Covid: What are the quarantine rules when arriving in the UK?
- Published
From Saturday 12 December, most people entering the UK from the Canary Islands must self-isolate.
Quarantine restrictions apply to most people entering the UK. But from 15 December travellers to England will be able to pay for a test which could cut the number of days.
What are the quarantine rules?
Most travellers arriving in the UK from most countries - including British nationals - must self-isolate for 14 days. (This changes to 10 days from Monday 14 December).
Exceptions are made for people coming from the Common Travel Area - Republic of Ireland, Channel Islands, or the Isle of Man - or countries in travel corridors with the UK.
Travellers must fill in a ''passenger locator'' form, with contact details and their UK address.
After arrival, people quarantining should not:
- Use taxis or public transport
- Go to work, school, or public areas
- Have visitors except for essential support
- Go out to buy food, or other essentials, if they can rely on others
If you have to self-isolate after a trip you may not get statutory sick pay, unless you meet the required conditions - such as displaying coronavirus symptoms.
Scotland,Wales and Northern Ireland have brought in their own rules, which vary slightly.
Who is exempt from the rules?
Some business travellers no longer have to quarantine when re-entering the UK.
Performing arts professionals, TV production staff, journalists and recently signed sports professionals will also be exempt.
A small number of jobs were already exempt, including:
- Diplomats
- Defence personnel, visiting forces and government contractors
- Border officials
- Bus, coach and goods vehicle drivers taking goods in and out of the UK
- Aircraft pilots and crew and certain rail workers
Can I pay for a test to shorten quarantine?
From 15 December, people arriving in England from a non-exempt country could cut their quarantine period if they pay for a Covid test.
Passengers using the voluntary scheme must book their test before leaving for England through a list of private providers and list the test on their passenger locator form.
The test must be taken no earlier than your fifth full day of self-isolation, either through a home kit or at a testing site. You are allowed to leave the house to visit the testing site or post back the test.
The tests cost between £65 and £120 and the results will normally come back within 24 to 48 hours. This means people could stop self-isolating six days after arrival if they test negative. Those who test positive will have to quarantine for a further 10 days from the day they took the test.
Can you be fined for breaking the rules?
Breaking quarantine rules is a criminal offence, and people who do it face a fine and potentially a criminal record.
Those not self-isolating when they are supposed to can be fined £1,000 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, or £480 in Scotland. Fines in England for persistent offenders have doubled to £10,000.
People can be fined up to £3,200 in England if they do not provide accurate contact details, or £1,920 in Wales.
There is also a fine of £100 for not filling in the passenger locator form.
Where can I go without quarantining?
There are currently only a handful of places that holiday travellers from England can visit without encountering restrictions either when they arrive at their destination, or when they return.
These include:
- Aruba (with pre-approval and if you provide a recent negative test)
- Bahrain (if you pay for a test on arrival)
- Cuba (if you pay for a test on arrival)
- Gibraltar
- Corfu, Crete, Rhodes, Zakynthos and Kos (if you provide a recent negative test)
- Iceland (if you test negative on arrival and again five to six days later. The test is free until 31 January 2021)
- Madeira and the Azores (if travellers cannot show proof of a recent negative test, they will be tested on arrival)
- Maldives (non-tourists must quarantine for 14 days on arrival, and tourists and short-term visitors must provide a recent negative test)
- Turks and Caicos (with pre-travel authorisation including proof of a recent negative test)
How is the quarantine list decided?
The Joint Biosecurity Centre - set up by the government to monitor coronavirus - advises on which destinations should be on the list.
It considers a range of factors including:
- infection rate per 100,000 people
- percentage of tests coming back positive
- the speed at which the situation is changing in a country
- Whether there is a significant risk on transmission through return journeys to the UK.
Are you planning to travel to or from the UK? How will the quarantine regulations affect you? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist.
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