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The Common Travel Area between the UK and Ireland, EU integration and the demilitarisation of the border following the 1998 Good Friday Agreement resulted in an open border by default. [26] Following the Northern Ireland peace process, military electronic surveillance and permanent vehicle checkpoints have been replaced by routine PSNI patrols.
They are required to carry a valid travel document, a passport or a national identity card, for entering the CTA and for travelling between Ireland and the UK. [90] But plans for a UK electronic travel authorisation would reduce the right to travel in the Common Travel Area for non-Irish EU citizens. [91] This decision was reversed.
[210] [211] As of 26 January 2021, all air passengers ages two and older must show proof of a negative COVID-19 test to enter the United States [212] and travel restrictions were reinstated for people who visited the Schengen Area, the Federative Republic of Brazil, the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and South Africa, 14 days before ...
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Speed limit sign on a single-carriageway road indicating a speed limit of 50 mph (80 km/h). The limits are posted on both sides of the road. Sign at the Republic of Ireland–United Kingdom border indicating that limits in Northern Ireland (part of the United Kingdom) are given in miles per hour, unlike those in the Republic, which are given in ...
In Northern Ireland, the Highway Code for Northern Ireland applies. [25] UK speed limits apply only to motor vehicles and are shown in mph. [20] With a few exceptions, they are in multiples of 10, ranging from 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) to 70 miles per hour (113 km/h).
The first case of the Omicron variant is identified in Northern Ireland, and is believed to be linked to travel from the UK mainland. [ 397 ] Stormont follows Westminster by tightening rules to require travellers arriving from abroad to take a pre-departure COVID test, with the rules coming into force from 4am.
Several travel agencies reported seeing noticeable increases in holiday bookings to cooler European destinations like Scandinavia, Ireland and the UK during 2023’s peak summer travel months.