UK ETA for Yacht Crew and Private Yacht Owners 2026:
Superyacht Crew, Skippers & the Seafarer Transit Scheme Exemption
It depends on your role on board and the purpose of your visit. Professional yacht and superyacht crew joining a vessel that will leave UK waters within a reasonable period — and who are not taking up UK employment ashore — are exempt from the UK ETA requirement under the Home Office’s Seafarer Transit Scheme. Crew arriving as tourists, for business meetings or training ashore, or ending their employment in the UK do need a UK ETA. Private yacht owners and their non-exempt crew or guests sailing their own vessel to the UK need an individual ETA each, verified automatically through the mandatory Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR) submitted to Border Force before arrival. The UK government fee is £20 per person. Via application-eta.uk: from €69 (Standard, 48–72h) to €169 (Dedicated Agent, 1–6h) for urgent crew changes. Jump to the decision tree ➤
- Quick decision tree: do you need a UK ETA?
- PART ONE — Superyacht & Professional Crew
- The Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption explained
- Which crew DO need a UK ETA
- Crew changes at Southampton, Portsmouth & the Solent
- Guidance for manning agents and crew coordinators
- PART TWO — Private Yacht Owners & Skippers
- Do private yacht owners and their crew need a UK ETA?
- The Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR) — your pre-arrival obligation
- The Q flag and the National Yachtline
- Major UK marinas, harbours and arrival points
- How to apply for a UK ETA — step by step
- Frequently asked questions
1. Quick Decision Tree: Do You Need a UK ETA?
Unlike cruise ship passengers, the answer for maritime crew and private vessel travellers is not a simple yes. The UK Home Office treats seafarers as a distinct category with a specific exemption — the Seafarer Transit Scheme — which most general ETA guides do not cover at all. Use this table to identify your situation before reading further.
| ✅ ETA REQUIRED | 🚫 LIKELY EXEMPT (Seafarer Transit Scheme) |
|---|---|
| Crew arriving in the UK as a tourist or on holiday, not joining a vessel | Crew arriving to join a vessel that will leave UK waters within a reasonable period |
| Crew attending marine business meetings, conferences, or training ashore | Aircrew “deadheading” or positioning, then leaving the UK |
| Crew ending their employment and remaining in the UK beyond immediate departure | Ferry crew arriving to join a ferry that is leaving UK waters |
| Any traveller engaging in activity under the standard Visitor route | Crew of a through-train or shuttle train not leaving any control area |
| Private yacht owners and skippers (non-British/Irish) sailing their own vessel to the UK | Seafarers in genuine transit, not undertaking visitor-route activity |
| Non-exempt crew and all guests aboard a private pleasure craft | (Exemption does not apply to private pleasure craft owners/skippers) |
| Cruise ship guests/passengers (handled separately — see our cruise passengers guide) | Cruise ship crew — handled by the cruise line and ship’s agent, not the standard ETA process |
The Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption is purpose-specific, not role-specific. Simply being “crew” does not automatically exempt you — what matters is whether you are joining a vessel that will leave UK waters within a reasonable period, and whether you intend to undertake any visitor-route activity ashore. If your itinerary includes time off the vessel for personal travel, sightseeing, or any purpose beyond joining/leaving as working crew, you may fall outside the exemption. If your situation is not clearly covered by the exemption criteria below, applying for a UK ETA (from €69, approved within hours in most cases) removes the risk entirely.
2. PART ONE — UK ETA for Superyacht and Professional Yacht Crew
The superyacht industry moves thousands of professional crew members through UK waters every year — for crew changes at Southampton ahead of the Mediterranean or Caribbean seasons, refit periods at UK yards, and positioning voyages through the Solent. Since full ETA enforcement began on 25 February 2026, manning agents, crew coordinators, and yacht management companies have had to build a new layer of compliance into every crew movement involving the UK.
The Home Office’s confirmed position, set out in official guidance updated for the 2026 enforcement date, treats professional seafarers — including yacht crew — as a distinct category from ordinary visitors. This section explains exactly when that distinction applies, and when it does not.
