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Feb 6, 2026

Mandatory UK ETA enters final countdown, forcing tourism sector to rethink last-minute travel

Mandatory UK ETA enters final countdown, forcing tourism sector to rethink last-minute travel
With less than three weeks to go before the UK’s “no permission, no travel” policy takes full effect, industry outlet Travel and Tour World warned on 5 February that hotels and attractions in London, Manchester and Edinburgh should brace for a sharp fall in spontaneous bookings. From 25 February, nationals of 85 previously visa-free countries must hold an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) approved in advance or airlines will face fines of up to £2,000 per non-compliant passenger.

Although more than 13 million approvals have been issued since the phased roll-out began in 2023, the end of the grace period shifts the pain point from border control to the check-in desk: carriers must verify ETA status before boarding. Tour operators say that requirement incentivises organised group travel and discourages “weekend breaks” booked at short notice, potentially reshaping visitor flows to Britain’s biggest city-break markets.

The £16 digital permit is valid for two years, but it is tied to the passport used at application—meaning frequent flyers who renew passports mid-cycle will need a fresh ETA. Cruise & Maritime, whose sailings originate in Southampton, is updating terms and conditions to make passengers liable for denied-boarding costs.

Mandatory UK ETA enters final countdown, forcing tourism sector to rethink last-minute travel


If the new process feels daunting, third-party facilitators such as VisaHQ can smooth the journey. Through its dedicated UK page (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/), the service guides applicants step-by-step, double-checks documentation, tracks real-time UKVI changes and sends status alerts—convenience that can prevent an overlooked detail from turning into an expensive airport turn-back.

Airlines are integrating live UKVI APIs into departure-control systems, yet technical glitches remain. Business-travel managers recommend applying at least three working days before departure and carrying confirmation emails offline in case airport Wi-Fi fails.

Destination marketing organisations see an upside: pre-travel security screening may speed arrivals once inside the UK, allowing Border Force to redeploy officers to manual lanes used by non-ETA nationalities. But small inbound agencies worry the additional administrative step could divert visitors to EU rivals that still offer visa-free entry.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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