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UK arrivals - pre-departure, quarantine and post-arrival [currently no requirements]

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Old Jun 4, 2020, 5:57 am
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: NewbieRunner
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A reminder that this thread is about the self-isolation requirements for UK arrivals.

It is a help/Information resource for those travelling or returning to England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland from outside the UK. Let's concentrate on news, questions and answers that are relevant and on-topic and stay away from speculations about the spread of the virus, the performance of politicians and other topics which are more suitable for OMNI.

Please stay within these requirements to avoid issues.

LATEST UPDATES

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/travel-t...virus-covid-19


18 March travel to the UK changes

If you will arrive in the UK from abroad after 4am, Friday 18 March, you do not need to:
  • take any COVID-19 tests – before you travel or after you arrive
  • fill in a UK passenger locator form before you travel

This will apply whether you are vaccinated or not.

You also will not need to quarantine when you arrive, in line with current rules.
Other countries still have COVID-19 entry rules in place. You should check travel advice before you travel.
If you will arrive in England before 4am, 18 March, you must follow the current rules as set out in this guidance.

*****

The following historical information is retained for the time being.

The Passenger Locator Form for passengers arriving into the UK can be found here:
https://visas-immigration.service.go...r-locator-form
This can only be completed once you are within 48 hours of arrival in the UK.

Exemption list from quarantine requirements - specific details:
https://www.gov.uk/government/public...k-border-rules

England
Statutory instrument for individual passengers arriving in to England: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2021/582/contents (this html version is updated, but may not have the very latest updates for Statutory Instruments released in the last few days)

Test to release for England only from 15 December, see post 4776 https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/32841066-post4776.html

Statutory instrument for transport providers http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2.../contents/made

Scotland
Statutory instrument for individual passengers arriving in to Scotland: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ssi/2020/169/contents (this html version is updated)

Wales
Statutory instrument for individual passengers arriving in to Wales: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/wsi/2020/574/contents (this html version is updated) &
Welsh language version: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/wsi/2...0200574_we.pdf

Northern Ireland
Statutory instrument https://www.legislation.gov.uk/nisr/2021/99/contents (this html version is updated)


PRACTICAL GUIDANCE FOR QUICK RELEASE FROM SELF-ISOLATION (based on November 28th updates)
[This section has been moved lower down in the wiki post following the change in self-isolation rule on 7th January 2022[

Any PCR test noted as a UK Government Day 2 test will be accepted for release from self isolation as soon as you get the negative result. If it is any other PCR test (eg "Fit to Fly") and not advertised specifically as a Day 2 test then it won't be valid.

This means that you can:[list]
  • Book a suitable Day 2 PCR test before you travel and use the booking reference for the test on the PLF (Passenger Locator Form).
    • On your day of arrival go to your scheduled test.
      • Proceed to you place of self-isolation and await the result, which will hopefully be same / next day.

        Alternatively:
        • Book any Day 2 PCR test before you travel even if you do not intend to use this test, and use the booking reference for the test on the PLF to ensure entry to the UK.
          • Note that you are not strictly required to have a PCR booking before arrival, but your carrier might not know that so you run the risk of being denied boarding
          • On your day of arrival (or before end of Day 2) go to a walk-in test centre and take a different test to the one you booked.
            • Proceed to you place of self-isolation and await the result, which will hopefully be same / next day.

        If you are leaving the UK before the end of day 2 then you do not need to take a test, but are required to self-isolate for the duration of your trip (since you do not have a negative result). Also, if you are self-isolating while waiting for a result (and hence have not been informed of a positive result and need to isolate) you may travel to leave the country.

        If you take a test and it is positive for any variant of COVID you will be required to isolate for 10 days from the date of the test.

        Whether you take a test or not you may be contacted by the UK Test and Trace system at any time if it becomes apparent that you have been in contact with another case. This is very unlikely to happen before day 3 if it is in relation to your flight to UK. Depending on the suspected / identified variant for that case and if you are fully-vaccinated by an accepted programme (see below for links to what this means and valid exemptions) :
        • Omnicron or not fully-vaccinated: You will be required to isolated for 10 days, including a bar on travel to leave the country. A negative Day 2 test does not release you from this requirement.
          • Other and fully vaccinated : You will not be required to isolate.

Test Providers for Day 2/8 tests & Day 5 Test to release
This section is for FTers to post their experience with specific providers (good or bad). Keep it brief and to the point. Please mention how the service is provided and your FT name.