3. The Seafarer Transit Scheme Exemption Explained
The Seafarer Transit Scheme is a long-standing exemption from UK immigration control, confirmed to remain in place under the ETA system. It allows non-visa national crew to enter the UK without an ETA, provided their visit meets specific conditions tied to genuinely transiting through — not visiting — the United Kingdom.
| Exemption Criteria — All Must Apply | What This Means in Practice |
|---|---|
| Joining a vessel as crew | You are travelling to the UK specifically to join a ship, yacht, or vessel as a working crew member — not as a passenger or guest |
| Vessel is leaving UK waters within a reasonable period | The yacht you are joining has a confirmed departure from UK waters — it is not based in the UK long-term or indefinitely |
| No intention to take up UK employment ashore | You are not working on land in the UK — your employment is aboard the vessel only |
| No intention to undertake visitor-route activity | You are not using the trip for personal tourism, sightseeing time ashore beyond normal shore leave, or any other Standard Visitor purpose |
| Carrying documentary evidence of crew status | A letter from the vessel owner, captain, or manning agent confirming you are under contract to join the named vessel as crew, plus crew ID or a Seafarer’s Identity Document where applicable |
This exemption is set out in the Home Office’s “Entering the UK: exemptions to controls” guidance, which confirms that seafarers arriving by air or sea to join a ship in the UK — provided they hold documentation showing they are under contract to join, as crew, a ship in UK waters which is leaving UK waters — do not need an ETA. The same guidance separately confirms equivalent exemptions for aircrew deadheading/positioning and certain rail crew, reflecting a consistent Home Office approach to genuine transit crew across all transport modes.
Practical examples — exempt vs. not exempt
| Scenario | Exempt? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Deckhand flies into Southampton to join a superyacht departing for the Caribbean season three days later | Likely exempt | Joining crew, vessel leaving UK waters within a reasonable period, no shore employment intended |
| Stewardess flies in for a crew change at a UK marina, then spends 5 days sightseeing in London before joining the vessel | Not exempt | The sightseeing period constitutes visitor-route activity, taking the trip outside the narrow transit purpose |
| Engineer travels to the UK for a refit training course at a UK boatyard, not joining a vessel that is leaving | Not exempt | This is training/business activity ashore, not joining a departing vessel as crew |
| Captain signs off a vessel in the UK and flies home the same day | Likely exempt under disembarking crew provisions | Crew leaving the UK promptly after disembarking, not remaining or undertaking other activity |
| Crew member’s contract ends in the UK and they decide to stay an extra two weeks as a tourist before flying home | Not exempt for the extended stay | Once employment ends and the visitor-route purpose begins, the seafarer exemption no longer applies |
Given the narrow, purpose-specific nature of the exemption, many manning agents and crew coordinators take the pragmatic approach of applying for an ETA for every crew member regardless of exemption status — particularly for last-minute crew changes where there is no time to resolve ambiguity at check-in. At €69–€169 per person depending on urgency, the cost of a precautionary ETA is negligible against the cost of a missed crew change or delayed yacht departure. Apply for crew ETAs now ➤
4. Which Yacht Crew DO Need a UK ETA
Outside the narrow conditions of the Seafarer Transit Scheme, the standard ETA requirement applies in full to maritime professionals. The following situations require an individual UK ETA application, just as they would for any other visa-exempt traveller:
- Crew travelling to the UK as tourists — including former crew visiting friends in a UK port town, or crew using time off between contracts for personal travel that includes the UK
- Crew attending business meetings, conferences, or industry events ashore — including superyacht industry trade shows, owner meetings, or broker presentations held on UK soil
- Crew attending training courses at UK-based maritime academies or boatyards, where the training itself — not joining a departing vessel — is the purpose of travel
- Crew ending their employment in the UK and remaining beyond their immediate departure — for example, signing off in Southampton and staying in the UK for any period before flying home
- Crew positioning to the UK by commercial flight for a crew change, who will have any period of UK-based personal time before joining the vessel
- Yacht owners’ family members, charter guests, or non-working visitors travelling alongside professional crew — these individuals are never covered by the seafarer exemption regardless of who else is on the trip
For all of these scenarios, the ETA application process, cost, and processing time are identical to those for any other visa-exempt traveller. See our complete UK ETA application form guide for the full step-by-step process, or jump to Section 12 below for a summary tailored to maritime travel.
