Skip to main content
ETIAS · How to apply

Apply for ETIAS the right way, for €20, once.

ETIAS is the EU's online travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors. The official application takes a few minutes and costs €20. This guide covers exactly how to apply, what you need, how long approval takes, and how to avoid the lookalike sites that charge several times the official fee.

€20, paid once

A single €20 fee per adult applicant, free for under-18s and over-70s. Paid online by card at the end of the application. Non-refundable if refused.

Minutes, usually

Most applications are approved automatically within minutes. A minority are flagged for review and can take up to 30 days. Apply before booking non-refundable travel.

Valid 3 years

One approved ETIAS covers multiple trips for 3 years, or until your passport expires — whichever is first. Each stay still follows the 90/180-day rule.

Linked to your passport

ETIAS is tied to the exact passport you apply with. Renew or replace it and you must reapply. Travel on that passport.

How to apply for ETIAS, step by step

1

Gather your documents

A valid biometric passport (with at least three months validity beyond your trip), a payment card, and an email address. Know your travel dates and the first country you will enter.

2

Open the official EU ETIAS portal

Go to the official EU ETIAS website — not a third-party reseller. Check the europa.eu domain before entering any personal or passport details.

3

Complete the application

Enter your passport, contact, and travel details, then answer the short security and background questions honestly. Review everything before submitting — small typos can trigger a refusal or a manual review.

4

Pay the €20 fee

Pay by card. The fee is per applicant and non-refundable. Travellers under 18 and over 70 are exempt from the fee but still submit an application.

5

Wait for the email decision

Approval usually arrives within minutes. If flagged, it can take up to 30 days. Do not book non-refundable travel until your ETIAS is approved.

6

Travel — then complete EES on arrival

Carry the linked passport; the airline checks ETIAS at the gate. On arrival you complete the separate EES biometric registration at the border.

Before you apply

Check the domain

The official portal sits on an official EU (europa.eu) domain. If a site asks for more than €20 or looks like a private agency, close it and find the official one.

One application per traveller

There is no family or group application. Every traveller, including infants and children, needs their own ETIAS linked to their own passport.

Answer questions honestly

ETIAS screens against EU security and migration databases. Inaccurate answers can lead to refusal. If refused, you may be able to appeal or apply for a visa instead.

Keep your approval handy

Save the approval email. While the authorisation is linked electronically to your passport, having the confirmation makes any gate-side query quicker to resolve.

ETIAS application FAQs

You apply online through the official EU ETIAS website once the system is live. You enter your passport details, contact and travel information, and answer a short set of background questions, then pay the €20 fee by card. Most applications are approved within minutes by email. There is no paper form and no need to visit an embassy.
ETIAS costs €20 per applicant aged 18 to 70. It is free for travellers under 18 or over 70, although they still need to complete an application. The fee is paid online at the time of application and is non-refundable, even if the application is refused. Be wary of third-party sites charging several times the official €20 to file the same form.
The large majority of ETIAS applications are approved automatically within minutes. A small share are flagged for manual review, which can take up to 30 days — or longer if the EU requests supporting documents. Apply well in advance of any non-refundable bookings rather than the day before you fly.
No. ETIAS is a travel authorisation for visa-exempt travellers, similar to the US ESTA. It is not a visa and does not guarantee entry — it allows your airline to let you board, and the border officer makes the final decision when you arrive. If you already need a Schengen visa, you do not apply for ETIAS.
The only official application is the EU ETIAS portal operated by the European Union (https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias_en). Numerous commercial sites rank in search results and charge a premium to submit the identical application on your behalf. They are not scams in every case, but you will pay more than the €20 official fee for no added benefit.
You need a valid biometric passport with at least three months of validity beyond your planned departure from Europe, a payment card for the fee, and an email address. Have your travel dates and the first country you plan to enter to hand. Each traveller, including children, needs their own application linked to their own passport.