UK’s 2026 Passport Rules Require Dual Citizens to Use British or Irish Documentation to Enter
From February twenty-fifth dual nationals must present a valid British or Irish passport or a Certificate of Entitlement under the UK’s enforced Electronic Travel Authorisation regime
The United Kingdom is introducing new entry rules for dual nationals tied to the full enforcement of its Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) system, reshaping how British dual citizens travel to the country from February twenty-fifth two thousand twenty-six.
Until now, many dual British and other-nationality citizens could enter the UK using their non-British passport; under the updated regime, carriers will be required to verify travellers’ documentation against ETA requirements before boarding, and those holding British citizenship must travel on valid British or Irish passports or present a Certificate of Entitlement confirming their right of abode.
The ETA system, similar to travel authorisation programmes in the United States and European Union, necessitates digital pre-authorisation from nationals of around eighty-five visa-exempt countries before travel, but British and Irish citizens are exempt from the ETA requirement.
The new rules close a loophole in which dual nationals could board UK-bound flights with a foreign passport without facing ETA checks, even though carriers must now enforce the authorisation requirement.
As a result, dual citizens without a UK or Irish passport and without a Certificate of Entitlement will be unable to travel to the UK on their foreign passport alone, potentially being denied boarding.
The British government says the changes align the UK with global border practices and improve national security by ensuring authorities and carriers can correctly identify British and Irish citizens at the border.
The rules also affect children born overseas who have not previously held a British passport: they will need to obtain either a valid British or Irish passport or a Certificate of Entitlement before travel.
Dual nationals anxious about upcoming travel are urged to apply early for necessary documentation, noting that passport renewals and certificates may take several weeks to process.
The updates reflect broader efforts within the UK’s digital border strategy to streamline entry processes while enhancing pre-departure screening and risk management, and they are expected to be strictly enforced from twenty-fifth February two thousand twenty-six onward.