US is Open to Tourists but CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to 80 Destinations

US is Open to Tourists but CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to 80 Destinations

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February 13, 2022
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US is Open to Tourists but CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to 80 Destinations

The U.S. reopened borders to tourists from Europe and other countries on November 8.

This reopening has raised countless questions including but not limited to the vaccines the U.S. will accept, the types of COVID-19 test travelers must present, what will happen with unvaccinated children travelers with vaccinated adults, and so on.

We have prepared a list of key aspects that EU and other travelers need to know before booking their trips to the U.S.

Join our FB Group – COVID Travel Advice Community

RELATED: – Canada is open for tourism: All You Need to Know – Is is safe to travel to Mexico right now?

US Reopening Tourism – LATEST UPDATES

January 15 – The US issues a “Do-not-travel” notice against Canada and Singapore

The CDC has issued the highest travel health advisory to Canada, Singapore and Curaçao due to the high incidence in COVID-19 cases in the previous week. 

The CDC currently lists about 80 destinations throughout the world as Level Four.

Canadian health officials forecast the Omicron wave peak at 170,000 cases a day this month, with 2,000 hospitalizations also per day.

The CDC will revisit this travel advice on Monday. 

Read our full post: CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to Canada

New Entry Requirements for international travelers

The CDC has clarified the entry requirements visitors will need to meet starting Nov. 8.

Vaccine and COVID-19 test 

From that date onwards, travelers must present proof of having received the full course of a WHO-approved vaccine at least 14 days prior to arrival in the U.S. and a negative COVID-19 test taken within 1 day of departure to the U.S. 

Warning!Nobody will be permitted to apply for an exemption to the proof of vaccination for religious or moral motives. Only people with severe anaphylactic reactions to the components of the vaccine would be exempted. 

Children under 18 traveling with vaccine-exempt adults must present a negative COVID-19 test taken only within 1 day prior to departure to the U.S.

All passengers aged 2 or older, must present a negative COVID-19 viral test or documentation of recovery from the illness regardless of their vaccination status.

Contact tracing

Airlines have been instructed to gather personal information from all passengers like emails, phone numbers, and U.S. addresses and retain it for 30 days in case authorities need “to follow up with travelers who have been exposed to COVID-19 variants or other pathogens.”

It will “strengthen [airlines and agencies] ability to rapidly identify and contact people in the U.S. who may have been exposed to a communicable disease, such as COVID-19,” the agency said.

Travelers experience from our Covid travel support FB group





U.S. reopening FAQs:

Can unvaccinated FOREIGN travelers enter the U.S. with a negative COVID-19 test?No, unvaccinated visitors can't enter the U.S. after November 8.

Can you apply for a religious exemption if you are not vaccinated?You can’t. There are no religious exemptions for international travelers who want to bypass the COVID-19 requirements for “religious or moral convictions“, as per the CDC.

Will the U.S. accept travelers immunized with mixed vaccine brands?International travelers will be considered fully vaccinated if they have received the full series of an FDA- or WHO-approved single-dose vaccine, such as the Johnson & Johnson shot, or “any combination of two doses of an FDA approved/authorized or WHO emergency use listed COVID-19 two-dose series,” confirmed the CDC. 

Can Covaxin vaccinated travelers enter the US?Foreign nationals can only enter the country if they have been fully immunized with a vaccine approved by the US Food and Drug Administration or the World Health Organization (WHO). As of now, Covaxin is not on that list. The CDC announced the country will be accepting the following: Moderna Pfizer/BioNTech Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) AstraZeneca, including Covishield Sinopharm (Beijing) Sinovac

Will travelers need to bring a negative COVID-19 test to enter the U.S. if they are vaccinated?All land and air passengers 2 or older, including U.S. citizens and permanent residents, need to show a negative coronavirus test to enter the U.S.

What types of COVID-19 tests are acceptable to enter the United States?Visitors can present either an antigen (rapid) test or a PCR test. For further information about the types of tests accepted click here.

