Which holiday destinations still require a pre-travel Covid test?

These vacation spots still demand a PCR or antigen test - even if you’re vaccinated

Lucy Thackray
Thursday 07 July 2022 16:03 BST
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<p>Madagascar insists on Covid tests both before and after your flight there</p>

Madagascar insists on Covid tests both before and after your flight there

Though many short-haul and European holiday destinations have now scrapped their pre-travel test requirements (some of them dropping all Covid-related rules altogether), many mid- and long-haul countries still ask you to test before your trip.

Australia is the most recent to drop its pre-travel test - from midnight on 6 July, local time - with no visitors required to declare their vaccination status or fill in a passenger locator form.

There are no hard and fast rules from region to region - in Asia, for example, UK travellers still cannot visit China or Japan for tourism reasons, while South Korea is open to all vaccinated people. In the Indian Ocean, Mauritius and the Maldives have scrapped their pre-travel test, while Madagascar’s rules remain pretty strict.

Here are the places where you still need to plan in advance and organise the correct tests to get in.

Some Caribbean islands

The Caribbean is a mixed bag at the moment: the Dominican Republic, Cuba, US Virgin Islands, Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica have dropped all requirements for testing or proof of vaccine requirements for travellers, regardless of vaccine status. Meanwhile St Lucia, Antigua, the Bahamas, St Maarten, the Cayman Islands and Barbados require a test for unvaccinated or partly-vaccinated travellers only. (The Cayman islands also requires unvaccinated visitors to quarantine for seven days.)

However, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Anguilla, and the British Virgin Islands all still require a test of all adult arrivals. For St Kitts, a PCR within the three days before travel or an antigen within 24 hours will do the trick for vaccinated visitors (meanwhile unvaccinated adults are not allowed in). For the BVIs, everyone aged five and over, regardless of vaccination status, must present a negative rapid antigen test or PCR test taken within 48 hours prior to arrival. Anguilla requires both proof of vaccination and a test (a PCR with 72 hours/antigen within 48 hours), with unvaccinated visitors barred from entry.

Madagascar

Madagascar doesn’t require proof of vaccination to enter, but does demand all travellers undergo a PCR test within the 72 hours before departure and an antigen test on arrival in the country. You must pay to take the test on arrival, at a cost of about £13. If you test positive on arrival, you must go into official hotel quarantine for seven days at your own expense.

You’ll have to test before a Tokyo tour

Japan

Japan is only open to UK visitors booked on to certain private, government-approved group tours at the moment - though both fully vaccinated and unvaccinated travellers are welcome on these. However, there are hopes that this will expand to include individual tourists in the coming months. The testing requirements for the lucky few who can go are as follows: all visitors must take an approved Covid-19 test within the 72 hours before their flight departure time - this can be a nucleic acid test such as an RT-PCR or LAMP test, or a “qualitative antigen test”. They must also sign a written pledge to abide by the local Covid health rules, and fill in an online health questionnaire before travel.

Rwanda

Testing is mandatory for all visitors over five ahead of your journey to Rwanda, even if you’re vaccinated. You can take a (professionally administered) rapid antigen test within the 72 hours prior to departure time, but you no longer have to take a PCR test on arrival, and there’s no passenger locator form. Some national parks within the country require an additional Covid test before you can visit.

Russia

While the Foreign Office currently advises against all travel to Russia. But if you did have an essential reason to go, you’d need to produce a negative PCR test taken within the 48 hours before your arrival. Passengers may be screen for further tests on arrival.

The Philippines still demands a Covid test

The Philippines

Only fully vaccinated people are able to travel to the Philippines, and must take a PCR test within the 48 hours before departure or an antigen test within the 24 hours beforehand. Children aged 11 and under are allowed to accompany vaccinated parents while unvaccinated, with those aged three and under exempt from testing. You must show your proof of vaccination, a valid return ticket for your trip on arrival, a passport with six months’ validity after you leave and travel insurance with minimum coverage of $35,000, including Covid treatment. There’s also an online platform you must register with.

South Korea

All visitors to South Korea - whether fully vaccinated or unvaccinated - must upload their journey and contact information to the Q-Code website before departure. This platform requires you to provide a negative PCR result from a test taken within the 48 hours before departure, or a professionally administered antigen test taken within 24 hours, in order to receive a QR code. You then show this at Korean immigration. The authorities also encourage tourists to bring a paper certificate showing your Covid test result. Children aged five and under do not need to have a negative test result to enter, regardless of vaccination.

Everyone must be tested on arrival in Korea, within the first 72 hours of your trip - “You can reserve an appointment for a PCR test upon arrival at Incheon Airport or take a PCR test within 72 hours of arrival in South Korea at a medical institution near your accommodation or residence,” advises the government. Anyone testing positive must then isolate in a quarantine centre for seven days.

Seoul, South Korea, is one frenetic Asian city you can visit with a test

Recently scrapped pre-travel tests for vaccinated arrivals

  • Australia
  • Canada
  • India
  • Brazil
  • Sri Lanka
  • Mauritius
  • UAE
  • The Maldives
  • Antigua
  • St Lucia
  • Dominican Republic
  • Cuba
  • Jamaica
  • Kenya
  • Chile
  • Tanzania
  • Namibia
  • Botswana
  • Oman
  • Kazakhstan
  • Uzbekistan
  • Pakistan
  • Mongolia
  • Singapore
  • Cambodia
  • Argentina
  • Colombia
  • Thailand (though you still have to apply to visit)
  • Indonesia
  • Vietnam
  • Morocco
  • Uganda
  • Malaysia
  • French Polynesia
  • New Zealand
  • The Bahamas
  • Barbados
  • Fiji
  • Peru
  • Guatemala
  • Belize
  • Brunei
  • Tunisia
  • The Cayman Islands

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