5. Crew Changes at Southampton, Portsmouth & the Solent
The Solent region — Southampton, Portsmouth, Cowes, Hamble, and Lymington — is one of the UK’s busiest hubs for superyacht crew changes, particularly ahead of the Mediterranean delivery season in spring and the Caribbean season in autumn. Understanding how the ETA requirement interacts with a typical crew change saves manning agents and crew coordinators from last-minute disruption.
A typical crew change scenario
A standard crew change — where an outgoing crew member flies home and an incoming crew member flies in to take their place aboard a vessel that remains in or departs from UK waters shortly after — usually falls within Seafarer Transit Scheme territory for the incoming crew member, provided they go straight from the airport to the vessel and the vessel has a confirmed onward departure. The outgoing crew member disembarking and flying home promptly is also typically covered.
| Crew Change Element | ETA Consideration |
|---|---|
| Incoming crew flying directly to vessel, vessel departing UK shortly after | Likely exempt — carry documentation confirming the vessel and departure plan |
| Outgoing crew disembarking and flying home same day or next day | Likely exempt as departing crew |
| Crew with a multi-day gap in the UK between contracts | Apply for an ETA to remove ambiguity — the gap period is visitor-route territory |
| Crew flying in for sea trials, boat shows (e.g. Southampton International Boat Show), or owner meetings | ETA required — this is business/visitor activity, not joining a departing vessel |
| Crew attending the vessel’s UK-based refit for an extended period | ETA required, and may also require additional immigration permission depending on duration and role |
Even when the Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption clearly applies, Border Force officers retain discretion to examine any crew member arriving in the UK. Carry a letter from the vessel’s captain, owner, or manning agent confirming your crew status, the vessel name, and the confirmed onward departure, along with your Seafarer’s Identity Document (SID) where you hold one. This documentation is your primary evidence of exemption — there is no separate “seafarer ETA exemption certificate” to apply for in advance.
6. Guidance for Manning Agents and Crew Coordinators
Since full ETA enforcement began, the UK Chamber of Shipping and major maritime services providers have issued guidance specifically directed at manning agents, ship operators, and crew coordinators responsible for managing crew travel compliance at scale.
Recommended workflow for crew travel compliance
- Audit crew travel patterns to identify which routine movements fall under the Seafarer Transit Scheme and which require individual ETA applications
- Issue clear written instructions to crew, captains, and any third-party booking agents about which crew changes require advance ETA applications
- Apply early for ETAs where required — most are approved within hours, but building in a buffer avoids any risk to flight or crew change timing
- Maintain crew documentation — letters of engagement, contract confirmation, and Seafarer’s Identity Documents — readily accessible for every crew movement, exempt or not
- Default to applying for an ETA in any case involving ambiguity, multi-day gaps between contracts, or crew combining a UK crew change with personal travel
For manning agents managing multiple simultaneous crew changes, the Dedicated Agent plan (€169, 1–6h processing) is commonly used to guarantee same-day turnaround for last-minute crew substitutions, where a replacement crew member is identified with only a day or two’s notice before a vessel’s scheduled departure.
Managing Multiple Crew ETA Applications?
Each crew member needs their own application, but our team can process several applications in parallel for manning agents and yacht management companies coordinating a crew change. Expert review of every photo and passport before submission. Same-day processing available.
7. PART TWO — UK ETA for Private Yacht Owners and Skippers
Sailing your own yacht to the United Kingdom — whether for the season, a single passage, or a stop on a longer voyage — involves a different set of obligations from commercial crew travel. As skipper, you are personally responsible for the immigration compliance of everyone aboard, on top of the vessel reporting requirements that apply to every private pleasure craft entering UK waters.
This section is written for owners and skippers of private yachts, motor cruisers, and sailing vessels making passage to the UK from outside the Common Travel Area — including transatlantic arrivals, Channel crossings from France, Belgium or the Netherlands, and passages from further afield.