Can unvaccinated Americans enter the U.S. with a negative COVID-19 test?Yes, they can but rules are becoming stricter. Starting Nov. 8, unvaccinated Americans will need to take the test only 1 day before departure and take an additional test upon arrival in the U.S.

When did the U.S. opening borders to Europe?The U.S. opened international borders on European and some Asian visitors on Nov. 8, 2021.

What countries can enter the U.S. from Nov. 8?Visitors from the following 36 countries will be permitted to visit the U.S. for tourism on Nov. 8. China India Iran Brazil South Africa United Kingdom Ireland The European Schengen area: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Monaco, San Marino, and Vatican City

When did the U.S.-Canada and Mexico land borders reopen?U.S. reopened both land borders with Canada and Mexico for vaccinated travelers on November 8

Can unvaccinated travelers from Canada or Mexico cross the U.S. land border?No. unvaccinated Canadian visitors can't enter the U.S. via the land border.

Do vaccinated travelers have to present a negative COVID-19 to cross the Canadian or Mexican land borders?No, this requirement only applies to air travel into the US.

Is travel insurance required to enter the U.S?It is not mandatory but highly recommended. Not only because not all states have been able to effectively control the pandemic but also because of the extremely high costs of hospitalization and emergency treatments in the U.S. Find here the 4 Best Travel Insurance For the U.S. with Covid Coverage

How safe is it to travel to the States at the moment?

According to America’s COVID Warning System, the country is overcoming the 4th wave of coronavirus infections.


US COVID-19 tracker

COVID-19 cases in the U.S.


COVID-19 cases in the US
Source

As of January 14, the U.S. has recorded 66,209,535 cases and 872,086 the highest death toll in the world.

Is it possible to travel to U.S. for business or tourism? 


US reopening borders for tourism - travel restrictions
irlines currently flying from Europe to the U.S.
U.S. reopening borders for tourism - travel restrictions
Lufthansa  United Air Europa Royal Air MarocAir FranceAlitalia, Delta Operated by Alitalia CityLinerDeltaKLM, Delta Virgin AtlanticLufthansa, Air Canada 0perated by Air Canada Express – Sky RegionalLufthansa, Air Canada operated by Air Canada Express – JazzLufthansa, United operated by Mesa Airlines DBA United ExpressTap Air PortugalTurkish AirlinesVirgin Atlantic
US reopening for tourism - Travel restrictions

US reopening borders for tourism: Update Archives

December 22 – US considers lifting travel ban on Southern African countries

The US is reportedly considering lifting its ban on Southern African countries over the next few days.

According to the government, “we’re letting in people from other countries that have as much or more infection than the Southern African countries.”

“We likely are going to pull back on that pretty soon because we have enough infection in our own country,” said Dr. Fauci at the National Press Club.

In less than three weeks, the Omicron variant already accounts for over 73% of the new infections in the U.S. said the CDC on Monday. 

December 4 – The US government tightens travel restrictions for all travelers 

All international arrivals are now required to present a negative COVID-19 test taken within 1 day of departure.

“Our doctors believe tightening testing requirements for pre-departure will help catch more cases, potential cases of people who may be positive and inside the country,” a White House official said.

Also, domestic travelers using all types of public transportation such as trains, cruise ships or domestic flights will have to wear a face mask at all times or face fines of up to USD 3,000. 

Read our full post: U.S. Announces New Travel Restrictions for All International Visitors

November 28 – The U.S. to ban all travel from South Africa and other 7 countries from Monday

The U.S. will ban travel from South Africa and other seven countries starting Monday as a new heavily mutated coronavirus variant emerges, announced White House officials on Friday.

Other countries included in the restriction are Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi.

National and residents are allowed to come back. 

“As we move forward,” said the President in a statement, “we will continue to be guided by what the science and my medical team advises.”

