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Put your details into this website for the particular journey you wish to make. You should be fine. Print the result.chursy wrote:Hi
I am a Non-Eu Spouse of a British National, currently residing in Malta on a resident card valid for 5 years.
I would like to travel on my own without my spouse, can this be done on the existing visa? If not, am i required to apply for a normal Visit visa?
Also provided my spouse travels with me to denmark on the way out, but upon my return can i travel on my own back to Malta, or am i required to travel with spouse?
Hello, actually IATA is not very clear when it comes to EEA Family Member Resident Cards.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Put your details into this website for the particular journey you wish to make. You should be fine. Print the result.chursy wrote:Hi
I am a Non-Eu Spouse of a British National, currently residing in Malta on a resident card valid for 5 years.
I would like to travel on my own without my spouse, can this be done on the existing visa? If not, am i required to apply for a normal Visit visa?
Also provided my spouse travels with me to denmark on the way out, but upon my return can i travel on my own back to Malta, or am i required to travel with spouse?
http://www.iatatravelcentre.com/home.htm
>>europa.eu<< wrote:For non-EU citizens
(...)
Visa
...If your visa is from a country fully applying the Schengen rules (which Malta is), it automatically allows you to travel to the other Schengen countries as well. Moreover, if you have a valid residence permit from one of those Schengen countries (yours is issued by Malta), it is equivalent to a visa (i.e. you don´t need one, or you already have one, whichever you prefer)....
IATA´s TIMATIC is a bit weird and not always correct.chursy wrote:Thanks guys
I have tried inputting the info on the IATA website and it seems to give me three different answers on three different tries.
It doesn´t matter if your Maltese Schengen-permit is in line with Directive 2004/38/EC, as this law doesn´t apply. Since your planned trip concerns only Schengen-countries, it´s the Schengen rules which apply.chursy wrote:I understand that the document i have is in line with the EU Direction , hence visa free travel is ok provided one is travelling with a Spouse ONLY.
I have no idea what you mean here, but both >>Malta and Denmark are Schengen states<<.chursy wrote:However i have my doubts considering Malta is in Shenghan and Denmark being one of the Shenghan states i am merely trying my luck here so i dont have to get a visa! To be honest getting a visa is cheaper then getting a ticket for the hubby!
Well, as you can see above you may travel to Denmark with the Maltese Residence Permit because of Schengen-rules.chursy wrote:Again would appreciate if anyone of you can clarify the situation. On another i also have a Resident Card from Republic of Ireland which is again valid for 5 years. Wouldn't assume this is of any help?
On your own is not allowed, if you want to cross from Schengen to non-Schengen or vice versa.chursy wrote:I understand that i can travel within the EU, but on my own is my worry? As the Resident permit is usually applicable to travel with spouse only!!
Within Schengen this is never a problem, as any Schengen-Residence-Card is equivalent to a ("permanent") Schengen-Visa (just as it sais on the quoted website). Also, there are simply no checks between Schengen-countries. Travelling from Luqa to Denmark, you will not see any border-officials. So if there´s no-one, who should stop you?chursy wrote:Unfortunately , there is no mention of the fact that on the EU website that i can travel without the spouse....
Danish Embassies have a good track-record to reply. You should receive a reply from them within a few days. They will tell you more-less the same as I´m writing here.chursy wrote:I have also send an email to the embassy here to get their thoughts on this too..
Agree it's not perfect, but it's what airlines use to check passengers' visa requirements.docteurbenway wrote:Hello, actually IATA is not very clear when it comes to EEA Family Member Resident Cards.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Put your details into this website for the particular journey you wish to make. You should be fine. Print the result.chursy wrote:Hi
I am a Non-Eu Spouse of a British National, currently residing in Malta on a resident card valid for 5 years.
I would like to travel on my own without my spouse, can this be done on the existing visa? If not, am i required to apply for a normal Visit visa?
Also provided my spouse travels with me to denmark on the way out, but upon my return can i travel on my own back to Malta, or am i required to travel with spouse?
http://www.iatatravelcentre.com/home.htm
When you put your information in, say you are from Vietnam married to an Italian and living in France. It will ask you to enter your current country of residence, so you put France, you will then get a drop down menu to chose the type of residency document you have.
You can chose between, residence permit, re-entry permit, alien resident permit and permanent resident permit. All of these options are based on national immigration laws. So you say like, uhm...residents permit, it will then spit out the results saying that you can travel without a visa. These results will be based on the fact that you chose a national French residents permit and not a Family Member Card.
The only country where the information shown by the IATA is 100% accurate is the Rep. of Ireland where the Family Member cards are clearly specified.
Cheers.
TIMATIC seems good to establish "normal" cases, where a person lives in his home country, and wants to take a journey from there.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Agree it's not perfect, but it's what airlines use to check passengers' visa requirements.
For clarity, if you take the UK as an example and put residence permit (I know, it's supposed to be a card), it does specifically talk about EEA residence permit excepting holder from visa.
If one put the same details for a person resident in France it would say that travel documents are fine because a Schengen permit is valid in all other Schengen states.
I agree, but by knowing this in advance, one can have the retort ready for the check-in guy.ca.funke wrote:TIMATIC seems good to establish "normal" cases, where a person lives in his home country, and wants to take a journey from there.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Agree it's not perfect, but it's what airlines use to check passengers' visa requirements.
For clarity, if you take the UK as an example and put residence permit (I know, it's supposed to be a card), it does specifically talk about EEA residence permit excepting holder from visa.
If one put the same details for a person resident in France it would say that travel documents are fine because a Schengen permit is valid in all other Schengen states.
Cases including Residence-Permits of other places are in many cases not correct :twisted: