The EU Recommended That Canadians Be Allowed To Travel To Europe

Even for non-essential reasons... like fun.
Reporter

The European Union has recommended that EU member states lift non-essential travel restrictions for 10 new countries and Canada is one of them, bringing the list to 23 countries.

That means Canadians could be allowed to travel to Europe — just for the fun of it — sooner. But the final decision is left up to each individual member state and the EU's recommendations are not legally binding.

Editor's Choice: US States Can't Stop Cheering For The Habs Instead Of Tampa & We Get Why (MAP)

The EU Council already permits non-essential travellers who are fully vaccinated with an EU-approved vaccine to enter its member states. But this list focuses on travellers from specific countries, rather than vaccination status.

According to EU criteria for adding countries to its "lifted travel restrictions" list, the number of COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people over the last 14 days should not be more than 75.

Over the last two weeks, the rate of cases per 100,000 people has reached 24 in Canada, according to government data.

Countries' vaccination progress is also be taken into account, as well as whether countries are making efforts to detect variants of concern, like the Delta variant strain. 

All travellers to the EU from a country on the list should have tested negative for COVID-19 in a PCR test taken 72 hours earlier or sooner. 

Member states are able to require self-isolation, quarantine and contact tracing for up to 14 days as well as further COVID-19 testing for the same period.

  • Lea Sabbah
  • Lea Sabbah was a Staff Writer for MTL Blog. Previously, Lea was a radio host on CJLO 1690 AM and her work has been published by Global News, the Toronto Star, Le Devoir and the National Observer. In 2019, she was part of the investigative team that uncovered lead in Montreal's drinking water — a story which won Quebec's Grand Prix Judith-Jasmin. She's a graduate of the journalism program at Concordia University.

Ignoring this little-known Canadian passport rule could ruin your trip before it even starts

You could be denied entry, even if your passport hasn't expired yet.

Over 25,000 Tim Hortons cups were just recalled in Canada and you could be owed money

Tim's already received 28 reports of incidents in Canada, including one confirmed burn injury.

Montrealers are driving less than almost anyone else in Canada, and here's why

Nearly one in ten Canadians say their monthly car expenses are simply more than they can manage.