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Thanks for your reply. I was just curious as we've never been asked and I saw it mentioned in a recent thread. I wonder is it because they have always been busy every time we go, or because my husbands passport is US and he can travel to Europe for up to 90 days without having a visa or GNIB card anyway.mentalmind wrote: ↑Mon Apr 04, 2022 12:09 pmAirlines do ask and have to ask for proper immigration permission, especially you are national of visa requiring country or departing from one.
As non-EU national, I have to show my Schengen visa at Dublin airport and get my visa checked else they cause trouble during boarding.
That’s not true. I am a US citizen and I have never been able to leave the US without producing my GNIB/IRP card within, at least, the last 5 years as it is considered a one-way ticket. It is very difficult to fly into Ireland on a one way ticket anymore, as they want proof you’re moving on and not trying to illegally stay. I almost got caught out once because my card was near expiry. I had to get emails from my employment, and proof that I had in fact renewed it but it just hadn’t received the new one yet. I usually fly with Delta, but AA and Aer Lingus have also checked. I then always have to have it for immigration as well once landed - didn’t upgrade my new address fast enough for them and was given out to for it and threatened with a fine. For the most part, airlines and immigration are strict enough with it.
What does that have anything to do with Ryanair/Schengen/EU? They will not check a non-visa required national's IRP card. That is not the requirement for EU flights.nmurph wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 1:08 pmThat’s not true. I am a US citizen and I have never been able to leave the US without producing my GNIB/IRP card within, at least, the last 5 years as it is considered a one-way ticket. It is very difficult to fly into Ireland on a one way ticket anymore, as they want proof you’re moving on and not trying to illegally stay. I almost got caught out once because my card was near expiry. I had to get emails from my employment, and proof that I had in fact renewed it but it just hadn’t received the new one yet. I usually fly with Delta, but AA and Aer Lingus have also checked. I then always have to have it for immigration as well once landed - didn’t upgrade my new address fast enough for them and was given out to for it and threatened with a fine. For the most part, airlines and immigration are strict enough with it.
I didn’t realise OP wasn’t referring to an EU flight until I reread Ryanair. The post wasn’t blatantly specific otherwise… my bad.littlerr wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 10:11 pmWhat does that have anything to do with Ryanair/Schengen/EU? They will not check a non-visa required national's IRP card. That is not the requirement for EU flights.nmurph wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 1:08 pmThat’s not true. I am a US citizen and I have never been able to leave the US without producing my GNIB/IRP card within, at least, the last 5 years as it is considered a one-way ticket. It is very difficult to fly into Ireland on a one way ticket anymore, as they want proof you’re moving on and not trying to illegally stay. I almost got caught out once because my card was near expiry. I had to get emails from my employment, and proof that I had in fact renewed it but it just hadn’t received the new one yet. I usually fly with Delta, but AA and Aer Lingus have also checked. I then always have to have it for immigration as well once landed - didn’t upgrade my new address fast enough for them and was given out to for it and threatened with a fine. For the most part, airlines and immigration are strict enough with it.
If this is a requirement in the US, that's understandable. China imposes similar requirements as well, but they have nothing to do with the OP's post.
Well, according to the department of justice Brazil is in the list of non-visa required country and when flying with Ryanair I have always to drop by their check desk.littlerr wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 10:11 pmWhat does that have anything to do with Ryanair/Schengen/EU? They will not check a non-visa required national's IRP card. That is not the requirement for EU flights.nmurph wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 1:08 pmThat’s not true. I am a US citizen and I have never been able to leave the US without producing my GNIB/IRP card within, at least, the last 5 years as it is considered a one-way ticket. It is very difficult to fly into Ireland on a one way ticket anymore, as they want proof you’re moving on and not trying to illegally stay. I almost got caught out once because my card was near expiry. I had to get emails from my employment, and proof that I had in fact renewed it but it just hadn’t received the new one yet. I usually fly with Delta, but AA and Aer Lingus have also checked. I then always have to have it for immigration as well once landed - didn’t upgrade my new address fast enough for them and was given out to for it and threatened with a fine. For the most part, airlines and immigration are strict enough with it.
If this is a requirement in the US, that's understandable. China imposes similar requirements as well, but they have nothing to do with the OP's post.
I’m a US citizen. Ryanair always “visa check” me. On a recent flight from Ireland to Spain, the gate agent flipped through my passport as if looking for something. Pretending really, then decided she had flipped through enough and printed my new boarding pass and stamped it with her stupid stamp. I don’t need a visa to enter Spain or Ireland…
She was looking for a UK entry-denial or deportation stamp. My brother in law works for Ryanair, and they do that as part of a routine visa checks for non-EU nationals, because Ireland is often targeted by people who were previously refused entry to the UK.
