Strazdas wrote: » On the form, you must state the address where you will be staying for the next two weeks in Ireland. The quarantine is not legally enforced but you would be 'expected' to stay in the one residence in Kerry for the two weeks and not move around the country.
Dante7 wrote: » No. I am not bothered about insuring against cancelled flights or hotels - i can manage all that myself. Health or accident wise, I have my EHIC card and the hotel I am staying in also provides health insurance and repatriation flights if required. If someone did wish to travel and the lack of insurance was the only thing putting them off, there are specialist firms who will cover you for the usual stuff bar Covid.
VG31 wrote: » I really don't understand this mindset. 2020 is unsafe yet January or February next year will be suddenly fine? There seems to be a lot of people rebooking to 2021. I can't see it being much better then. At least if you go abroad this year it will be very quiet.
deathbomber wrote: » I am against international travel except for business etx. However, if there is an outbreak in your choice of destination, it would be hell having to be quarantined in one of those apartments, if forced to etc
jam_mac_jam wrote: » Not worth the risk. I will leave it until January or February of next year and go somewhere hot in the winter.
Ray Donovan wrote: » The Coronavirus situation with regards travel will be the exact same as it is now.
irishguitarlad wrote: » Hi lads i'm heading to Ireland there on the 18th of july to see my family as I haven't seen them in over a year. I'm getting the bus from Seville (which has been very good during all this) to faro and then from there to Kerry. Will i be allowed to enter Ireland? If I do get there is the is It illegal not to quarantine? The information that they give is very confusing.
jam_mac_jam wrote: » I won't be travelling this year. Missed my holidays that I had booked in April. Was thinking of going later this year but I think i will leave it. Not worth the risk. I will leave it until January or February of next year and go somewhere hot in the winter.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » Unless your whole holiday is cancelled and covered. That will depend on the travel advisory. Covid might not be covered either. And EHIC is great for EU members thankfully, but heaven forbid it will not cover repatriation of a deceased person either. Think about it. It is not always just about a broken leg.
Stephen Gifted Geophysics wrote: » Other than of course, the cost of repatriation of your body for when you die after catching COVID-19
Spanish Eyes wrote: » The naivety of some on here is unreal. But it is the internet so who knows what anyone is saying is real anyway.
TheDriver wrote: » Nope. Travel insurance covers very little anyways once excess comes into play. Ehic card will suffice.
faceman wrote: » I agree. We have the capacity to do it too
bladespin wrote: » This, honestly cannot understand why testing at the airports isn’t a thing! Regardless of how you feel about those travelling it would be a massive help imo.
TheDriver wrote: » Apparently a number of policies don't cover covid style travel advisory.
Sheep Shagger wrote: » For anyone travelling, are you concerned or do you care that you won't have valid travel insurance (serious question)?
ZX7R wrote: » Interestingly if your holiday or travel was booked before 14 of March your travel insurance will cover it even if flights were rescheduled anything's booked after that date not so. I have no problem with travel been interduced. But people looking for flights to be cancelled because they booked holidays after that date don't deserve to be compensated.
bladespin wrote: » No idea tbh but it would be a great catch for those already carrying, would at least reduce active mobile cases. I’d be happy to have it done. Have some very outstanding work in the UK and wouldn’t say no to a hol either. Hopefully someone could answer.