November 21 – The U.S. makes booster shots available to all people 18 and above

With an increasing number of countries requiring passengers to provide proof of booster shots to give them access to a number of tourist venues, the U.S.’s move to make booster doses available for most citizens brings relief for international travelers.

“Based on the compelling evidence, all adults over 18 should now have equitable access to a COVID-19 booster dose,” says the CDC.

Despite the fact that more than 195 million Americans are fully vaccinated, Covid cases are on the rise in some locations as vaccine effectiveness declines over time.

The Pfizer booster dose was found to be 95 percent effective in a clinical trial involving 10,000 people aged 16 and up.

November 13 – Travelers experiencing long wait times at U.S. airports

Following the reopening on Nov. 8, large numbers of overseas travelers have begun to arrive in American airports.

Although this is wonderful news for families and the tourism sector, 21 months of closure did not seem to be enough time for American airports to prepare for such a large influx of passengers all at once.

Thousands of travelers have complained about having to wait over two hours to get through customs. Things are expected to worsen as the Christmas holidays approach. 

“The expectation is that we could see wait times of up to eight hours,” said Sherry Stein, the leader (SITA).

November 5 – The U.S. to welcome EU travelers as soon as ports of entry open on Nov. 8

Beginning Monday, the United States will drop entrance restrictions for vaccinated EU and Asian travelers, putting an end to historic restrictions that have kept the country partially isolated from the rest of the world for almost 21 months. 

According to US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the U.S. will reopen its air and land borders as soon as ports of entry start operations on Nov. 8

That means that border crossings that are open 24 hours a day will accept international travelers from midnight, while the rest will open during regular business hours.

October 15 – U.S. Government announces the reopening date for the European Union

White House has confirmed the reopening date for international tourism, current travel curbs will be lifted on November 8. Both land and air borders will reopen to fully vaccinated travelers.

Non-vaccinated air travelers will be also able to enter but they will need to show proof of a negative Covid-19 test.

The ban on non-vaccinated travelers will still remain in place on the Mexican and Canadian land borders.

October 20 – The U.S. is set to reopen land borders with Canada and Mexico in “early November”

The U.S. land borders, which have been shut down since March 2020, will reopen to Canadian and Mexican visitors at some point in November as long as they can prove they are fully vaccinated. 

“We are pleased to be taking steps to resume regular travel in a safe and sustainable manner,” Homeland Security Secretary said in a statement.

Essential travelers such as truck commercial drivers, students, and other essential personnel will have until January to present their vaccine certificates.

October 10 – U.S. Reveals the vaccines it will accept for EU travelers

There was a lot of uncertainty over which brand of vaccines the US would accept as a valid entry requirement for EU travelers, once it open its borders.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has revealed the country will accept the following:

ModernaPfizer/BioNTechJanssen (Johnson & Johnson)AstraZeneca, including CovishieldSinopharm (Beijing)Sinovac

The CDC also informed that more information will be released as soon as the travel protocols are completed.

The reopening date has not been announced yet. 

October 2 – US, Canada, UK, and other G7 leaders met to discuss the future of international travel

Transport and health ministers of Canada, Germany, the U.K, the U.S, Japan, Italy, and France virtually met to discuss the future of international travel on Thursday. 

Among other things, the U.S. committed to a number of principles “for a safe and sustainable reopening of travel.” These include trusting scientific evidence, accepting both digital and non-digital test and vaccine passports, protecting users’ private data, and supporting cleaner technologies for land, air, and maritime transport.

Sept. 24 – The U.S. lifts the ban on European Travel but reopening date remains unknown

This week, the U.S. announced that its long ban on European travel will end in “early November”. But so far, they haven’t provided an exact reopening date yet.

The head of the White House’s COVID-19 Response Team, Jeff Zients, said that all travelers must be fully vaccinated, no exceptions. 

The CDC will order commercial airlines to collect information from U.S.-bound visitors including their phone number and email address to act as a “public health surveillance system.” 

More information about the date and the requirements is expected to be revealed over the next few weeks.  

