‘Scandalous and unacceptable’: readers on the new UK entry rules for dual nationals

A picture


British dual nationals living abroad have told of their disgust, fury and distress over new UK border rules that mean they could risk being denied boarding on a flight, ferry or train.The new rules, which come into force on 25 February, have caught many by surprise and require British dual nationals to present a British passport or a “certificate of entitlement”, which costs £589, to visit the UK on their non-British passport.The changes will affect up to 1.2 million people who have moved abroad.Some have said the only option they now have is to renounce their British citizenship.

Here are some Guardian readers’ stories.Sandra, 78, a former civil servant, has lived in Australia for the past 50 years.She has always used her Australian passport to travel and recently discovered that will no longer work in the UK.But she has faced a mountain of paperwork to prove she is British.She has been told to apply as a first-timer as she has not held a British passport since the 1980s, and has been asked for her long birth certificate, and her full marriage certificate which she says her deceased ex-husband held on to.

“I’m 78 and all this bullshit for one last trip home is ridiculous.I am disgusted,” she said.She said an official at the passports office told her they had been inundated with passport applications.“They have not thought the process through for everyone impacted and they have not looked at what this means for the many people who do not have a passport,” she said.John, who was born in the UK, married a French woman in 2002 and two years later moved permanently to France, where they had a daughter in 2008.

She is registered as a dual citizen but has never had a British passport while John hasn’t held a UK passport since 2019 and uses his French passport to travel,He is disgusted with the cost of getting a document to prove his birthright to enter the UK,“I am not paying £1,178 to the UK government for us to visit family,” he said,“So there is only one solution: renounce our British citizenship,Is this really what the government wants?”Jacqueline Ossig, 79, has been living in Germany since 1968, became a German citizen more than 30 years ago and did not keep up with her British passport as there was no need.

“I was planning, at the ripe old age of 79 (turning 80 in April), to travel to London for probably the last time to visit the area where I grew up.The government has now decided that I should to pay £589 for the privilege and that I appear to pose a threat to the country whereas my German husband can enter the country and does not have to pay this additional fee,” she said.“I feel I have been shut out of my own country.This coming on top of never having been allowed to vote.In my opinion this is insulting, scandalous and unacceptable.

So much for British fairness.”Margaret, in France, said the “red tape was insurmountable” as she tried to get a British passport after hers had expired.“It required travelling to Paris to get documents translated by an official translator and was not possible for me.I lost my €120 fee in the process.“The new digital certificate of entitlement, besides the extortionate fee which translates to €677, requires travel to either Paris or Marseille for biometrics.

There are no regional centres within 300km of my home.I will therefore not be applying and have decided not to travel back to the UK again.”Rachel was looking forward to seeing her son and grandson living in Australia at Easter but fears they won’t make it because her son’s passport has lapsed and her grandson, who has to make a new application, may not get the document in time.“My husband and I are elderly and unable to travel to Australia and so we cherish their annual visits to the UK,” she said.A Home Office spokesperson said: “From 25 February 2026, all dual British citizens will need to present either a valid British passport or certificate of entitlement when travelling to the UK.

Without one, carriers cannot verify they are a British citizen, which may lead to delays or refused boarding.“This requirement applies to all British citizens regardless of other nationality and is the same approach taken by other countries, including the United States, Canada and Australia.”*Some names have been changed
sportSee all
A picture

Grand National field ‘stands out’ in 2026 with elite runners and promising underdogs

The unveiling of the weights for the 2026 Grand National started with a montage of clips from 50 years ago, when the world’s most famous steeplechase was at its lowest ebb, the crowd had dipped below 10,000 and the track was odds-on to be sold off for housing. It was, as Ruby Walsh pointed out on the voiceover, a reminder of how the National has been revived and transformed.A glance back no further than the 2011 Grand National, however, also offers clear evidence of how much the great race has changed, even in the space of 15 years. The field, of course, is now down to a maximum of 34, rather than the 40 runners that we all grew up with, but it is the depth of quality in the names, ratings and weights that were published on Tuesday that stands out.The bottom weights in 2011 raced off a rating of 138

A picture

A part-time job and DJ gigs helped Lara Hamilton reach the Winter Olympics. Now she wants to put Australia on the map

When Lara Hamilton started skiing as a child her parents would not let her join them on the slopes until she could keep up. Off she went to ski school, while her mum and dad traversed the New South Wales ski town of Perisher unshackled by children. Her dad raced World Cup Nordic skiing, so they didn’t dawdle. Now, Hamilton is about to make her Winter Olympics debut, and she is solely focused on keeping pace with the best ski mountaineers in the world.“It was just in the family and we had a lot of old gear and he taught me and my sister how to Nordic ski,” Hamilton says

A picture

Lindsey Vonn back in US for treatment but ‘not yet able to stand’ after Olympic crash

Lindsey Vonn is back home in the US to continue treatment after she broke her leg during the Winter Olympic downhill.“Haven’t stood on my feet in over a week… been in a hospital bed immobile since my race. And although I’m not yet able to stand, being back on home soil feels amazing,” Vonn posted on X with an American flag emoji. “Huge thank you to everyone in Italy for taking good care of me.”The 41-year-old suffered a complex tibia fracture after she crashed early in her downhill run on 8 February

A picture

Elana Meyers Taylor’s victory in her fifth Olympics was about far more than gold

The American won her first Winter Games title at 41. She did so while advocating for Black athletes, mothers and the deaf and Down’s syndrome communitiesElana Meyers Taylor had already cemented her place in Olympic history long before Monday night. She had competed with and against men on the World Cup tour and at the world championships to help force women’s monobob into the Winter Olympic program. She had surpassed the speed skater Shani Davis as the most decorated Black athlete in Winter Games history. She had stacked more Olympic medals than any female bobsledder ever, reaching the podium at Vancouver, Sochi, Pyeongchang and Beijing

A picture

‘No cushion, no seatbelt, no airbag’: the GB bobsledder who races with her eyes closed

Ashleigh Nelson was never meant to be in the Winter Olympics. If you’d asked her 18 months ago where she expected to be competing this week, she would have told you she would be at the Utilita Arena in Birmingham running the 60m at the UK Indoor Championships, not standing at the top of the world’s newest ice track riding a £75,000 bobsleigh.“I was tricked into it,” Nelson says. “You laugh, but it’s true.” Nelson got into it only after the GB bob pilot Adele Nicoll sent her a message on Instagram just after the Paris Olympics asking if she fancied giving it a go

A picture

‘I’m trying to expand what it means to be a skier’: Mallory Duncan on jazz, freedom and the mountains

The Californian once had ambitions of winning gold at the Winter Olympics. But now he is more interested in what skiing can do for the soulGrowing up in the Hayward Hills, just south of Oakland, California, Mallory Duncan lived a hybrid lifestyle throughout his childhood. Weekdays were spent at school, avoiding homework, disrupting class and getting in trouble. Weekends at Alpine Meadows, a ski resort on the north-west shores of Lake Tahoe, were for jumping off cliffs and skiing powder with friends. Every Sunday he would have dinner at his grandad’s house, watch football and listen to jazz