8. Do Private Yacht Owners and Their Crew Need a UK ETA?
Yes. Unlike the professional crew exemption discussed in Part One, there is no Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption for private pleasure craft owners, skippers, or their non-exempt crew and guests. If you are not a British or Irish citizen, you need a valid UK ETA before sailing your own vessel into UK waters — and as skipper, you are responsible for ensuring the same applies to everyone else on board.
| Who Is On Board | UK ETA Required? |
|---|---|
| Skipper/owner (non-British, non-Irish, eligible nationality) | Yes |
| Professional delivery crew hired to help sail the vessel to the UK | Yes — same as any other crew or passenger on a private vessel |
| Family members or guests aboard for the passage | Yes — every individual, including children |
| British or Irish citizens aboard | No — exempt regardless of role |
| Crew or guests with a valid UK visa or Settled Status | No — existing immigration status supersedes the ETA requirement |
As the skipper or owner of a private vessel, you must make sure that any crew member or guest requiring an ETA has one arranged before departure. Before anyone disembarks, they must have permission to enter the UK — and ETA status for everyone aboard is checked as part of your Pleasure Craft Report. Confirm everyone’s ETA status using our status check tool before you leave your departure port, not after you arrive in UK waters.
9. The Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR) — Your Pre-Arrival Obligation
All voyages — regardless of crew nationality — starting or finishing in Great Britain or Northern Ireland (with limited exceptions for travel between GB, NI and the Isle of Man) must be reported to UK Border Force via a Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR). This applies to outbound voyages before departure from the UK, and inbound voyages before arrival.
| sPCR Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| When to report | Before departure to the UK (inbound) or before departure from the UK (outbound) |
| How to report | Online via the sPCR web service (preferred), or by the fallback paper/email template where no internet access is available |
| What it checks | Confirms vessel details and verifies the ETA, visa, or eVisa status of every person on board who requires one |
| Account setup | An sPCR account can store vessel and regular crew details for repeated use across multiple voyages |
| Crossing the Channel Islands | Passages to and from Jersey and Guernsey also require reporting — each has its own specific procedure depending on departure port and crew nationality |
Since the sPCR system checks ETA status for everyone listed on board, the most efficient approach is to ensure every non-exempt crew member and guest has an approved ETA before you begin the Pleasure Craft Report — not a pending one. ETA approval typically arrives within hours via application-eta.uk, but applying with enough lead time (ideally before you depart your home port) avoids any last-minute mismatch between your sPCR submission and outstanding ETA applications. You can start your sPCR before departure and edit the arrival date later, but you cannot set a departure date earlier than your report’s creation date.
For the official sPCR reporting tool and current fallback forms, see the GOV.UK Pleasure Craft Report guidance. application-eta.uk handles UK ETA applications for your crew and guests — the sPCR itself is submitted separately and directly to Border Force/HMRC by the skipper.
10. The Q Flag and the National Yachtline
Arrival procedure for private vessels does not end with submitting your sPCR. On physically entering UK waters from outside the Common Travel Area, two further steps apply:
Flying the Q flag
Vessels required to report their arrival must fly the yellow “Q” flag as soon as they enter UK waters — defined as the 12-mile limit. This signals to Border Force and other vessels that you have not yet cleared customs and immigration. The Q flag should not be lowered until you receive clearance.
Calling the National Yachtline
On arrival, call UK Border Force’s National Yachtline: 0300 123 2012, available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. All crew and guests must remain on board until you receive either:
- Verbal clearance over the phone, or
- A visit from a Border Force officer
Do not lower the Q flag, and do not allow anyone to disembark, until instructed by the National Yachtline or a Border Force officer. This applies even if every person aboard holds an approved UK ETA — the verbal or in-person clearance step is a separate requirement specific to private vessel arrivals, distinct from the ETA itself. If you are arriving from an EU member state directly into Northern Ireland, the Q flag requirement does not apply.
Health clearance
If there are animals, birds, or any illness aboard, separate health clearance is required. The captain should contact the relevant port health authority by radio 4 to 12 hours before arrival, or immediately on arrival if advance contact was not possible. No one except officials may board or leave the vessel until health clearance is granted.
