
The United Kingdom’s Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) scheme moved from pilot to full enforcement at 00:01 GMT on 8 January 2026. From now on, every traveller who previously enjoyed visa-free entry—including HKSAR and BNO passport holders—must secure a £16 digital permit before boarding a flight, train or ferry to the UK.
The approval process is mobile-app based and typically takes minutes, but the Home Office warns that secondary checks can lengthen processing to 72 hours. Carriers face fines for transporting passengers without an approved ETA, so check-in agents will turn away non-compliant travellers. Transit passengers remain exempt until at least 2027.
For hassle-free compliance, Hong Kong travellers and corporate mobility teams can turn to VisaHQ, whose online platform and in-house visa specialists streamline ETA applications and other UK visa categories. The Hong Kong portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) offers live status tracking, bulk uploads for group travel, and optional courier services, making it an easy add-on to existing travel workflows.
For Hong Kong corporates the operational impact is immediate. The ETA grants visitor status only; employees undertaking chargeable work still need a Skilled-Worker, Global Business Mobility, or Permitted-Paid-Engagement visa. Mobility managers should embed ETA prompts into online booking tools and store approval numbers in traveller profiles to enable ‘one-click’ renewals.
Cost-wise, the ETA is cheaper than the US ESTA or Canada’s eTA, but budget airlines serving Manchester and Gatwick are already marketing bundled “ETA + seat” deals that may confuse travellers. HR should issue clear guidance and may consider reimbursing the fee to maintain parity with Schengen ETIAS reimbursements planned for late 2026.
Finally, staff holding BNO passports should note that the ETA does not affect their separate five-year BNO visa route, but BNO dependants without status in the UK must still obtain an ETA for short visits.
The approval process is mobile-app based and typically takes minutes, but the Home Office warns that secondary checks can lengthen processing to 72 hours. Carriers face fines for transporting passengers without an approved ETA, so check-in agents will turn away non-compliant travellers. Transit passengers remain exempt until at least 2027.
For hassle-free compliance, Hong Kong travellers and corporate mobility teams can turn to VisaHQ, whose online platform and in-house visa specialists streamline ETA applications and other UK visa categories. The Hong Kong portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) offers live status tracking, bulk uploads for group travel, and optional courier services, making it an easy add-on to existing travel workflows.
For Hong Kong corporates the operational impact is immediate. The ETA grants visitor status only; employees undertaking chargeable work still need a Skilled-Worker, Global Business Mobility, or Permitted-Paid-Engagement visa. Mobility managers should embed ETA prompts into online booking tools and store approval numbers in traveller profiles to enable ‘one-click’ renewals.
Cost-wise, the ETA is cheaper than the US ESTA or Canada’s eTA, but budget airlines serving Manchester and Gatwick are already marketing bundled “ETA + seat” deals that may confuse travellers. HR should issue clear guidance and may consider reimbursing the fee to maintain parity with Schengen ETIAS reimbursements planned for late 2026.
Finally, staff holding BNO passports should note that the ETA does not affect their separate five-year BNO visa route, but BNO dependants without status in the UK must still obtain an ETA for short visits.











