-
France set to pass emergency ‘budget law’: is it good or bad for your finances?
The country will effectively be without a budget from 2025, with knock-on effects for individuals and companies
-
EasyJet announces nine new flight routes from France including to UK
A service from Bordeaux to Birmingham is among the new announcements
-
French weekend weather outlook December 14 - 15: gloomy and chilly in the north
Cloudy skies are expected to dominate in the north, but in the south temperatures will still reach double figures
UK NHS vaccine certificates not yet compatible with French health pass
The certificates issued in England with a QR code can be scanned into France’s Covid application, but they cannot be read by verification technology used to access many venues
UK NHS vaccination certificates are not yet compatible with France’s health pass scanning tool which will be used in restaurants, bars and many other venues in France from next week, the British Embassy in Paris has confirmed to The Connexion.
This is despite the fact the certificates can be uploaded to the phone application TousAntiCovid in order to facilitate travel into France and other EU countries.
Covid vaccination certificates issued in the UK can be used as proof of vaccination to enter France. Passengers can present them on paper or through the TousAntiCovid app, which will be looked at by travel authorities rather than scanned.
The issue is, once in France, they cannot be scanned by staff at venues using France’s verification tool TousAntiCovid Verif.
It means that when staff at places subject to health pass rules try to scan the QR code, it will not work. British customers may then be denied entry, as they do not have a valid health pass.
Staff at these venues may choose to read the information on the certificate instead of scanning the QR code and therefore allow the British customer entry, but this is at the discretion of the staff and the venue’s management.
A spokesperson at the British Embassy in Paris told The Connexion today (August 4) that work was ongoing to make the NHS certificates compatible with France’s scanning tool.
France is set to make its health pass a requirement to enter restaurants, cafes, bars, hospitals (excluding urgent care), care homes and long-distance transport services, such as TGV trains, on August 9.
The exact specifications of this rule depends on a judgement from France’s Conseil constitutionnel, to be announced tomorrow (August 5).
The health pass, which is proof of vaccination, proof of a negative Covid test taken within the past 48 hours, or proof of having been positive with Covid 11 days to six months before, is already required to enter museums, theatres, cinemas, public swimming pools and some other venues that can host over 50 people.
It has been possible since July for UK visitors to France to scan the QR codes on their NHS vaccination certificates issued in England to France’s TousAntiCovid app.
No timeframe was given by the British Embassy in Paris as to when the British QR codes will be readable.
Several major museums in France have told The Connexion they accept paper-based foreign vaccination certificates.
However, France has not issued an official statement on whether venues, including restaurants, cafes, bars, etc, can accept paper-based foreign vaccination certificates as part of the health pass.
Read more: Explained: What changed with France’s Covid health pass on July 21
France has also not supplied official information on whether US vaccination certificates will be accepted as part of its health pass requirements, a spokesperson for the US Embassy in France told The Connexion yesterday (August 4).
Read more: French health pass: Museums take US vaccine card but no official rules
Related stories:
How will France’s health pass work in cafes, bars and restaurants?