Chile entry question.
#16
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The simple answer to make sure you don't feel ripped off, is keep going back to Chile. I do. My "reciprocity fee" was $61 just over 3 years ago, and I've entered 8 times
#17


Join Date: Mar 2002
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Originally Posted by JDiver
The receipt is attached into your passport, and is good for the life of the passport. It is not a visa, nor is it part of your tourist card. If you remove it from your passport, no big whoop, except you will have to pay another $100 next time you visit.
#18




Join Date: Feb 2004
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Like Eastbay1K, I've gotten my money's worth out of my reciprocity fee receipt. The one in my old passport cost me $20 in 1995, and counting up the stamps in that passport, I see I entered 25 times with it.
En estricto rigor, the receipt is good for the life of your passport, but if you're lucky, it can be good for longer than that. The first time I entered Chile after I had renewed my passport, I expected to have to pay the reciprocity fee (which had since risen to $100), since the $20 receipt now had holes punched through it like the rest of the old passport. But after some consultation between the fee booth person and the passport control people, I was given a new receipt without my having to pay.
A few months later I got my permanent residency card, and sometime soon thereafter, either on leaving or reentering Chile, someone in passport control removed the $100 receipt from my passport.
In the new passport, by the way, 14 entries so far, and counting.
En estricto rigor, the receipt is good for the life of your passport, but if you're lucky, it can be good for longer than that. The first time I entered Chile after I had renewed my passport, I expected to have to pay the reciprocity fee (which had since risen to $100), since the $20 receipt now had holes punched through it like the rest of the old passport. But after some consultation between the fee booth person and the passport control people, I was given a new receipt without my having to pay.
A few months later I got my permanent residency card, and sometime soon thereafter, either on leaving or reentering Chile, someone in passport control removed the $100 receipt from my passport.
In the new passport, by the way, 14 entries so far, and counting.
Last edited by cubbie; Jan 19, 2005 at 8:48 am
#19


Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: US expat somewhere south of Valpo, Chilezuela
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Originally Posted by cubbie
En estricto rigor, the receipt is good for the life of your passport, but if you're lucky, it can be good for longer than that. The first time I entered Chile after I had renewed my passport, I expected to have to pay the reciprocity fee (which had since risen to $100), since the $20 receipt now had holes punched through it like the rest of the old passport. But after some consultation between the fee booth person and the passport control people, I was given a new receipt without my having to pay.
A few months later I got my permanent residency card, and sometime soon thereafter, either on leaving or reentering Chile, someone in passport control removed the $100 receipt from my passport.
A few months later I got my permanent residency card, and sometime soon thereafter, either on leaving or reentering Chile, someone in passport control removed the $100 receipt from my passport.
#20




Join Date: Nov 2004
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Actually, when I was last there, I am pretty sure they wanted a $45 reciprocity fee from UK passport holders.
Of course, I do know some people who don't see the UK as a European country.
They also charged Australian, Canadian and Mexican passports varying fees.
Of course, I do know some people who don't see the UK as a European country.
They also charged Australian, Canadian and Mexican passports varying fees.
Originally Posted by Sjoerd
Please note that US citizens need to pay this fee because Chileans have to pay USD 100 for a US visa. If the US government stops asking this visa fee, the Chileans will allow Americans to enter Chile for free. Europeans can enter Chile without a visa and don't have to pay a fee.
#21




Join Date: Feb 2004
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Originally Posted by Viajero Perpetuo
Is it a valid assumption that this generosity was the result of having your permanent residency paperwork already in the system and being processed?
I didn't ask or do anything to get out of paying the fee; in fact, I did get in line at the booth and paid it, but then when I got to the immigration desk and showed the new passport along with the old one, the guy there said I didn't have to pay it, and walked me back to the booth and told them to give me my $100 back.
As I said, it could have been just my luck that day.
Last edited by cubbie; Jan 19, 2005 at 2:57 pm
#23
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Originally Posted by LLB
Do you have to pay the $100 visa fee if you are flying to Mendoza with a connection through SCL?
#26
Join Date: Nov 2002
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Originally Posted by LLB
Do you have to pay the $100 visa fee if you are flying to Mendoza with a connection through SCL?
#27
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Originally Posted by chtiet
No - I've done exactly this, and you can avoid Chilean immigration altogether. As you're exiting the plane in SCL, there will be signs and people directing if you're making a connection to Argentina.

