
Is it possible to use different passports to enter and leave france and the uk?
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BORDER SECURITY RULES ARE COMING INTO FORCE ACROSS EUROPE AND UK WHICH WILL SEE NON-CITIZENS REGISTERING TO ENTER COUNTRIES Reader Question: I hold passports for both France and the UK. Is
it possible for me to leave a country on one passport and arrive in a new one with another? Will the new border security rules affect this? It is possible for dual citizens to enter/exit
countries using the method you have described. The rule of thumb when travelling between the two countries you have a passport for is to use the corresponding document for each country when
exiting or entering. In general, if you are entering a county you are a citizen of, you should show this via a passport/ID card where applicable, which will also minimise any border
control issues. In your case, you should show your UK passport when entering/exiting the UK, and your French one when entering/exiting France (and when entering/exiting all Schengen Area
countries as you are an EU citizen). When travelling to a third country, you should use the same passport when entering and exiting (for example, if you enter Australia on your French
passport, also exit on that passport, so there is a record of you leaving the country). INCREASED IMPORTANCE UNDER INCOMING RULES It will be increasingly important for dual nationals to
follow these rules in the coming years, as both the UK and EU plan to introduce tighter border security rules. In the UK, this is the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA), already in force
for most citizens of countries with visa-free access to the UK, and applying to EU citizens from April 2, 2025. Read more: New UK travel permit rules: how are travellers from France
affected? In the EU’s Schengen Area, Etias (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) will come into force around six months after the digital border security changes relating to
the Entry/Exit System (EES) begin. It is not known when the EES (and by extension Etias) will be implemented, after the systems faced numerous delays. Read more: Britons, Americans, other
non-EU travellers: New problem for digital border checks Both systems will require non-exempt visitors to register when passing through border control. UK citizens will be subject to Etias
rules but not ETA, and the opposite will apply for French and other EU citizens. Dual citizens are exempt from registration from both systems (if they hold eligible citizenship), which will
be beneficial to minimise pre-journey paperwork and costs relating to the systems. However this will only be the case if they show the correct passport upon entry. For example, if you
showed your French passport when entering the UK after April 2, but did not register for an ETA, you may face issues. This will especially be the case if you do not have your UK passport on
hand to prove you are a UK citizen.