That is correct. Ryanair’s policy is to ‘visa’ check all non-EU nationals. That doesn’t mean you need to have a visa - US nationals don’t need one. Ryanair cannot refuse you entry if you don’t have a stamp or show your IRP card on your passport. However, as Vorona said, if you have a refusal stamp by the UK or Irish authority, chances are that they will deny you from boarding.jbminger wrote: ↑Thu May 26, 2022 6:22 pmI’m a US citizen. Ryanair always “visa check” me. On a recent flight from Ireland to Spain, the gate agent flipped through my passport as if looking for something. Pretending really, then decided she had flipped through enough and printed my new boarding pass and stamped it with her stupid stamp. I don’t need a visa to enter Spain or Ireland…
To answer the OP. The only time I have ever shown my GNIB card was to Irish immigration at an airport when entering Ireland.
Not correct.littlerr wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 2:38 amThat is correct. Ryanair’s policy is to ‘visa’ check all non-EU nationals. That doesn’t mean you need to have a visa - US nationals don’t need one. Ryanair cannot refuse you entry if you don’t have a stamp or show your IRP card on your passport. However, as Vorona said, if you have a refusal stamp by the UK or Irish authority, chances are that they will deny you from boarding.jbminger wrote: ↑Thu May 26, 2022 6:22 pmI’m a US citizen. Ryanair always “visa check” me. On a recent flight from Ireland to Spain, the gate agent flipped through my passport as if looking for something. Pretending really, then decided she had flipped through enough and printed my new boarding pass and stamped it with her stupid stamp. I don’t need a visa to enter Spain or Ireland…
To answer the OP. The only time I have ever shown my GNIB card was to Irish immigration at an airport when entering Ireland.
Which bit in what I said is different from what you said?O'Ramires wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 12:53 pmNot correct.littlerr wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 2:38 amThat is correct. Ryanair’s policy is to ‘visa’ check all non-EU nationals. That doesn’t mean you need to have a visa - US nationals don’t need one. Ryanair cannot refuse you entry if you don’t have a stamp or show your IRP card on your passport. However, as Vorona said, if you have a refusal stamp by the UK or Irish authority, chances are that they will deny you from boarding.jbminger wrote: ↑Thu May 26, 2022 6:22 pmI’m a US citizen. Ryanair always “visa check” me. On a recent flight from Ireland to Spain, the gate agent flipped through my passport as if looking for something. Pretending really, then decided she had flipped through enough and printed my new boarding pass and stamped it with her stupid stamp. I don’t need a visa to enter Spain or Ireland…
To answer the OP. The only time I have ever shown my GNIB card was to Irish immigration at an airport when entering Ireland.
Ryanair is a budget airline, therefore they avoid any extra costs they would legally have if they flew a passenger into a country they are refused entry — they would be responsible for flying you back to where you came from.
That can happen for different reasons, you may have overstayed your visa, you may not have the proper documentation, you may be flying from a visa-free country to a visa-required country etc
That they are (only) looking for refusal stamps and/or that Ryanair cannot refuse your entry (boarding). They are looking for anything that can stop you from entry your country of destination and if they find something wrong they won't let you board.littlerr wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 3:05 pmWhich bit in what I said is different from what you said?O'Ramires wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 12:53 pmNot correct.littlerr wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 2:38 amThat is correct. Ryanair’s policy is to ‘visa’ check all non-EU nationals. That doesn’t mean you need to have a visa - US nationals don’t need one. Ryanair cannot refuse you entry if you don’t have a stamp or show your IRP card on your passport. However, as Vorona said, if you have a refusal stamp by the UK or Irish authority, chances are that they will deny you from boarding.jbminger wrote: ↑Thu May 26, 2022 6:22 pmI’m a US citizen. Ryanair always “visa check” me. On a recent flight from Ireland to Spain, the gate agent flipped through my passport as if looking for something. Pretending really, then decided she had flipped through enough and printed my new boarding pass and stamped it with her stupid stamp. I don’t need a visa to enter Spain or Ireland…
To answer the OP. The only time I have ever shown my GNIB card was to Irish immigration at an airport when entering Ireland.
Ryanair is a budget airline, therefore they avoid any extra costs they would legally have if they flew a passenger into a country they are refused entry — they would be responsible for flying you back to where you came from.
That can happen for different reasons, you may have overstayed your visa, you may not have the proper documentation, you may be flying from a visa-free country to a visa-required country etc
Except, This happened on the flight out of Ireland. So you’re reasoning doesn’t work.
What does not work for you is not important. What works for carriers is, because it's part of their duties and responsibilities. You're not unique among millions of non-EU passenger to be subjected to visa checks. It's a common practice. Take it or leave it.