DNA Workplace - Postal - Test kits arrived with me on time. Royal Mail slow for return. 5+ days for Day 2 result. #DaveS
DNA Workplace - Postal - Test kits both arrived on time, video of tests required, results by late evening Day 3 and Day 9. #TSE
ExpressTest Gatwick - Drive through - Tested early at 1000 a few times for TTR. Results came through in evening. #DaveS
NowTest - Postal - Day 2 kit arrived on time, day 8 did not. Will update with result arrival times when applicable. #wilsnunn
Collinson - Postal - Day 5 Test to Release kit arrived in time. Results and release by end of day 6. #tjcxx
CTM - Postal - Days 2/8 kits arrived together in time. Both sent results 2 days after posting. #tjcxx
Qured (Oncologica) - Postal -Day 2/8 kits arrived late. Results 3+ days from posting. #Gagravarr
Qured (Oncologica) - Postal - Day 2/8 kits arrived on time. Day 2 result on Day 5 and Day 8 result on Day 10 - happy customer! #EddLegll
Qured (Ocnologica) - Postal - Day 2/8 kits arrived on time. Day 2 result on Day 5 (after bedtime; ironically after my TTR result). #KSVVZ2015
Anglia DNA - Postal - Day 2/8 kits arrived early. (Both were labelled Day2). Results on Day 4 and Day 9. Cheapest on the list at the time, and good service/result. #tjcxx
Qured - Pre-flight test booked and bought through BA. Very efficient service. Highly recommended. #lhrsfo
Randox - Days 2 and 8. Booked two days before return, using BA discount. Kits already arrived on return. Slightly confusing instructions but manageable. Used Randox dropbox and results next day. Good. #lhrsfo
Randox - Day 2 (also used as pre departure test for a London to Milan flight). Used a drop box and results arrived at midnight the next day. #11101
Randox - Day 2 test centre - 2h30 queues outside the test centre in Waterloo. Results of antigen arrived 45 minutes later. #11101
Collinson - Test to Release at LHR T2. Good trip out! Very efficient service and well organised. Used BA discount. Results by end of day. Excellent. #lhrsfo
DAM - Test to Release in Fulham (they have many locations) - the cheapest fast turnaround TTR we have found. They promise 24 hours but in reality me, my wife, and my son (on different days) have received results inside of 12 hours. Very efficient staff as well. Princes outside of Central London as low as 99 GBP. Fulham is 129 GBP. #KSVVZ2015
Boots/Source Bioscience - days 2&8. Both packs sent in the same mail, waiting at the isolation address. Dropped off at postbox at 4pm, result back next day between 4 and 5 pm, very effective. Bought from Boots, £160, but same package sold directly bu Source Bioscience is just £120. Aaargh! Instructions said nasal and throat swabs, did only nasal and marked accordingly, no issues. #WilcoRoger
Collinsons/Stansted walkin TTR - test taken 1:30 pm, email with results 10:10 pm same day If the BA20OFF doesn't work (didn't work for us) there's another discount on the airport's site #WilcoRoger
Ordered Day-2 kit from Chronomics a week before our return for £18.99. Duly dispatched day we were returning to UK, so arrived on day following return. Reasonably simple process to do test and upload -ve result picture. Not sure where +ve result would have led to... #EsherFlyer
Hale Clinic testing centre (near Oxford Circus) - While not the least expensive, appoint schedules are accurate and results returned in promised timeframe. I've used the clinic for Day 2 tests (twice) and antigen test for US (once). I would def utilize again. #ecaarch
Halo at T5 (Sofitel) - Day 2 PCR spit test. Took the test 7pm, results arrived 7am the next day. No queues but a slightly awkward process to follow.

Useful data sources:

New cases per 100k - 7 days: https://covid19.who.int/table
New tests per 1000 - 7 days: https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing
Vaccination doses per 100: https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations
Sequenced samples uploaded to GISAID: https://www.gisaid.org/index.php?id=208
NHS Track & Trace data (positivity rates for arriving passengers are published every three weeks, so if you can't find the data in the current release it will be in one of the previous two) https://www.gov.uk/government/collec...weekly-reports https://assets.publishing.service.go...ut_week_50.ods
UK daily COVID data https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/?_ga...827.1594116739
Risk assessment methodology to inform international travel traffic light system
Data informing international travel traffic-light risk assessments


Testing Terminology
Notes which may assist with understanding which tests to use and with "reuse" of UK tests for other countries regulations:
  • LFT: Lateral Flow Test - A rapid antigen test using nasal / throat swab typically performed by the traveler at home, hotel, etc using simple disposable device. Usually tests the "outer shell" of the nucleus (which causes the symptoms and is reasonably stable across variants) and not the "spikes" (which allow new variants to invade more easily), so gives a positive result for many variants. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-...d_antigen_test)
  • PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction - A laboratory based test which looks at the nucleus of the virus to determine which specific variant it is. After a positive LFT test ("I have some form of COVID") a PCR test ("You have the Gamma variant") allows identification and tracking of new variants to see if they are likely to become a "variant of concern". (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymerase_chain_reaction)
  • NAAT: Nucleic Acid Amplification Test - A general class of laboratory based tests which includes PCR, LAMP, etc tests. (See https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019...b/naats.html)
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UK arrivals - pre-departure, quarantine and post-arrival [currently no requirements]

 
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 3:29 am
  #3976  
 
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Poland has had a record increase today. The minister of health has said we should "get used" to higher numbers of cases.

