WiFi most of the time, and any hotels you stay in will normally also offer free WiFi, so it would only be needed for when out and about. You can use the GPS function without connecting to the internet - set the phone to airplane mode to be sure it doesn't accidentally connect.

Public transport within Luxembourg is free.

Melnq8 Jul 31st, 2024 05:48 AM

Buy your plane tickets directly from an airline, avoid third party sites.

Your existing credit card will be fine. Just be sure your transactions are charged in the currency of the country you are visiting, not the currency of the country you are from (which I assume is the US). Do the same when using an ATM. Otherwise you'll be paying much more - this practice is called dynamic currency conversion - look it up.

If you plan to travel internationally more in the future, you might consider getting a Schwab debit card - they will refund ATM fees up to a set amount per month.

k_marie Jul 31st, 2024 06:09 AM

If your cell phone carrier is t-Mobile, verify the details of your plan. We travel in North America and Europe with no need for additional plan or SIM card.

Madam397 Jul 31st, 2024 07:53 AM

Yes always book direct with the airline rather than a third party. If there are issues, the airline will give priority to those who have booked directly. To check flight schedules and pricing, I usually use Kayak to check and once I make my decision, I go directly to the airline. That said for me I try to book Delta and now JetBlue with additional European flights to gain points but points no longer give you the benefits they used to provide, so you might consider the best schedule and pricing as priority.

Starman32 Jul 31st, 2024 10:26 AM


Originally Posted by janisj (Post 17585557)
Welcome. Just very quick - "6. I would go through immigration at my final destination which would be Luxembourg since I have one stop in Paris first.flying from the States." No, you will go through Immigration the first time you set foot in Schengen (in this case that would be Paris). It makes no difference how you travel onward. .

But I am a bit confused because you ask where to buy your plane tickets . . . but if you haven't booked the flights how do you know you will land in Paris first?? Flights from various cities in the US and on to Luxembourg can connect in lots of different cities - London, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdam, Zurich and others.

My apologies on the confusing, i am looking at plane tickets through Unitled, one that I am thinking of going with is going through Paris and was just checking if there are better sites out there, the ones I looked at or either going to stop at Paris or Frankfurt.

Thanks for replying 🙂

hetismij2 Jul 31st, 2024 10:47 AM

From Frankfurt you can get a bus direct to Luxembourg city, or the train for not much more, though that involves changing trains.
Have a look at Flixbus.
Better than a really short flight, climate wise, and probably moneywise too. Takes a bit longer but you get to see things along the way.

SusanP Jul 31st, 2024 06:47 PM

Make sure you have a credit card that doesn't charge the 3% Foreign Transaction Fee on everything you charge.

KayF Jul 31st, 2024 08:54 PM

For immigration I've had questions, no comments at all, and occasionally a machine instead of a person. Be clear and direct if asked questions. They don't want a long story. If they think perhaps you're not being honest, it could lead to a longer interview. The most common questions in my experience are 'what is the nature of your visit? ' and 'how long are you here for?'.

lavandula Jul 31st, 2024 09:09 PM

If you are travelling with your credit card, remember to contact your bank before buying plane fares or leaving the country. Banks can block big purchases or put the brakes on if they think a scammer is using your card in an unauthorised way overseas.

Lavandula

KayF Jul 31st, 2024 09:49 PM

Don't forget to buy travel insurance. Hopefully you will never need it but things can go wrong.

bilboburgler Jul 31st, 2024 10:31 PM

Travel insurance, buy it before or very soon after you place your first purchase (normally the flight) then if there is a major crisis (another Covid or Ukraine) and you have to cancel all the elements of your holiday are covered. Don't buy it at the airport waiting to board. If you have medical conditions you need to make sure the insurance company is made aware of these.

kja Jul 31st, 2024 10:56 PM

I strongly encourage you to get a good guidebook. Most will cover much of the information you've sought and have been given ... and BONUS!: it will cover the things you haven't thought to ask! :)

mjs Aug 1st, 2024 12:54 AM

I think Rick Steves Europe through the Back door would be helpful

KayF Aug 1st, 2024 07:51 PM

Do you have a US passport? Others on this forum will know if visas are required. Europe is introducing an online visa, later this year I think.

janisj Aug 1st, 2024 08:06 PM


Originally Posted by KayF (Post 17586061)
Do you have a US passport? Others on this forum will know if visas are required. Europe is introducing an online visa, later this year I think.


AFAIK - ETIAS (visa) for US citizens doesn't begin until mid 2025.

Ez73 Aug 3rd, 2024 03:20 AM

ETIAS is NOT a visa
 
"Europe", ie the EU/Schengen area, is not introducing an "online visa."

ETIAS is pre-screenings for terrorism and migration-related risks for citizens of countries where visas are not required. It's late getting rolled out (expect it in 2025) but you can read more here: https://etias.com/etias-requirements/


Ez73 Aug 3rd, 2024 03:41 AM

OP, check out deals to Europe for October as some airlines have promotional fares. If you plan on flying into Paris, check PROMO deals on Air France, for example. You can get deals for $900 round trip if you look around. You can try Skyscanner to compare fares. Delta/Air France/KLM are Skyteam and work together so you can book all the way through to Paris or wherever you want from the nearest airport on one ticket, often referred to as a "through ticket." That way your luggage goes to your final destination and you get all of your boarding passes. In case of a delay, the airlines puts you on the next flight.

ABSOLUTELY DO NOT BOOK your tickets SEPARATELY as that requires you to pick up your luggage and recheck it yourself every time you change planes. Everything should be on one booking, from the airport closest to your home to the airport in Europe which is your destination. Things happen and missed connections are an everyday occurrence but the airlines are always responsible to get you to you final destination if you are on a through ticket. I once got stuck for 3 days in Montevideo because my flight to Buenos Aires was canceled and I had to rebook my flight out of Buenos Aires to Paris myself with just hours to spare before the flight lifted. This was because I had booked my tickets separately after changing my plans. Not fun. If I had booked on one ticket, the airlines would have done it all for me, at no extra expense. I had to cough up $500 more to change my ticket. A costly mistake.

When you arrive back in the US, you will pick up your luggage but you return it right after clearing US Customs and Immigration so it's no big deal.


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