Rosie51
I thought personal attacks on posters was against GN guidelines?
Nobody is attacking anybody- 🥄 - just don't.
I have an Australian passport and have not lived in the UK for over 50 years but I was born there. Apparently if I want to visit the uk for any reason I have to show a uk passport now. I don’t want one, costs too much and I am absolutely furious about this. I will never visit again , I feel that strongly. How dare they ? Maybe if I went in a little boat from Calais things would be easier ?
Rosie51
I thought personal attacks on posters was against GN guidelines?
Nobody is attacking anybody- 🥄 - just don't.
I honestly don't think it's really very complicated!
🤷
Every major international flight now begins with a computer checking for a digital "permission to travel" record linked to your passport number.
If you are British and coming to the UK you now need to use a UK passport UNLESS you have obtained the passport stamp/sticker in your Australian passport that Graphite tells us about.
I understand it's more expensive than a second passport.
It's called a Certificate of Entitlement and proves your "Right of Abode" in the UK.
The final option is to give up your "Right of Abode in the UK" - the UK currently charges £372 to renounce British citizenship (at an embassy, in person).
So those with dual nationality are to be penalised as they cannot use an ETA plus Australian passport to come here but an Australian can.
I thought I understood it, but no, it is so ridiculous it surely cannot be true.
Who thinks up this red tape and 🐂💩
It is beyond ridiculous.
I am looking at UK government information which is dated January 2026 which explain the strict enforcement of the regulations from 26 February 2026 for people who have dual citizenship - British and another country.
The graphic is from an Australian travel site:
www.smartraveller.gov.au/destinations/europe/united-kingdom
Rosie51
Allira from the link Graphite posted
A British dual national travelling on a foreign passport is not supposed to use any of those. They would be ineligible for an ETA, eVisa or immigration permission due to their British citizenship.
Surely that means she can't just travel on the Australian passport with an ETA. My son has dual British/Canadian citizenship so I assume the same would apply to him. I'm thoroughly confused..........
I read a government link and it didn't say that, so it is very confusing.
That sounds quite ridiculous and designed to cause confusion.
Message withdrawn at poster's request.
This is an exhausting thread! 
Several of us have tried to explain the new rules - but maybe not everyone is reading the whole thing! 
I thought personal attacks on posters was against GN guidelines?
Allira from the link Graphite posted
A British dual national travelling on a foreign passport is not supposed to use any of those. They would be ineligible for an ETA, eVisa or immigration permission due to their British citizenship.
Surely that means she can't just travel on the Australian passport with an ETA. My son has dual British/Canadian citizenship so I assume the same would apply to him. I'm thoroughly confused..........
She has to come here using her British passport, but as she is refusing to renew her British passport, she basically won’t be coming, and as she blames Keir Starmer 🤣🤣🤣🤣she ll probably vote for the first time in 50 years 🙄🙄
Rosie51
My understanding is that as a dual Australian/British citizen nanna8 cannot travel on her Australian passport with an ETA, she must either get a new British passport or pay circa £400 to renounce her British citizenship. I don't see how that cost for renouncing citizenship can be justified.
No, Australian citizens with Australian but not British passports can come here for holidays but need to apply for the Electronic Travel Authority, valid for two years, first.
She has dual nationality which is allowed. Not all countries allow this.
nanna8.
Do you want to visit the UK ?,if not why worry,if you do well unfortunately it's the price you have to pay,life's too short to stress
My understanding is that as a dual Australian/British citizen nanna8 cannot travel on her Australian passport with an ETA, she must either get a new British passport or pay circa £400 to renounce her British citizenship. I don't see how that cost for renouncing citizenship can be justified.
Graphite
OP says she has an Australian passport. To get an Australian passport, you need to prove your Australian citizenship.
She says she can vote in UK elections. If that is true then she must mean she has also retained her British citizenship.
In that case, she has dual citizenship.
Twice I gave posted this link now. Here goes for a third time:
commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10344/#:~:text=their%20digital%20UK%20immigration%20permission
From 25 February 2026, the Home Office will be fully applying the ETA requirement. The Home Office is advising British dual citizens to make sure they have a valid UK or Irish passport or certificate of entitlement if they will be travelling on or after that date. If they don’t, they may not be able to board their transport to the UK.
That is what OP has been told and is annoyed about but as I have already explained, it is to do with the changes brought in by the 2022 Nationalities and Borders Act and not a change by the current UK government.
OP appears to be holding Keir Starmer personally responsible🙈
Australia was added to the list in November 2024.
That is what OP has been told and is annoyed about but as I have already explained, it is to do with the changes brought in by the 2022 Nationalities and Borders Act and not a change by the current UK government.
Yes.
However, more countries have been added in the last year, at least one announced and implemented immediately last April, causing confusion and chaos, as I posted earlier, and the rest coming into force on 25th February.
OP says she has an Australian passport. To get an Australian passport, you need to prove your Australian citizenship.
She says she can vote in UK elections. If that is true then she must mean she has also retained her British citizenship.
In that case, she has dual citizenship.
Twice I gave posted this link now. Here goes for a third time:
commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10344/#:~:text=their%20digital%20UK%20immigration%20permission
From 25 February 2026, the Home Office will be fully applying the ETA requirement. The Home Office is advising British dual citizens to make sure they have a valid UK or Irish passport or certificate of entitlement if they will be travelling on or after that date. If they don’t, they may not be able to board their transport to the UK.
That is what OP has been told and is annoyed about but as I have already explained, it is to do with the changes brought in by the 2022 Nationalities and Borders Act and not a change by the current UK government.
CariadAgain
Quick check - about 39% of people currently have the same definition of British as I do - ie asking about the parents nationality.
Job done.
Quick check - about 39% of people currently have the same definition of British as I do - ie asking about the parents nationality.
What 39 % of people think does not make it true.
39% of people might think that unicorns roam the earth, but it doesn't make it true.
Apart from the fact that 39% is way below a majority of people the question remains “Which people?”
People down the pub? CariadAgain’s friends and family? Sun readers?
Perhaps the FACTS are more useful.
Job not quite done.
Hope you have a large pot of tea (or coffee) when you wake up, nanna8!
😁
Message withdrawn at poster's request.
You might know what you are on about Cariad but I don’t and it’s not really relevant to this case
I was born abroad, I’m British, my husband was born in Southern Ireland, moved across here to UK at 5, he’s now 70, he’s chosen not to become a British Citizen and still has his Irish passport though he’s a British resident, all of our children can now claim dual nationality and have Irish passports.
Electronic Travel Authorisations are a direct result :
Total Scope: By 25 February 2026, the ETA scheme will be mandatory for citizens of 85 countries and territories.
Key Nationalities: The requirement applies to visitors from the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and all European Union nations (except Ireland).
Cost: £16 per application.
Validity: Valid for multiple journeys over two years.
Exemptions: British and Irish citizens do not need an ETA.
Timeline: The scheme is being rolled out in phases, with full enforcement for all eligible nationalities starting 25 February 2026.
Exemptions: British and Irish citizens do not need an ETA
But you would need to have an in-date passport for overseas travel and re-entry.
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