Germany’s Opportunity Card visa goes fully digital, slashing appointment backlogs
Home Office quietly expands right-to-work checks for UK sponsor-licence holders
First EU Entry/Exit System statistics released: what they reveal for travellers to Germany
Latest News
Brussels hails Schengen’s new Entry/Exit System after 32,000 inadmissible travellers stopped
The European Commission’s 2026 State of the Schengen Report shows the new Entry/Exit System (EES) has already registered 66 million border crossings and blocked 32 000 inadmissible travellers in six months. French ports and airports are among the biggest users, but Brussels is pressuring Paris to scrap its long-running internal border checks and trust the digital system instead. Businesses must brace for stricter pre-departure screening and automatic detection of Schengen overstays, fundamentally changing how short-term assignments to France are planned.
Abu Dhabi opens new US pre-clearance facility at Zayed International Airport
Abu Dhabi Airports has shifted the US pre-clearance centre to the new Zayed International Airport, allowing passengers to complete all US entry formalities before boarding. The biometric-enabled facility accelerates connections, improves compliance, and positions Abu Dhabi as the Gulf’s only hub with this service—an advantage for corporate travel programmes routing staff to North America.
Beijing issues security and travel advisory ahead of Putin’s 19-20 May state visit
Beijing has activated strict traffic, aviation and hotel controls from 18-20 May to accommodate President Putin’s state visit. Road closures, airport ground-stops and extra police document checks are expected to disrupt business travel. Companies should build time buffers, verify address registrations and keep virtual options ready. The episode highlights the need for robust mobility contingency plans during China’s busy 2026 diplomatic calendar.
EU Schengen Report Reaffirms Need to Finalise Cyprus’ Accession
The European Commission’s latest State of Schengen report urges the EU to finish Cyprus’ accession, saying the island has reached technical readiness but still needs political approval. Full Schengen membership would eliminate passport checks for business travellers moving between Cyprus and the rest of the zone, boosting trade and corporate mobility. Companies should prepare for transitional compliance checks as Brussels continues to scrutinise migration management along the Green Line.
Prague Airport Opens eGATE Fast-Track to Selected Non-EU Travellers
Passengers from the UK, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea can now use Prague Airport’s automated eGATE system, previously reserved for EU nationals. The move dovetails with the EU-wide Entry/Exit System and is designed to reduce summer queues, giving business travellers a faster, touch-free border experience. Companies should brief staff on eligibility rules and remind them that the 90/180-day clock is now fully automated.
Poland Proposes “Silent-Consent” Rule to Cut Residence-Permit Backlogs
Warsaw has unveiled a bill allowing residence-permit applications to be approved automatically after 60 days if officials take no action. The change targets ballooning backlogs that hamper employers and would make Poland one of the EU’s fastest immigration regimes. HR teams should brace for stricter front-end checks and refresh compliance workflows.
India Fully Restores Long-Duration Tourist Visas and e-Tourist Visas
New government guidance dated 18 May 2026 confirms that all pre-existing long-duration paper tourist visas and suspended e-Tourist visas (30-day, 1-year, 5-year) are reinstated with immediate effect. Foreign nationals may enter on previously issued stickers, and fresh applications via embassies and the online e-Visa portal are open again. The move restores a critical low-friction entry channel for tourists, business-conference organisers and mobility planners.
Brussels Airport border-control chaos sparks federal–regional row over staffing and infrastructure
Interior Minister Bernard Quintin says four-hour immigration queues at Brussels Airport are the result of obsolete facilities as well as a shortage of border-police staff. He called on the Flemish Region, now the airport’s largest shareholder, to help finance expansion of the arrivals hall and repair out-of-service e-gates. The standoff will be discussed by federal and regional leaders this week amid warnings that summer traffic could become “absolute chaos”, with knock-on effects for business travel and Belgium’s image.
SWISS prolongs suspension of Zurich–Dubai flights until 13 September 2026
SWISS has extended its Zurich–Dubai suspension until 13 September 2026 because Middle-East air-space detours remain commercially unviable. Ticket holders can rebook or refund, while spare aircraft are being shifted to high-demand routes such as Zurich–Delhi. The change complicates mobility for Swiss exporters that rely on rapid access to the Gulf, underscoring the need for flexible travel policies.
EU Entry/Exit System Blocks 32,000 Arrivals in First Six Months as Spain Completes Roll-Out
The EU confirmed on 18 May that its biometric Entry/Exit System has logged 66 million crossings and denied 32,000 entries in six months. Spain’s airports and land borders are now fully integrated, ending passport stamping for non-EU travellers. The change reduces wait times but heightens enforcement of the 90/180-day rule, requiring companies to track employee days in Schengen more carefully.
Finland proposes tougher language, income & family-reunification rules for international students
Finland has published a draft bill that would: 1) require non-EU students to pass a language test before arrival; 2) delay family-reunification eligibility until the student has lived in Finland for one year; and 3) set a legally binding, higher minimum-income threshold. The reforms, slated to enter into force in 2027, are intended to curb abuse of study permits but could also shrink the pool of future graduates available to Finnish employers.
Nation-wide 24-hour strike cripples Italy’s rail and urban transport network
A 24-hour general strike running from 17–18 May has shut down most rail, metro, bus and tram services across Italy, with knock-on delays for airport transfers. Organised by USB and allied unions, the action protests wage stagnation, workplace safety and defence spending, while also expressing solidarity with Gaza. Business travellers face widespread cancellations outside protected time bands and are advised to rebook or work remotely. The walk-out highlights the need for robust travel-risk and contingency planning in Italy.
London Underground strikes set to snarl Heathrow access and disrupt international business travel
RMT-led Tube strikes from 19-22 May—and again in mid-June—will shut the Piccadilly line to Heathrow and curtail other key Underground services. TfL and Heathrow advise travellers to allow much longer transfer times or use the Elizabeth line and Heathrow Express. The walk-outs threaten missed flights, crowded alternatives and additional costs for firms moving staff through the UK’s busiest hub.
Strikes drag Frankfurt Airport traffic down 11 % in April, Fraport warns of summer knock-on
Passenger numbers at Frankfurt Airport fell 11 % in April after six days of Lufthansa strikes, Fraport revealed on 18 May 2026. The data highlight continuing volatility for business travellers using Germany’s main hub and point to higher summer airfares if further labour disputes erupt.
U.S. F-1 Visa Slots Disappear Within Minutes, Fueling Panic Among Indian Students
Interview dates for U.S. F-1 student visas released on 15 May were booked out in minutes, leaving thousands of Indian applicants anxious about reaching U.S. universities for the Fall 2026 semester. Experts recommend careful portal use, full document readiness and patience as the U.S. Mission adopts staggered ‘drop-feed’ scheduling. Corporations sponsoring scholars should prepare backup study-start plans.
UK raises travel warning for UAE after Iran-US escalation; business trips face new compliance hurdles
The UK Foreign Office now advises against all but essential travel to the UAE after a drone strike near a nuclear site and wider Iran-US hostilities. Companies must upgrade risk assessments, ensure insurance remains valid, and brief travellers on security and social-media restrictions. Flight schedules are operating but remain subject to short-notice changes, complicating corporate itineraries.
Austria Sees 21 % Jump in Naturalisations in First Quarter of 2026
Statistics Austria reports that 6,641 people became Austrian citizens in Q1 2026, a 21 % year-on-year increase driven by long-term residents, family members and descendants of Nazi-era victims. The jump expands Austria’s EU-passport-holding workforce and reduces future visa needs for many employers, but looming legislative reforms could make the window of opportunity short-lived.