


You may be fined up to £100 if you refuse to provide your contact details, or more if you break this rule more than once. If you need to self-isolate for the first 14 days after you arrive in the UK, the government will also use the information to check that you’re self-isolating. The government will use the information you give to contact you if you or someone you’ve travelled with develops coronavirus (COVID-19) symptoms. Do not print out the form and fill it in by hand. You do not need to pay another website or business to provide your contact details for you. You cannot submit the form until 48 hours before you’re due to arrive in the UK. If you do not complete the form before you arrive in the UK, it’s likely to take you longer to enter the UK. You must complete this form even if you’ve already completed a different form to enter another country. This includes if you’re travelling from a country or territory where you do not have to self-isolate when you arrive in the UK. You must complete the passenger locator form online before you arrive in the UK from any country. Provide your journey and contact details before you travel to the UK You also have to say you’ve travelled from Portugal but then you can add in Madeira as an island you’ve visited later in the form. I wish we’d completed them at leisure 48 hours before not been struggling to complete them before getting to the front of the queue. There was nothing about these forms on the BA app. If you’ve children with you, were elderly or you don’t have a decent Mobile device I don’t know what you’d do!

They are LONG forms - we are fast at typing and managed to complete them as we were walking along in the queue, but it was stressful whilst managing luggage, making sure you didn’t walk into the person in front, digging out all passport information and flight information.

We arrived to very long (but fast moving) queues in passport control and many QR codes instructing us to complete the locator forms or risk a fine. He said to scan the QR codes in the airport and to complete the forms. The Pilot announced there were large fines if you didn’t complete the forms. The couple in the seat behind said that they had received an email the day before and had completed a lengthy form online at but their friends travelling with them had not been asked to complete the form. It was hard to hear what he was saying to be honest. When we were due to land back in LHR from Madeira this afternoon, the pilot mentioned that everyone arriving needed to complete a ‘Public Health Passenger Locator Form’ and that this was not a ‘landing card’ that would be handed out, but that we would need to complete it online. 10 days will not have elapsed between arriving in Edinburgh from France, and traveling to London by train.This was new to us and I’ve not seen it mentioned anywhere on this board, so thought I’d warn anyone travelling soon about the UK locator forms. What I can’t figure out is do we need to fill out ANOTHER passenger locator form before getting on the train to London, and therefore book ANOTHER day 2 test in London?Īdvice online is fuzzy because I am aware that within the UK it’s technically the common travel area, but some websites state unclearly that even if you are traveling within the UK, you still have to fill out another one if you’ve been in an amber list country in the past 10 days. After our three days in Edinburgh, we are taking a train to London. I understand I need to take a pre-departure test, pre-book a day 2 test from the specific Scotland approved testing provider, and fill out a passenger locator form prior to arrival. In September, I will be traveling from Paris to Edinburgh and staying in Edinburgh for about 3 days. I am terribly sorry if this has been answered but I’ve been endlessly searching and cannot seem to find a reliable answer.
