Brazil Offers Visa-free Entry June 1 – Sept 15th 2016

Brazil normally requires a visa from citizens of most countries for which you apply online and have to send your passport to the consulate to have the visa attached.  But for one window of opportunity this summer, citizens of countries which have a strong Olympic history will be able to enter Brazil without a visa for maximum 90 days.  These countries include the United States, Canada, Australia and Japan.

Although this opportunity is basically intended to support the Olympics in Rio, you do not have to present Olympic tickets to take advantage.  So if you want to visit Brazil for eco-tourism & birding and HATE having to apply for visas, now’s your chance!  Honestly, I wish I had known about this in time or I would have planned Brazil for this year’s trip as well!

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India Extends Visa-on-arrival Facility To 180 Countries

The Times of India reports that India will be implementing a new Visa-on-arrival system which will be a great asset to tourism.  Although some countries like the USA can visas valid for 10 years once you go through the procedures, others like Australia have visas that expire after 6 months and you have to go through the procedure every time you travel.

“We have decided to extend visa-on-arrival to tourists from 180 nations. It will take 5-6 months to put the infrastructure in place. We hope to implement this from the next tourist session beginning October,” planning minister Rajiv Shukla said.

The facility will be implemented at 9 airports initially (although only 8 airports are named).  Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Cochin, Hyderabad, Goa and Trivandrum.  I am surprised not to see Bangalore on the list since this is a major airport in India.

Tourists will also have the option of applying for an electronic visa (ETA) which is similar to an ESTA for the USA, ETA for Australia and India’s neighbor Sri Lanka.  For my recent trip, I had to go to the Indian visa processing facility in Brisbane which was a pita given there is very little parking nearby and is very expensive.  By contrast our Sri Lankan visas were done online in a matter of minutes!

I have to admit, ease of obtaining a visa plays a huge part in my decision making as to which country I choose if I am targeting a bird species that is present in more than one country.  All else being equal, I will choose the country I can get a visa on arrival or do an ETA.

This is a great move on behalf of the Indian government and should greatly boost tourism in the country and increase job opportunities for people working in tourism!

 

India May Extend Visa On Arrival To More Nationalities

After hastily throwing together a trip to India & Sri Lanka prompted by last week’s US Airways promo I have now turned my attention to the formalities.  Both countries require visas of Australians, Americans, Canadians and most Europeans.   A full list can be found on the new story.  HT:  The Wandering Aramean

I spent this morning filling out applications for me and my husband.  Sri Lanka was easy.  A short application that was approved less than 5 minutes after submitting it.  The approval went to my spam folder but I eventually found it.

India is more difficult.  This isn’t our first trip but the visas Australians get a visa valid for 6 months, double entry and there must be a gap of 2 months between entries.  Our last visa issued and used in 2011 was long expired.  I filled out the apps for both of us, uploaded passport photos and printed it out.  India wants to know EVERYTHING about us, our parents, religion, employment, what countries we’ve been in the last 10 years –  I ran out of room!  Thankfully there is an Indian visa centre in Brisbane so we don’t have to mail our passports off.

So my prediction of when this new visa on arrival will happen?  The day after I lodge our visa applications and pay the fee!

Travel Tips For Dual Citizens

After our last trip where I had to use both my passports (USA & Australian), I thought that some people may appreciate some tips for how to handle traveling with 2 passports.

Our trip originated in Australia, with transits through Thailand, Korea, Canada & the USA to Belize.  Then we visited Guatemala, Costa Rica and Panama before flying back to the USA for 10 days after which we returned to Australia via Korea and Thailand.  My husband used his Australian passport with an ESTA to enter the USA.  I had to bring both USA & Australian passports with me.

The Australian gov’t requires its citizens to enter and exit Australia using their Australian passports.  The USA gov’t has the same requirement.  So how do you know which passport to show at different stages of travel?

CHECKING IN AT THE AIRPORT

Airlines may be fined if they transport someone to a country where they don’t have a visa or other permission to enter so they want to be sure you have the correct documents.  When we checked in with Thai at Brisbane airport, they wanted to know that we had permission to transit the USA since you can’t do this airside as with most countries.  They also wanted to know we could enter Belize, the final destination of the journey.  Star Alliance  provides a tool to look up this information.  Delta used to have one but it seems to have been taken down.

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The resulting screen is too long to copy here but in a nutshell it says that Australians need an ESTA to transit (or visit) the USA which my husband had.  We had a printout of it but they could see it on his passport somehow.  They also wanted to see my US passport as proof that I could transit the USA enroute to Belize.

Australians may enter Belize for up to a month without a visa.  They could see we had return tickets to Australia, albeit from Honolulu but I did have printouts of our Central American airline tickets if they had asked.  We actually took a shuttle van from Belize to Tikal in Guatemala.

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EXITING THE ORIGINATING COUNTRY

Simple:  if you are a citizen of that country, you use their passport.  If you are not a citizen, you can use any valid passport.  We both used our Australian passports to exit Australia.

VISITING COUNTRIES ENROUTE WHERE YOU ARE NOT A CITIZEN BUT DON’T REQUIRE A VISA

We could have chosen to exit the airport in Thailand, Korea and Canada.  We only exercised this option in Canada to make a quick trip into Vancouver.  Since Australians and Americans can enter these countries, I had a choice of passports.  I used my Australian passport since my husband was also using his Australian passport for simplicity.  In this case, you can use either passport which suits your convenience.

VISITING COUNTRIES WHERE ONE OF YOUR PASSPORTS REQUIRES A VISA AND ONE DOESN’T

I’ll use an example of a friend who has both UK and USA citizenship visiting Brazil.  If he flies from London to Miami to Rio de Janiero; he must show his UK passport when exiting the UK, US passport to transit the USA and the UK passport to enter Brazil since citizens of the UK don’t need a visa to enter Brazil for 90 days.  If he used his US passport, he would have to obtain a visa in advance for $160!  Always check both your passports against a country’s visa requirements and use the one which gets you into the country cheaper!