
Geneva’s Cointrin Airport, the main gateway for winter tourism in the Alps, descended into scenes of near gridlock on Sunday, 21 December, when the new EU Entry/Exit System (EES) repeatedly crashed. The outage struck at the worst possible moment – the first big weekend changeover of the Christmas ski season when planeloads of British, American and Gulf tourists arrive within a tight three-hour window.
According to a detailed report by VisaHQ, the biometric kiosks froze twice during the afternoon, forcing Swiss border guards to shut them down and funnel all non-EU passengers through manual booths. Queues quickly snaked back into the airbridge corridors, with some travellers reporting waits of up to four hours. Reddit posts from stranded skiers corroborated the timeline, with several noting that their airport transfers departed without them.
The EES records fingerprints and a facial image the first time a third-country national enters the Schengen zone, replacing the old passport-stamp system. Although only 10 % of arrivals are supposed to be enrolled during the pilot phase, Geneva officials admit processing times have risen 70 % for the cohort concerned. A spokesperson said additional staff and “contingency lanes” would be deployed for the upcoming peak on 26 December, but warned passengers to expect “significantly longer” formalities than in previous years.
Travellers anxious to sidestep similar snarl-ups can lean on VisaHQ’s Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) to confirm entry requirements, pre-check eligibility for the EU Digital Travel Credential and receive real-time alerts on border-control changes. The platform streamlines paperwork for both leisure skiers and corporate assignees, helping them stay compliant and keep their onward transfers on schedule.
For global-mobility managers the incident is a red flag ahead of the January corporate-travel ramp-up. Companies relocating staff to Switzerland, or routing talent through Geneva for Alpine off-sites, should pre-enrol travellers on the EU Digital Travel Credential pilot where available, brief employees on biometric requirements, and build slack into ground transport bookings. Employers with large non-EU workforces – notably NGOs in International Geneva – may wish to stagger travel dates to avoid weekend spikes.
Swiss tourism bodies are pushing for a post-implementation review of staffing ratios and system resilience. “If a 10 % enrolment rate already chokes the system, we need to rethink resources before 100 % go live next autumn,” said Nicolas Dupont of the Swiss Travel Association.
According to a detailed report by VisaHQ, the biometric kiosks froze twice during the afternoon, forcing Swiss border guards to shut them down and funnel all non-EU passengers through manual booths. Queues quickly snaked back into the airbridge corridors, with some travellers reporting waits of up to four hours. Reddit posts from stranded skiers corroborated the timeline, with several noting that their airport transfers departed without them.
The EES records fingerprints and a facial image the first time a third-country national enters the Schengen zone, replacing the old passport-stamp system. Although only 10 % of arrivals are supposed to be enrolled during the pilot phase, Geneva officials admit processing times have risen 70 % for the cohort concerned. A spokesperson said additional staff and “contingency lanes” would be deployed for the upcoming peak on 26 December, but warned passengers to expect “significantly longer” formalities than in previous years.
Travellers anxious to sidestep similar snarl-ups can lean on VisaHQ’s Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) to confirm entry requirements, pre-check eligibility for the EU Digital Travel Credential and receive real-time alerts on border-control changes. The platform streamlines paperwork for both leisure skiers and corporate assignees, helping them stay compliant and keep their onward transfers on schedule.
For global-mobility managers the incident is a red flag ahead of the January corporate-travel ramp-up. Companies relocating staff to Switzerland, or routing talent through Geneva for Alpine off-sites, should pre-enrol travellers on the EU Digital Travel Credential pilot where available, brief employees on biometric requirements, and build slack into ground transport bookings. Employers with large non-EU workforces – notably NGOs in International Geneva – may wish to stagger travel dates to avoid weekend spikes.
Swiss tourism bodies are pushing for a post-implementation review of staffing ratios and system resilience. “If a 10 % enrolment rate already chokes the system, we need to rethink resources before 100 % go live next autumn,” said Nicolas Dupont of the Swiss Travel Association.






