Passport Stamps Are Disappearing Across 29 Countries This Fall, and Here’s What Travelers Need to Know

Passport

There is nothing more exciting than examining a passport stamp after entering a new country, seeing the barely dry ink on the page, and creating a tangible memory you can hold in your hand. However, that experience will soon become outdated as countries across the European Union transition to biometric and electronic border systems, thereby forgoing the physical stamp.

In Europe, 29 countries will soon replace passport stamps with a new Entry/Exit System (EES). The policy, which has been delayed for years, will now go into effect starting Oct. 12 and be introduced gradually, with the full implementation expected to be complete by April 10, 2026.

The electronic authorization is an “automated IT system for registering non-EU nationals travelling for a short stay, each time they cross the external borders of any of the following European countries using the system,” according to the European Union. The policy, aimed at modernizing borders, will collect data listed in travelers’ documents, the date and place of each entry and exit, a facial image, and fingerprints.

 Europe isn’t alone in moving toward a digital border. In January, the United Kingdom implemented its own electronic travel authorization (ETA) fee, which is now required for most travelers arriving in the country, including from the United States. At the time, the long-anticipated fee was called a step toward “a modern immigration system.”

Even the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has started expanding its facial recognition technology at airports across the country, and programs like Clear Plus, which uses fingerprint, eye, or facial scans to speed through security, are gaining in popularity.

Other countries are moving away from stamps as well. Australia, for example, stopped issuing passport stamps as far back as 2012, according to the country’s ABC News. Destinations like Hong Kong, Singapore, and Argentina have similarly eliminated them. Even the U.S. has started to phase out the use of physical stamps, Harvard University noted.

However, while travelers may lament the loss of that tangible reminder of a trip, one thing they should never do is affix a souvenir stamp to their official passports. That’s because the document warns the holder that “only authorized officials of the United States or of foreign countries may place stamps or make notations or additions.”

This is the full list of countries where the EES will be implemented on a gradual basis:

    Austria

    Belgium

    Bulgaria

    Croatia

    Czechia

    Denmark

    Estonia

    Finland

    France

    Germany

    Greece

    Hungary

    Iceland

    Italy

    Latvia

    Liechtenstein

    Lithuania

    Luxembourg

    Malta

    Netherlands

    Norway

    Poland

    Portugal

    Romania

    Slovakia

    Slovenia

    Spain

    Sweden

    Switzerland