
The European Commission quietly confirmed on 15 January 2026 that the European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) will not enter mandatory enforcement before April 2027, with a soft launch now pencilled in for Q4 2026. The decision follows repeated delays to the companion Entry/Exit System (EES) biometric database, which member states—including France—have struggled to integrate at busy border posts.
For France’s airports and airlines, the reprieve is significant. ADP Group expects passenger volumes to rebound to 2019 levels this summer; layering a €20 pre-authorisation on top of EES would have stretched staffing and IT systems during the Paris 2026 tourist surge. Border-police unions, already short 900 officers at CDG, gain extra time to recruit and test self-service kiosks.
Corporate-travel teams should update policy documents to reflect the new timeline: employees from visa-exempt countries (e.g., US, UK, Singapore) will not need to input an ETIAS number when booking trips to France until at least late 2026. However, the Commission warns against fraudulent ‘early-access’ sites and urges travellers to wait for the official portal.
Meanwhile, specialised visa agencies such as VisaHQ stand ready to help both individual travellers and corporate travel managers navigate the forthcoming ETIAS requirements. Their France page (https://www.visahq.com/france/) tracks every regulatory update in real time and offers scalable application solutions, ensuring companies can stay compliant the moment the system goes live.
Airlines must still adapt departure-control software to read ETIAS approvals during the six-month transition period beginning in 2026; failure to verify could trigger carrier fines. Travel-management companies are advised to build bulk-application workflows now so they can flip the switch quickly once testing begins.
Paris-based tour operators welcomed the delay, saying it avoids a potential ‘double whammy’ of biometric bottlenecks and new paperwork during the first post-pandemic high season in which China is expected to send large tour groups back to Europe.
For France’s airports and airlines, the reprieve is significant. ADP Group expects passenger volumes to rebound to 2019 levels this summer; layering a €20 pre-authorisation on top of EES would have stretched staffing and IT systems during the Paris 2026 tourist surge. Border-police unions, already short 900 officers at CDG, gain extra time to recruit and test self-service kiosks.
Corporate-travel teams should update policy documents to reflect the new timeline: employees from visa-exempt countries (e.g., US, UK, Singapore) will not need to input an ETIAS number when booking trips to France until at least late 2026. However, the Commission warns against fraudulent ‘early-access’ sites and urges travellers to wait for the official portal.
Meanwhile, specialised visa agencies such as VisaHQ stand ready to help both individual travellers and corporate travel managers navigate the forthcoming ETIAS requirements. Their France page (https://www.visahq.com/france/) tracks every regulatory update in real time and offers scalable application solutions, ensuring companies can stay compliant the moment the system goes live.
Airlines must still adapt departure-control software to read ETIAS approvals during the six-month transition period beginning in 2026; failure to verify could trigger carrier fines. Travel-management companies are advised to build bulk-application workflows now so they can flip the switch quickly once testing begins.
Paris-based tour operators welcomed the delay, saying it avoids a potential ‘double whammy’ of biometric bottlenecks and new paperwork during the first post-pandemic high season in which China is expected to send large tour groups back to Europe.