11. Major UK Marinas, Harbours and Arrival Points
The UK no longer designates official “ports of entry” for pleasure craft — responsibility for clearance is shared between HMRC (Customs) and the Home Office (Border Force) at any marina or harbour. The ETA, sPCR, Q flag, and National Yachtline requirements apply uniformly, regardless of which of the following you arrive at:
| Region | Common Arrival Points for Private Vessels |
|---|---|
| The Solent | Southampton, Portsmouth, Cowes, Hamble, Lymington, Yarmouth (Isle of Wight) |
| South West England | Falmouth, Plymouth, Dartmouth, Poole, Weymouth |
| South East England | Dover, Ramsgate, Brighton Marina, Chichester Harbour |
| East Coast | Lowestoft, Harwich, Ipswich |
| Scotland | Largs, Oban, Inverness (via Caledonian Canal) |
| Northern Ireland | Belfast, Bangor — note the simplified procedure for arrivals directly from EU member states |
If your voyage involves multiple UK stops after your initial arrival — for example, clearing in at Falmouth and later sailing on to the Solent — an sPCR is generally only required for your initial entry into and final exit from UK waters, not for each domestic stop along the way, unless specifically requested by an officer.
12. How to Apply for a UK ETA — Step by Step for Maritime Travellers
Step 1 — Confirm who needs an ETA
Use the decision tree in Section 1 to identify which crew members are likely exempt under the Seafarer Transit Scheme, and which need an individual application. For private vessels, assume everyone non-exempt needs one — there is no seafarer exemption for private pleasure craft.
Step 2 — Choose your processing plan
| Timing | Plan | Processing Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urgent crew change, departing within 48 hours | Dedicated Agent | 1–6 hours | €169 |
| Crew or passage planned in 3–7 days | Priority | ~24 hours | €119 |
| Passage or crew change 7+ days away | Standard | 48–72 hours | €69 |
Step 3 — Complete an individual application for each person
Each crew member, guest, or passenger applies separately at application-eta.uk/application/, entering passport details exactly as printed, uploading a selfie and passport data page photo, and answering the 8 suitability questions. Manning agents and skippers can apply on behalf of crew, using their own email and payment method while entering each crew member’s individual details.
Step 4 — For private vessels: submit your sPCR
Once ETAs are approved, the skipper submits the Pleasure Craft Report via the official GOV.UK sPCR service, listing the vessel and everyone aboard. This step does not apply to professional crew arriving by commercial flight under the Seafarer Transit Scheme or standard ETA route.
Step 5 — Fly the Q flag and call the Yachtline on arrival
For private vessels arriving from outside the Common Travel Area: fly the Q flag at the 12-mile limit, call 0300 123 2012, and remain aboard until cleared.
Step 6 — Check status before you travel
Use the UK ETA status check tool to confirm every traveller’s approval before departure — whether you are flying in for a crew change or casting off for a Channel crossing.
Ready to Apply for Your UK ETA?
Whether you are a manning agent coordinating a crew change, a skipper preparing for a Channel crossing, or a yacht owner planning the season ahead — every non-exempt traveller needs their own ETA. Expert review of every photo and passport before submission.
13. Frequently Asked Questions — UK ETA for Yacht Crew and Owners
Does superyacht crew need a UK ETA?
It depends on the purpose of travel. Crew joining a vessel that will leave UK waters within a reasonable period, who do not intend to take up employment ashore, are exempt under the Seafarer Transit Scheme. Crew travelling as tourists, for business meetings or training ashore, or ending their employment in the UK, do need a valid UK ETA before travel.
What is the Seafarer Transit Scheme and who qualifies for the exemption?
The Seafarer Transit Scheme exempts non-visa national crew from the UK ETA requirement when travelling to join a ship, train, or aircraft leaving UK waters or territory within a reasonable period, with no intention to take up UK employment or undertake visitor-route activity. Crew must carry documentation confirming they are under contract to join the vessel. Crew arriving for any other purpose must apply for an ETA.
Do private yacht owners need a UK ETA to sail their own boat to the UK?
Yes. Skippers and owners of private pleasure craft who are non-visa nationals need a UK ETA before arriving in UK waters, unless British, Irish, or otherwise exempt. As skipper, you are responsible for ensuring every non-exempt crew member and guest on board also holds a valid ETA — status is verified through the Pleasure Craft Report.
What is a Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR) and how does it relate to the UK ETA?
A Pleasure Craft Report (sPCR) is a mandatory pre-arrival notification to UK Border Force and HMRC for private vessels voyaging to or from the UK from outside the Common Travel Area. The sPCR checks the ETA status of everyone on board, so ensure all ETA applications are approved before starting your report. Submit via the official GOV.UK sPCR service.
What is the National Yachtline and when do I need to call it?
