
With fewer than eight weeks until the United Kingdom flips the switch on its new Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) regime, the Home Office has begun a high-visibility information blitz aimed at airlines, ferry companies, rail operators and would-be visitors. From 25 February 2026, nationals of 85 visa-waiver countries—including the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan and all EU member states—must hold an approved ETA (or an e-Visa) before they will be allowed to board transport bound for the UK. British and Irish citizens remain exempt, as do travellers who already hold another form of UK visa or an e-Visa linked to their passport. ([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-05/gb/no-permission-no-travel-uk-gives-final-warning-before-eta-enforcement-in-february-2026/?utm_source=openai))
Carriers will be legally required to check every passenger’s ETA status through a government API in the same way they currently verify passport data. Failure to do so could trigger civil penalties of up to £50,000 per flight or sailing. Industry sources say the tight deadline is forcing some operators to accelerate IT integrations that were originally scheduled for later in the year, while smaller ferry lines are scrambling to secure third-party service providers who can connect to the Home Office’s Border Crossing system.
The ETA is not a visa but a digital pre-clearance that costs £16 and is valid for two years (or until the traveller’s passport expires). Most applications are processed automatically within minutes, but officials advise allowing up to three working days in case manual review is required. Children need their own ETA, and travellers will have to re-apply if they renew their passports.
For travellers and corporate mobility teams seeking an extra layer of assurance, VisaHQ’s platform can simplify the entire ETA process, providing step-by-step guidance, automated error checks and live support for individual or bulk submissions. Visit https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/ to start an application or to learn how VisaHQ can integrate with company travel policies.
From a corporate mobility perspective, the biggest operational shift lies in the carrier-liability model. Multinational companies that book group travel or rely on self-booking tools must ensure that travellers obtain an ETA well before departure, or risk denied boarding and expensive last-minute rebooking. Travel managers are updating pre-trip approval workflows to include ETA checks and reminding dual British citizens to travel on a valid UK passport to avoid unnecessary fees.
Longer term, the government sees the system as the cornerstone of a “contactless border” strategy that will eventually allow biometric gates to recognise travellers before they reach immigration desks. In the short term, however, corporates should expect a learning curve and advise staff and assignees to apply early to avoid disruption.
Carriers will be legally required to check every passenger’s ETA status through a government API in the same way they currently verify passport data. Failure to do so could trigger civil penalties of up to £50,000 per flight or sailing. Industry sources say the tight deadline is forcing some operators to accelerate IT integrations that were originally scheduled for later in the year, while smaller ferry lines are scrambling to secure third-party service providers who can connect to the Home Office’s Border Crossing system.
The ETA is not a visa but a digital pre-clearance that costs £16 and is valid for two years (or until the traveller’s passport expires). Most applications are processed automatically within minutes, but officials advise allowing up to three working days in case manual review is required. Children need their own ETA, and travellers will have to re-apply if they renew their passports.
For travellers and corporate mobility teams seeking an extra layer of assurance, VisaHQ’s platform can simplify the entire ETA process, providing step-by-step guidance, automated error checks and live support for individual or bulk submissions. Visit https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/ to start an application or to learn how VisaHQ can integrate with company travel policies.
From a corporate mobility perspective, the biggest operational shift lies in the carrier-liability model. Multinational companies that book group travel or rely on self-booking tools must ensure that travellers obtain an ETA well before departure, or risk denied boarding and expensive last-minute rebooking. Travel managers are updating pre-trip approval workflows to include ETA checks and reminding dual British citizens to travel on a valid UK passport to avoid unnecessary fees.
Longer term, the government sees the system as the cornerstone of a “contactless border” strategy that will eventually allow biometric gates to recognise travellers before they reach immigration desks. In the short term, however, corporates should expect a learning curve and advise staff and assignees to apply early to avoid disruption.