Expect to see the Poland number grow.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 4:21 am
  #3977  
 
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Originally Posted by corporate-wage-slave

Here is the Thursday data which will be very important today, with Denmark on the radar here. Iceland (not in the chart) is 90.5, compared to 19.0 last Thursday. Faroes 74. Bonaire (etc) has also had a recent outbreak and is on 169. UK and several other European countries have had >5 point rises in one day, which is invariably a bad sign. Croatia's data has been rebased, but I think it is correct. Something odd is happening with the Swiss data but I've not been told what it is yet.

I have gone for option 2 in redrawing up the chart, and I'll make it more alphabetical when I get more time. I'll try and keep two columns of older data, representing about 2 and 1 months prior to the current week. We can change it further after trying it out for a bit.
Thanks as always C-W-S. I think that's the best way forward, keep the last Saturday in the previous 2 months. If you're rejigging countries, I don't have particular requests for additions, but I think you can remove Australia because that'll be off the map for the vast majority for a long time to come...
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 5:30 am
  #3978  
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Also worth noting the constant increase in infection rates in the US again despite the number of tests performed going down over the period and much lower than its highest level in July, and Belgium being its usual statistically frustrating self. Every day, they update results for several days prior adding nearly 5-10 points each time! France has now broken the sad and symbolic 200 bar (and Belgium has undoubtedly broken the 150 but they will only tell us that retrospectively tomorrow or so!)
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 7:19 am
  #3979  
 
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I don’t see how Denmark and Iceland are not removed today - I assume that ship has already sailed / the decision has probably already been taken.

Croatia is providing almost the only good news at the moment! Hopefully they can keep it up. The fact that Spain is still basically in free fall I find mind blowing, the Czech Republic seems intent on joining Spain, too.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 8:07 am
  #3980  
 
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Originally Posted by orbitmic
Also worth noting the constant increase in infection rates in the US again despite the number of tests performed going down over the period and much lower than its highest level in July, and Belgium being its usual statistically frustrating self. Every day, they update results for several days prior adding nearly 5-10 points each time! France has now broken the sad and symbolic 200 bar (and Belgium has undoubtedly broken the 150 but they will only tell us that retrospectively tomorrow or so!)
Uncertain as to where you are getting your USA data from.
If you look at the testing rate from JHU website, USA testing rate hit >1MM this past week for the first time and remains fairly steady on a smoothed basis at 800K tests a day. Positives rate <5%.
There is a small blip on positives in the past week but I would say using the adjective constant to describe the increase is hyperbole.

While the numbers are large, unlike many countries in Europe, they are not increasing as of yet.

https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/testing/individual-states
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 9:29 am
  #3981  
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Originally Posted by ElegantMess
Is the data for Croatia and Switzerland correct? Same metrics since Friday.
CH is 63.1/100k incl. today‘s announcement of cases.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:07 am
  #3982  
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Originally Posted by radonc1
Uncertain as to where you are getting your USA data from.
If you look at the testing rate from JHU website, USA testing rate hit >1MM this past week for the first time and remains fairly steady on a smoothed basis at 800K tests a day. Positives rate <5%.
There is a small blip on positives in the past week but I would say using the adjective constant to describe the increase is hyperbole.

While the numbers are large, unlike many countries in Europe, they are not increasing as of yet.

https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/testing/individual-states
The data I used was this: https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing It suggests that the number of tests performed this week is 2.6 o/oo after a low of 2.3o/oo about ten days ago, whilst in late July it was 2.9 o/oo (7 day rolling averages). The JHU figures you linked to are slightly different and I'm not sure why, but the 1 million figure you mention is a single one day total so it is a lot harder to make sense of (3 days later, the figure was about 700,000).

As for the numbers, the table provided by cws suggests that we have moved from 157/100k a week ago to 174.6 based on yesterday's figures so that looks like a deterioration after weeks of slow improvement to the headline figure. The incidence rate is 5% and that is looked at as a rolling 7 day average. That's a bit more than a low of 4.7 a few days ago but a lot less indeed than it was in July where it was above 8%.

