رجوع
أكتوبر ٢٤, ٢٠٢٥

Two weeks into the EU Entry/Exit System, updated guidance issued as travellers report mixed experiences

Two weeks into the EU Entry/Exit System, updated guidance issued as travellers report mixed experiences
The Connexion – in an article updated on 23 October – has published fresh guidance on the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) following reports of long queues at some external Schengen borders, including Prague Airport. The EES, live since 12 October, replaces passport-stamping for non-EU short-stay visitors with biometric enrolment and automated records.

Czech border police told local media that initial teething problems stemmed from travellers unfamiliar with the self-service kiosks and airlines failing to separate first-time registrants. While bottlenecks have eased, passengers arriving on peak mid-morning North-American flights still face processing times of up to 50 minutes. Prague Airport has added mobile teams to triage passengers and is considering a dedicated EES help desk in Terminal 1.

For corporate mobility teams the main takeaway is to brief non-EU assignees and business visitors to allow extra time and to retain their exit receipts, which will be needed for future stays and for Schengen-day calculations. The update also clarifies that British and Australian nationals have temporarily been exempted at certain checkpoints pending software fixes – an exemption Czech authorities say they will mirror to avoid discrimination.

Companies running rotational shift patterns should revisit flight-duty rosters to accommodate variable arrival times until the six-month phased roll-out completes on 10 April 2026.
تساعد فريق خبراء التأشيرات والهجرة في VisaHQ الأفراد والشركات على التنقل في متطلبات السفر والعمل والإقامة العالمية. نحن نتولى إعداد الوثائق، وتقديم الطلبات، وتنسيق مع الوكالات الحكومية، وكل جانب ضروري لضمان الموافقات السريعة والمتوافقة والخالية من التوتر.
سجل للحصول على التحديثات

Email address

Countries

Choose how often you would like to receive our newsletter:

×