Source: Reuters

September 16 – The U.S. works on a “new system for international travel” aiming to reopen borders

White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said on Wednesday the country is working on a “new system for international travel” that will include contract tracing for international visitors when the country lifts its travel ban. 

The government aims to replace the current restrictions with a “safer, stronger, and sustainable” system. 

The official did not reveal when the new system will be put into motion or the metrics it will use.

Source: Reuters

September 21 – The U.S. to reopen for vaccinated EU and other travelers in November, says government

Jeff Zients, the White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator, announced that the U.S. will reopen to visitors from the European Union in “early November.”

Additionally, fully vaccinated travelers from other 33 countries including China, India and Brazil will also be allowed to come back. 

“We will move to this much stricter global system, so we will have a consistent approach across all countries,” Zients said.

Visitors will need to present proof of vaccination and a negative Covid-19 test. 

Source

September 10 – Nine EU countries have reimposed entry restrictions for American travelers in the last 10 days

On August 31, the European Council recommended removing the U.S. from the “save travel list.” Since then, 11 European countries have taken a stand on the U.S. situation.

As of today, Denmark, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Germany, Czech Republic and France have enforced additional entry restrictions for Americans.

Netherlands, Spain, Czech Republic and France not only increased their restrictions but also completely barred the unvaccinated. 

Sweden and Bulgaria have indefinitely closed their borders to all U.S. arrivals. Croatia, Portugal and Ireland will remain open.

Read our full article: Which EU Countries are Open, Closed to American Visitors

ugust 31 – U.S. Updates Travel Advisory For Canada, Puerto Rico and Other Countries

Seven countries were moved up to Level 4 travel warning since they surpassed the limit of 500 new cases per 100,000 population over the last 28 days. 

The affected countries this time were Switzerland, Saint Lucia, North Macedonia, Laos and Estonia due to their COVID-19 reports; and Oman and Azerbaijan because of raising concerns about terrorism.

Additionally, other 12 countries were moved up or down to the Level 3 travel advisory (high level of COVID). 

Some of them because of their improvements in the fight against the pandemic, and some others like Canada and Germany because their efforts are not producing the expected results. Source: TravelOffPath

ugust 19 – U.S. officials and border mayors demand the White House to reopen international borders

A number of U.S. officials and border mayors are joining forces to request the White House to lift the travel restriction that has been in place for 18 months severely affecting their local economies. 

A few weeks ago, Washington announced it will maintain restrictions on multiple countries and territories including the EU and China for the time being.

“The ultimate goal is to look for easing of restrictions on nonessential travel,” as well as the “specifics on what we can, need or must do to achieve that.” said San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria. 

The government has not replied yet.

Source: CNN

ugust 5 – the US works on a plan to request all international travelers to be fully vaccinated 

The U.S. is reportedly putting in place a new system requiring all international arrivals to be fully vaccinated so they can be allowed to travel into the country, a White House official told Reuters. 

“With limited exceptions (…) all foreign nationals traveling to the United States (from all countries) need to be fully vaccinated,” said the official.

He also added that “working groups” are getting ready for “when the time is right to transition to this new system.” However, the date when this plan will be set into motion was not released.

Source: Reuters

ugust 5 – the US works on a plan to request all international travelers to be fully vaccinated 

The U.S. is reportedly putting in place a new system requiring all international arrivals to be fully vaccinated so they can be allowed to travel into the country, a White House official told Reuters. 

“With limited exceptions (…) all foreign nationals traveling to the United States (from all countries) need to be fully vaccinated,” said the official.

He also added that “working groups” are getting ready for “when the time is right to transition to this new system.” However, the date when this plan will be set into motion was not released.

Source: Reuters

July 30 – Fully vaccinated Americans will be able to resume travel with the U.K. on August 2, but U.S. remains closed due to a delta variant and a surge in cases

While the U.S. continues to be closed for half of the world due to a surge in Covid cases, more countries have been adding it to the list of allowed visitors.