The National Yachtline (0300 123 2012, 24/7) is Border Force’s telephone clearance service for private vessels arriving from outside the Common Travel Area. After flying the yellow Q flag on entering UK waters, call the Yachtline for clearance. Everyone aboard must remain on the vessel until verbal clearance is given or Border Force visits in person.
Does cruise ship crew need a UK ETA?
Cruise ship crew typically have separate immigration arrangements handled by the cruise line and ship’s agent, and are not covered by the standard passenger ETA process. This differs from private yacht and superyacht crew, where individual applications or Seafarer Transit Scheme exemptions apply based on each person’s travel purpose. Cruise passengers, however, do need an ETA — see our cruise passengers guide.
Can I apply for a UK ETA for my entire yacht crew at once?
No. There is no group or fleet ETA application. Each non-exempt crew member or passenger needs their own individual application linked to their own passport. A captain, manning agent, or yacht management company can submit applications on behalf of each crew member using their own email and payment method, entering each person’s individual details.
Does a UK ETA replace the need for a Seaman’s Book or work permit for yacht crew?
No. The UK ETA is a travel authorisation, not a work permit. Crew intending to work in the UK long-term, including aboard a vessel based in UK waters, may require a visa or other immigration permission in addition to or instead of an ETA. A Seaman’s Book issued under ILO Convention 108 or 185 can support visa-free transit for visa national crew in certain circumstances, but does not itself substitute for a required ETA.
What happens if a crew member arrives at a UK marina without a UK ETA?
A crew member without a required ETA and without a recognised Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption may be refused permission to enter by Border Force. For private vessels, this is identified during the Pleasure Craft Report and National Yachtline clearance process. For commercial crew changes, airlines are required to verify ETA status before boarding, so a missing ETA will typically prevent travel to the UK in the first place.
How long does a UK ETA take for yacht crew and how much does it cost?
Most applications are approved within a few hours; the official maximum is 3 working days. The UK government fee is £20 per person. Via application-eta.uk, total cost including expert review is from €69 (Standard, 48–72h) to €169 (Dedicated Agent, 1–6h) — commonly used by manning agents for urgent crew rotations. See full pricing: UK ETA fees and processing times.
Does my UK port of arrival affect whether I need an ETA?
No. The ETA requirement applies uniformly across all UK ports and marinas for non-exempt travellers, whether arriving at Southampton, Portsmouth, Cowes, Falmouth, Lymington, Poole, or elsewhere. The UK no longer designates official ports of entry for pleasure craft — responsibility is shared between HMRC and Border Force regardless of arrival point.
I’m flying in for a one-day crew change at Southampton then flying straight back out with the outgoing crew member. Do either of us need an ETA?
Both scenarios are likely covered by the Seafarer Transit Scheme — the incoming crew member is joining a vessel, and the outgoing crew member is departing the UK promptly after disembarking. Carry documentation confirming your crew status and the vessel’s confirmed movements. If there is any gap, delay, or uncertainty in either departure, applying for an ETA in advance removes the risk.
Can a manning agent or yacht management company apply for a UK ETA on behalf of crew?
Yes. A manning agent, crew coordinator, captain, or yacht management company can complete an ETA application on behalf of a crew member, using their own email and payment method while entering the crew member’s own passport details, photo, and suitability answers. Each crew member still requires their own separate, individually linked ETA.
Expert review: Martin Cage, Senior UK ETA Specialist, former Home Office Immigration Advisory Panel. Published June 2026. · Sources: UK Home Office — “Entering the UK: exemptions to controls”, GOV.UK (updated for 25 February 2026 enforcement) · UK Home Office — “Submit a Pleasure Craft Report” guidance, GOV.UK · UK Border Force — National Yachtline guidance, GOV.UK · UK Chamber of Shipping — “ETA Enforcement Countdown: Key Updates for Carriers & Crew” · UK Home Office Immigration System Statistics, Year Ending December 2025 (published February 2026) · Immigration and Nationality (Fees) Amendment Order 2026 (government fee increase to £20, 9 April 2026). Note: Maritime immigration rules involve genuine complexity and individual circumstances vary. This guide reflects confirmed Home Office policy as of June 2026 but is not a substitute for case-specific immigration advice. Where the Seafarer Transit Scheme exemption is unclear for your situation, applying for a UK ETA is the lower-risk option.
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