Cloud 5
Member
Interesting can i ask what the ( igic ) vat rate in Canaries , against EU rate
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It looks like an Irish passport is valuable asset
I think YOU need to re-read the statements and your examples. The two statements are NOT contradictory. I and others have attempted to explain why...Read the original statements again carefully. Then tell me what it means, not what you would like it to mean. The two statements contradict each other.
But this is what I have come to expect from both the government and the other advisory bodies and so called experts. If someone is offering guidance on the law or potential law, then they should be clear and concise, not leave it open to interpretation of the readers.
I wonder if these people ever read what they've written, back to themselves and put themselves in the position of the recipient.
Although some individual EU countries may offer 180 day visas to some nationalities (I believe France offers this to Australian citizens) such a visa is restricted to the issuing country and does provide an exemption to the general 90 day rule for the other countries within Schengen. Similarly gaining residence in a Schengen country allows you to stay in that one country only.
I understand that the EU has offered 180 day stays if reciprocated by UK. Boris has turned this (and so many other) friendly offer down.
UK Citizens Travelling to EU Member States After Brexit
In a post-Brexit European Union, the UK travelers will no longer be privileged as they currently are as EU citizens. They will need to join the lines of third-country nationals at airports, and present the following documents:
As of January 1, 2021, UK nationals traveling to the EU will also need an ETIAS, which is an online authorization to enter the Schengen Area.
- Valid passport. The passport must not be older than 10 years, and it must have at least 3 months of validity left on the day the traveler plans to leave the EU.
- Health Insurance. Valid in the whole territory of the Schengen Area, with a coverage worth minimum €30,000 for health related incidents.
- Proof of accommodation and financial means may also be required in several Schengen countries.
Can you provide a link? My understanding is that UK offered EU citizens 6 months but they haven't reciprocated.
............... I've been reading fake news!
I think YOU need to re-read the statements and your examples. The two statements are NOT contradictory. I and others have attempted to explain why...
I don't understand how you think that a 14 day exit suddenly warps time and changes 104 days (90+14) into 180!
These rules are not new and have applied to non EU/Schengen countries for many years. Although some individual EU countries may offer 180 day visas to some nationalities (I believe France offers this to Australian citizens) such a visa is restricted to the issuing country and does provide an exemption to the general 90 day rule for the other countries within Schengen. Similarly gaining residence in a Schengen country allows you to stay in that one country only.
Generally a good description of the rules and I'm sure they mean well but they can confuse people with their contradictions.
First statement says, quote "After your 90-days in the Schengen zone have finished, you have to leave, and you cannot return until 90 days after that. Basically 3 months on, 3 months off. " OK I've got that - simple.
Then a few lines further down:- Quote : "but if you count back to a 180 day period, you can only be in the Schengen Zone for a total of 90 of those days. " - this means that if you're in Schengen for 90 days and leave for example for 14 days, you are then entitled to come back for 14 days to "top back up" to the 90 days limit. OK I understand that too.
But which one is the rule?
I'm still wondering if I'm going to be able to sail in say, Portugal for three months on my UK passport, check out, then pop around the corner to Spain and check in again on my NZ passport for another 90 days. That would get me the six month sailing season it used to be my God-given right to until some twit painted a bus.
I agree with that if 14 days in EU were the the first of the180 day window. But your example was 90 days in EU then 14 days out. You still have to wait a further 76 days so that days start to drop out if the 180 day window.Apologies but I missed your post on Monday. Please read the post and subsequent ones and you will see that my example IS possible using the 90 in 180 rolling system if 14 days of your occupancy were the first 14 days of the 180.
I am not interested in what you think or say, I can read and can understand what it means. AND IT IS CONTRADICTORY. There, you've got me shouting now.
I'd better go sailing
Pity you had to introduce an irrelevant political bias it to your message. Wrong place.
A Portuguese I.D. card is even more convenient.It looks like an Irish passport is valuable asset