Effective August 2, double-vaccinated Americans and residents will be allowed to travel to the U.K. without quarantine. 

There is a catch. Americans should’ve been vaccinated in the U.S. or in one EU country.

Although these travelers no longer need to quarantine, they will still be required to submit a negative PCR COVID-19 test before boarding and take another one on the second day of their stay in England.

This scheme does not apply to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland for now.

Read our full post: U.K. drops quarantine for fully vaccinated Americans on Aug. 2

July 16 – The U.S. borders will not reopen for EU or other travelers for the time being

“It defies logic. It defies science. It defies fact,” Democratic Representative of New York, Brian Higgins told CNN, regarding the lack of transparency about the U.S. international borders reopening. 

Another White official said that European Union, United Kingdom, Canadian and Mexican task groups have met with their American counterparts to discuss the aspects that would allow them to safely reopen the country.

However, another White House official told Reuters that “the Biden Administration is not in a rush to lift travel restrictions soon.”

Source: TD News

July 9 – The U.S. can’t put a date on the international borders reopening, says government 

The U.S. is unable to put a date on international travel reopening according to a White House official who spoke to Reuters on July 7. 

“There are further discussions to be had before we can announce any next steps on travel reopening with any country,” said the official. 

This is the second time in less than 2 weeks that a Biden’s administration official speaks about the impossibility to determine when the country will reopen for tourism. 

On June 25, the US Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken also told reporters they could not give an approximate date and that everything will “have to be guided by the science and by medical expertise.” 

As of today, Schengen area residents who are not American citizens are only allowed if traveling under the National Interest Exception (NIE).

Source: Reuters

June 25 – U.S. to resume international tourism after September 6, said U.S. Commerce Secretary

The long-awaited reopening to EU tourists may be about to be over. 

U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo has stated the country is actively seeking to open travel bubbles with key partners so they can resume international travel soon.

Although not a specific date was announced, Raimondo mentioned Labor Day, which is celebrated on September 6, as the potential date for free foreign travel.

“I’m hopeful that post-Labor Day we will see a nice uptick in business travel and international travel” […] “I can promise that getting business travel and international travel going again is a top priority,” said Raimondo.

(Source: Business Travel News)

June 9 – U.S. to form task groups with Canada, Mexico, the EU and the U.K. to create a strategy to safely reopen borders soon

Multiple EU countries expected President Joe Biden’s announcement about the U.S. border reopening during his visit to the U.K. for the very first G7 summit of his administration.

But instead, the White house has issued a statement informing the country will not reopen just yet.

“While we are not reopening travel today, we hope that these expert working groups will help us use our collective expertise to chart a path forward, with a goal of reopening international travel with our key partners when it is determined that it is safe to do so,” reads the statement.

For now, the U.S. will form task groups with Canada, Mexico, the EU and the U.K to find the safest way to start international travel.

(Source: Reuters)

May 24 – The U.S. has not decided yet whether they will reopen to Europeans or not this summer

On May 19, all E.U. members agreed to welcome back Americans from June. E.U. countries can still enforce extra testing or quarantine requirements, but in principle, all vaccinated Americans will be allowed to visit Europe for tourism again. 

Unfortunately, on the other side of the Atlantic things seem to be different. Biden administration has been reportedly holding meetings and contacting tourism industry leaders but reopening decisions have not been made yet. 

Last week, White House spokesman Jen Psaki stated that no changes on current travel restrictions have been planned thus far when asked if the U.S. would allow vaccinated travelers to visit America Again. (Source: Reuters)

The post US is Open to Tourists but CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to 80 Destinations appeared first on Traveling Lifestyle.

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By: Viktor Vincej
Title: US is Open to Tourists but CDC Warns Americans Against Travel to 80 Destinations
Sourced From: www.travelinglifestyle.net/us-reopening-borders-to-tourism-who-can-enter/
Published Date: Sat, 15 Jan 2022 12:17:31 +0000