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TRAVEL NEWS

Sweden scraps negative Covid test for travellers from Norway

Less than four weeks after it was introduced, Sweden will later this week scrap the Covid test requirement for foreign visitors from some countries, including Norway, and will bring back the Covid-19 certificate rules that applied before the turn of the year.

Pictured is a Norwegian police officer at the border with Sweden.
Sweden has decided to relax its testing rules for travellers from Norway and the EEA. Pictured is a police office at the border with Sweden. Photo by Petter Bernsten/AFP

The Swedish government made the announcement following a request from the Public Health Agency, with the new border rules set to come into force on Friday, January 21st.

Since December 28th, foreign citizens (with some exceptions, such as residents of Sweden or people travelling for urgent family reasons) have had to show a negative test to be allowed into the country, regardless of country of departure or vaccination status.

These rules were introduced after the Omicron variant of the coronavirus started to spread in other European countries, but the variant now dominates in Sweden too. Sweden has been seeing a rapid increase in the number of new Covid cases in recent weeks.

“Travellers are no longer considered to pose a special risk of affecting the spread of Omicron in Sweden. The special requirement for a negative test for ongoing Covid-19 infection performed no more than 48 hours before arrival in Sweden is therefore no longer considered to be a proportionate measure, according to a request from the Swedish Public Health Agency,” read a government statement on Tuesday.

The entry rules that applied prior to December 28th will now be brought back.

This means that adult foreign citizens (again with certain exceptions) travelling to Sweden from EU/EEA countries, including the Nordics, will have to show either the EU’s Digital Covid Certificate or a valid equivalent which shows that the person is either fully vaccinated with a first and second dose, tested negative no more than 72 hours before arrival, or recovered from confirmed infection in the past six months.

Foreign citizens travelling to Sweden from outside the EU/EEA must be covered by an exemption from the overall entry ban (for example if they live in an “exempt” country), and show a negative Covid test no older than 72 hours unless they are also exempt from the test requirement.

Several categories of travellers are exempt both from the entry ban and from presenting a negative test on the border, for example under-18s, people who live in Sweden, people travelling for urgent family reasons, or travellers with vaccination certificates issued in so-called “approved” countries. A full list of countries whose vaccination certificates Sweden accepts for entry can be found here.

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TRAVEL NEWS

How the check-in process at Oslo Gardermoen Airport will change this autumn

Several airlines flying out of Oslo airport will use new luggage drop technology and see their check-in area move this autumn. Here’s what travellers need to know.

How the check-in process at Oslo Gardermoen Airport will change this autumn

A new luggage drop has opened at Oslo Airport Gardermoen, and several airlines will move their check-in areas to make use of the new technology, state-owned airport operator Avinor has said in a press release.

“Now we are ready to open up to a larger number of flights every day, and from this week, we are entering a major ramp-up phase,” Hans Petter Stensjøen, an area manager at Oslo Gardermoen, said in a press release.

“Half of the departure hall at Oslo Airport has been blocked off with either test stations or construction walls for several years, and there are many people who have turned to go straight to check-in areas 1-4 in the west, and 10 all the way in the east. Now that a significant number of flights are being moved to the new facility, travellers will have to get used to checking the information boards to find their check-in area,” he added.

Over the next few weeks, SAS would begin moving its travellers over to the new 5-7 check-in area.

The new luggage system is one of the world’s most modern, Avinor has said. The traditional baggage belt has been dropped, and passengers will place their luggage in a box before scanning the luggage tag.

Throughout the autumn, several other airlines will also be moved to the new check-in area.

“There have, of course, been some teething problems, and it is precisely to weed out such errors that we are carrying out a gradual escalation in the use of the facility. The feedback from the travellers has also been very good, and the vast majority find this simple and user-friendly,” Stensjøen said.  

READ ALSO: What is the best way to get to Oslo from the airport?

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