FlyerTalk Forums

FlyerTalk Forums (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/index.php)
-   Practical Travel Safety and Security Issues (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/practical-travel-safety-security-issues-686/)
-   -   Mistaken Date on Passport Stamp (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/practical-travel-safety-security-issues/1852409-mistaken-date-passport-stamp.html)

LASNRT Jul 8, 2017 5:02 pm

Mistaken Date on Passport Stamp
 
I believe the situation may have already resolved itself, but I'd just like a second opinion. US passport holder (issued in 2013), no European residency.

On June 4, I had a 8 hour layover in Switzerland coming from Turkey on my way to Russia and left the airport and went into Zurich, thus clearing passport control. The immigration agent mistakenly stamped the next day, June 5, as the entry date into my passport. Later when I left Zurich and cleared exit immigration, the agent looked around my passport for a while (a little longer than normal), said nothing, and stamped the correct exit date of June 4. (The Turkish exit date is stamped correctly as June 4, and the Russian entry date is stamped correctly as June 5 - although very blurry (on the next page) - as the plane landed at 2 am...)

I left Russia by train and entered Finland on June 13, and got a Finnish entry stamp. I left Schengen through Poland on June 16 and the Polish exit stamp was stamped next to my Swiss entry stamp dated June 5.

Of course, I didn't notice the discrepancy until I had already returned home.

My next port of entry into Europe will be...Zurich!

To me, it looks like I left Switzerland on June 4, with no corresponding entry into the Schengen area. Common sense would explain that it was a mistake - I entered Turkey on May 31, left on June 4, and flew into Switzerland on June 4, but I don't want to depend on my idea of common sense when I am at the mercy of another nation's frontier guards...

Should I contact Swiss immigration authorities to alert them to the anomaly in my passport, or just let it go? I wasn't questioned about it leaving Warsaw. By the way, my line was about 30 deep when I got there, and I assume everybody else in my line got the wrong date stamped too (my travel companion did!)

Thanks for your advice and opinions!

https://preview.ibb.co/eObkza/IMG_0727_1.jpg

For clarification, my itinerary was:

May 31: USA -> Turkey
June 4: Turkey -> Switzerland -> Russia (landing 2 am)
June 13: Russia -> Finland
June 16: Poland -> USA

kshanew Jul 8, 2017 5:21 pm

I wouldn't worry about this in the slightest. I have many (maybe dozens) of Schengen stamps that don't correspond..entries with no exits and exits with no corresponding entries. For a while I was entering Schengen through CDG often and I would get an entry stamp < 50% of the time (it happened in other locations as well but CDG was the worse..or best, depending on your perspective). To add another facet, I also have a German entry stamp on a date that does not exist (32nd March)...my favorite stamp. :)

I've been asked a total of twice out of many many Schengen border crossings about this. Once, when departing Schengen through Iceland I was asked when/where I entered as it wasn't clear from my stamps or their computer. I explained and it was no issue.

Once when entering (either Switzerland or France or Portugal, I can't recall), I was simply asked "where do you live", likely due to the volume of stamps (~200, 3 extra sets of pages from back when that was possible) but my answer (which was a city in the US) was enough and on I went.

LASNRT Jul 8, 2017 5:42 pm


Originally Posted by kshanew (Post 28536405)
I wouldn't worry about this in the slightest. I have many (maybe dozens) of Schengen stamps that don't correspond..entries with no exits and exits with no corresponding entries. For a while I was entering Schengen through CDG often and I would get an entry stamp < 50% of the time (it happened in other locations as well but CDG was the worse..or best, depending on your perspective). To add another facet, I also have a German entry stamp on a date that does not exist (32nd March)...my favorite stamp. :)

I've been asked a total of twice out of many many Schengen border crossings about this. Once, when departing Schengen through Iceland I was asked when/where I entered as it wasn't clear from my stamps or their computer. I explained and it was no issue.

Once when entering (either Switzerland or France or Portugal, I can't recall), I was simply asked "where do you live", likely due to the volume of stamps (~200, 3 extra sets of pages from back when that was possible) but my answer (which was a city in the US) was enough and on I went.

Fantastic! Thank you kshanew for taking the time for such a detailed response... I'll tuck the passport away for now until the next adventure :)

kshanew Jul 8, 2017 5:47 pm

1 Attachment(s)
My pleasure..and here's the infamous (to me) March 32nd entry stamp from Dusseldorf. Safe travels!

Skatering Jul 9, 2017 6:36 am

You should be fine.

A US citizen friend of mine travelled the Schengen area with me and managed to get no entry or exit stamps, including an exit without an entry, and an entry without an exit. It was pretty impressive.

I researched it pretty extensively and found many anecdotes from people in similar situations who had no future problems. Certain Schengen members are worse than others with collecting accurate data.

SDQBound Jul 9, 2017 9:12 am

Things have changed in the last year or so. I believe all passports are now scanned and non-EU passports stamped both at entry/exit.

Often1 Jul 9, 2017 9:27 am

This won't be an issue because whatever issue might have existed did so when you were stamped out of Schengen at ZRH and it wasn't raised then.

If it gives you peace of mind stick a copy of your inbound and outbound itinerary and boarding passes in a file and have them should someone ask.

leaveamessage Jul 9, 2017 3:53 pm

I have this nugget in one of my UK passports...thankfully re-issued sheepishly by the same officer a few hours later :D but otherwise a waste of an entire page.

http://thumbsnap.com/i/dZz8D7TH.jpg

kshanew Jul 9, 2017 3:59 pm


Originally Posted by SDQBound (Post 28538224)
Things have changed in the last year or so. I believe all passports are now scanned and non-EU passports stamped both at entry/exit.

It my be that non-EU passports are supposed to be stamped at entry/exit but that hasn't been my experience. I have had non-stamped Schengen border crossings as recently as this year (though the vast majority of crossings were stamped both ways).

FlyingUnderTheRadar Jul 10, 2017 9:25 pm

We recently discover the wrong year on one of our passport entry stamps which at first really confused us because we were sure that we did not go to Mexico that year.

seawolf Jul 10, 2017 11:29 pm

Your stamps since 5 JUN showed you were outside Schengen and didn't overstay. Nothing to worry about.

LASNRT Jul 11, 2017 11:13 pm

Thank you all! Glad to know this won't be an issue!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 7:20 am.


This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.