What Travelers Will Need To Enter The United States Beginning November 8
New regulations break down what both vaccinated and unvaccinated travelers will require to enter the United States.
Beginning on November 8th, or specifically 11PM on November 7th, new regulations surrounding travel to the United States will be implemented.
Regulations brought in during the Trump administration ruled that any non-US Citizen must not have been in the UK, the Schengen Zone, China, Brazil, India, Ireland, and Iran in the 14 days prior to arrival. These rules are officially coming to an end.
Countries across Europe had been particularly critical in recent months, as many had relaxed or removed their own regulations on visitors from the United States. But the Biden Administration announced new measures, allowing for entry to the U.S. from dozens of countries, subject to new requirements.
The measures affect citizens and non-citizens alike, with differing regulations relating to each group, as well age.
The Following Vaccines Are Accepted For Entry To The US
Two doses of:
- Pfizer-BioNTech
- Moderna
- AstraZeneca
- Covishield
- BIBP/Sinopharm
- Sinovac
One dose of
- Janssen/J&J
The following is required for entry to the United States of America
Vaccinated U.S. Citizens (including lawful permanent residents)
Before boarding any plane bound to the US, vaccinated citizens must show a negative COVID-19 test within 3 days of travel. Antigen tests are fine.
A US citizen is defined as fully vaccinated if they have received the full dosage of an accepted vaccine and allowed two weeks (14 days) before traveling.
If the citizen has recovered from COVID-19 in the previous 90 days, they may instead travel with proof of recovery. This must be in the form of a doctor’s note, or hospital record.
Children under the age of 2 are not required to take a COVID test.
It should be noted that differing airlines may have their own requirements as to the method of testing, as well as other regulations in place. These should be respected, but do not take the place of the US regulations.
Unvaccinated Citizens (including permanent residents)
Unvaccinated Citizens are required to show a negative COVID-19 test taken no more than 24 hours before travel. Any test taken beyond this time may be denied. The test can be antigen type.
A US citizen is defined as unvaccinated if they have
- Received no doses of any accepted vaccine
- Received one dose of a two dose cycle vaccine
- Received both doses of an accepted vaccine less than two weeks before travel
- Have received a full or partial dose of a vaccine not accepted in the US
Travelers under the age of 2 will not be required to take a COVID-19 test.
Vaccinated non-US Citizens
Travelers must provide a negative COVID-19 test taken no more than 3 days before departure. Any more than this, and the traveler is subject to denial of entry.
Vaccinated non-US citizens are defined in the same manner as above, regarding a full vaccination at least 14 days prior to traveling.
Please note that proof must be shown of vaccination. Anyone non-vaccinated or otherwise vaccinated with a non-approved type of vaccine will be denied entry to the US without official proof.
Children Under 2 are not required to take a COVID-19 test.
Contact information will be required by the airline, to allow for swift contact in the event of exposure to COVID-19.
Unvaccinated non-US Citizens
The new rules stipulate that unvaccinated non-US citizens will be denied entry to the United States.
Unvaccinated non-US citizens have defined the same manner as above, meaning any traveler with no vaccine doses, an unaccepted vaccine, an incomplete vaccine cycle, or a full vaccine cycle less than 14 days before travel.
Importantly, travelers under the age of 18 will not be required to show proof of a full vaccine cycle, due to rulings in other countries surrounding the vaccination of children, If a child is traveling with a parent, they may adhere to the rules applicable to the parent.
Unvaccinated non-US citizens are defined the same manner as above, meaning any traveler with no vaccine doses, an unaccepted vaccine, an incomplete vaccine cycle, or a full vaccine cycle less than 14 days before travel.
Importantly, travelers under the age of 18 will not be required to show proof of a full vaccine cycle, due to rulings in other countries surrounding the vaccination of children, If a child is traveling with a parent, they may adhere to the rules applicable to the parent.
Mask usage in the US is still strongly recommended. It is required in public transpiration hubs, and state laws regarding COVID-19 should be followed.
Please refer to the CDC and Government websites before traveling to the USA to ensure the most up-to-date information.
Source: https://bit.ly/2Ylyq8J