This is of course far from the rate of increase in Europe at the moment, but the US is well behind Europe in the cycle so that is not surprising per se. So for instance the positivity of 5% in the US is not far from the 6% just reached in France which is among the countries with the steepest increases in recent weeks (though quite a bit below Spain or Israel which have much higher incidence rates). The issue in a way is that the US numbers have never gone down to the levels Europe got after their "hard" lockdown which were new cases per 100k in single digits and incidence rates between 0 and 0.5% for several weeks or months depending on the country. Obviously, mortality is still a lot higher in the US too.

Last edited by orbitmic; Sep 24, 2020 at 10:22 am
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:13 am
  #3983  
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14-day COVID-19 case notification rate per 100 000, weeks 37-38 (ECDC - map produced on 23 September 2020)






Geographic distribution of 14-day cumulative number of reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population, worldwide, as of 24 September, 2020


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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:16 am
  #3984  
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Confirmed today: Iceland, Denmark, Slovakia and Curaçao are no longer exempt from self isolation for England at least. This applies to arrivals from Saturday, until then arrivals into England remain exempt from the requirement to self isolate. No countries are being added to the list of exempt countries this week.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:25 am
  #3985  
 
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Originally Posted by corporate-wage-slave
Confirmed today: Iceland, Denmark, Slovakia and Curaçao are no longer exempt from self isolation for England at least. This applies to arrivals from Saturday, until then arrivals into England remain exempt from the requirement to self isolate. No countries are being added to the list of exempt countries this week.
The same countries are now also on Scotland's list.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:37 am
  #3986  
 
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Originally Posted by corporate-wage-slave
No countries are being added to the list of exempt countries this week.
Hard to see many countries getting added unless they change the rules and start removing countries with a lower rate than the UK.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 10:51 am
  #3987  
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UK media is reporting two people in Bolton fined very quickly after returning from trips to non-exempt countries (and going to school/work). This would seem to go against the wisdom that many texts are sent, then a call, and only the a police referral. Is enforcement changing? Or is this a result of Bolton being a community in lock down or tips from people at the school/office?
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 11:04 am
  #3988  
 
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Originally Posted by KSVVZ2015
UK media is reporting two people in Bolton fined very quickly after returning from trips to non-exempt countries (and going to school/work). This would seem to go against the wisdom that many texts are sent, then a call, and only the a police referral. Is enforcement changing? Or is this a result of Bolton being a community in lock down or tips from people at the school/office?
I think we'd have heard if the formal process was changing. I can imagine it was tip offs, similar to the Scotland situation when those families returned from Spain and sent their children to school and the teachers reported them.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 11:14 am
  #3989  
 
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Originally Posted by corporate-wage-slave
Confirmed today: Iceland, Denmark, Slovakia and Curaçao are no longer exempt from self isolation for England at least. This applies to arrivals from Saturday, until then arrivals into England remain exempt from the requirement to self isolate. No countries are being added to the list of exempt countries this week.
Montserrat was added, not that Brits are allowed in.
Not sure if it was added to Scotland's too.
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Old Sep 24, 2020, 11:14 am
  #3990  
 
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Originally Posted by orbitmic
The data I used was this: https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing It suggests that the number of tests performed this week is 2.6 o/oo after a low of 2.3o/oo about ten days ago, whilst in late July it was 2.9 o/oo (7 day rolling averages). The JHU figures you linked to are slightly different and I'm not sure why, but the 1 million figure you mention is a single one day total so it is a lot harder to make sense of (3 days later, the figure was about 700,000).

As for the numbers, the table provided by cws suggests that we have moved from 157/100k a week ago to 174.6 based on yesterday's figures so that looks like a deterioration after weeks of slow improvement to the headline figure. The incidence rate is 5% and that is looked at as a rolling 7 day average. That's a bit more than a low of 4.7 a few days ago but a lot less indeed than it was in July where it was above 8%.

This is of course far from the rate of increase in Europe at the moment, but the US is well behind Europe in the cycle so that is not surprising per se. So for instance the positivity of 5% in the US is not far from the 6% just reached in France which is among the countries with the steepest increases in recent weeks (though quite a bit below Spain or Israel which have much higher incidence rates). The issue in a way is that the US numbers have never gone down to the levels Europe got after their "hard" lockdown which were new cases per 100k in single digits and incidence rates between 0 and 0.5% for several weeks or months depending on the country. Obviously, mortality is still a lot higher in the US too.
Using single day figures can be misleading which is why I stated testing to be around 800k "smoothing the curves". I simply pointed out 1MM/day to show that testing has vastly increased.

Looking at your site,
It appears that the USA has the highest rate of testing (only outmatched by GB) in the world (2.67/1000), and basically unchanged since the beginning of August (again smoothing the curves).

That does not appear to be any different than the JHU data, which is not shocking since they draw from the same data sources.

https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing
(I am unable to post the graphs, sadly).
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