j'aimerai visiter Bethlehem en territoire palestinien, je compte entrer en Israel via le pont Allenby en espérant ne pas avoir de tampon sur mon passeport mais plutôt une feuille volante:
J'ai 2 questions:
- la feuille volante, est-ce que les douaniers la gardent chez eux au poste frontière ou alors ils nous la donnent? Je dis ça car j'ai cru comprendre dans un autre post qu'ils la gardaient chez eux, mais ça me paraît pas très logique...
- en fonction de cela, entrer et sortir de Bethleem ne va-t-il pas poser problème si ils gardent la feuille volante? Devrai-je justifier mon entrée en Israel par le pont Allenby pour pouvoir sortir de Bethleem.
Attention parce que le coup de la feuille volante c'est un peu à la tête du client.
Je voulais lui demander, la douanière a pris mon passeport et l'a tamponné subitement, je n'ai rien vu venir.
Je pense que si tu arrives à avoir un tampon sur une feuille, tu la gardes dans ton passeport et ils la récupère quand tu sors d'Israel.
Je m'interroge quand même sur l'utilité de cette feuille volante, parce que tu auras en principe un tampon de sortie de la Jordanie. Si tu sors de la Jordanie par Allenby bridge, cela veut dire que tu es allé en Israel .
C'est comme avoir le tampon israelien dans son passeport./ Ca revient au même non?
c'est vrai je n'y avais pas pensé, sortir de Jordanie par le pont Allenby est-il équivalent à un tampon israelien?
Peut-être quelqu'un pourrait-il nous éclairer?
je ne sais pas exactement ce qu'il se passe quand on revient en Jordanie. En tout cas, j'ai bien un visa de sortie du territoire jordanien en étant passé au pont Alleby. Je suis rentrée en France par Tel Aviv, donc je n'en sais pas plus. Mais ce serait intéressant de comprendre comment ça marche.
Quand on voyage dans la region, il faut demander a ne pas etre tamponne a l'aeroport de tel Aviv. Si on passe par voie de terre, il faut demander aux officiers israeliens ET jordaniens ou Egyptiens de ne pas tamponner. Un visa de taba ou d'Allenby signifie que vous etes allee en Israel a coup sur.
Le papier volant: soit ils te le donnent, soit ils le gardent. S'ils le gardent tu n'as pas le droit de rester dans le bus dans les checkpoints, tu dois les passer a pied comme les Palestiniens. Ils appelleront l'aeroport pour verifier tes dires, c'est une formalite.
Merci pour vos informations...
Finalement je suis allé a Jerusalem et en Palestine, et je peux vous dire que ça vaut vraiment le coup, Jerusalem est un ville spendide, surtout la vieille ville qui a gardé toute son authenticité...et aussi pour la Palestine, Bethleem est une ville relativement moderne qui a su garder son authenticité historique, et Hebron pour constater la réalité que vivent des milliers de familles palestiniennes, Hebron est pour eux une prison à ciel ouvert, et je pèse mes mots, j'ai pu constaté les grillages au-dessus des ruelles qui servent à protéger les passants palestiniens des jets de pierres (et quelles pierres! plutot des morceaux de briques en béton) et détritus par les colons juifs... Côté cuturel on peut visiter à Hebron certains tombeaux des prophètes Abraham, Isaac, sa femme Rebecca, et d'autres...
Pour ce qui est des visas et tampons j'en profite pour vous faire part de mon experience:
en entrant par le pont King Hussein (ou Allenby côté israélien) j'ai dû attendre à 4 heures et subir un interrogatoire des plus approfondis, on se sent un peu con de répondre à toutes leurs questions d'ordre très privé, on se demande si c'est bien légal tout ça mais mieux vaut jouer le jeu si on veut passer la frontière...
Pour le tampon j'ai demandé une feuille volante je l'ai eu sans problème, on m'a juste demandé pourquoi, ce à quoi j'ai répondu que j'ai prévu un voyage d'affaires à Dubai prochainement....(une astuce que j'ai lu sur ce forum ;-)).
Pour les territoires palestiniens le passage a partir de Jerusalem s'est fait sans aucun problème, il y'a 2 check points avec passage dans un couloir grillagé, et entre les deux une espèce de zone tampon de quelques mètres, il faut juste montrer votre passeport et dire "tourist" et vous passez sans problème. En entrant je me suis incrusté dans un groupe de touristes, en sortant c'était la nuit et j'étais seul à passer avec un medecin palestinien qui bosse a Hebron, j'ai juste montré mon passeport et suis passé sans problème, le detecteur de metaux a même sonné aux deux check points et on m'a même pas fouillé ni demandé de repasser...
Ce qui m'a un peu dégouté c'était la taxe de sortie au pont Allenby qui est de 167 sheckels (33 euros), un peu cher quand même...
salut leperpet
merci pour votre note c vraiment génial.. ça rest quand méme une référence pour tous les voyageurs
en fait je voulais demander à propos le trajet amman vers le pont.; racontez ns un peu de ce trajet (distance; cout ; moyen ..)
Merci bq
__Le plus beau voyage, c’est celui qu’on n’a pas encore fait__
Pour le trajet Amman - pont King Hussein c'est très simple, tu prends le bus ou le taxi à la station (Amman est une grande ville il y en a plusieurs), moi j'ai pris le bus ça m'a couté 4.5 JD si je me souviens bien (environ 5 euros), tu roules pendant environ 45 min voire 1 heure, une fois arrivé au pont y'a les formalités administratives, ils vérifient ton passeport et te demande d'attendre le temps que le bus qui fait office de navette arrive, ils te remettent ton passeport une fois monté dans le bus...la traversée du pont est courte, une fois de l'autre côté tu passe le poste frontiere israélien et c'est là que ça se complique, si tu voyage seul tu peux être sûr qu'ils te casseront les pieds avec leurs questions et te feront attendre des heures...Le côut de la navette: 3 JD + 1.5 JD par bagage dans la soute.
ps: je ne suis pas très sûr des tarifs exacts, je les donne a titre indicatif
SALUT;
merci bq leperpet c gentil
je vais voyager seul et j'ai une grande maintenant mais ça me stress bq quand je sente quil aura un risk que je pourrais pa entrer ..
surtt que je suis tunisien
merci quand mem
__Le plus beau voyage, c’est celui qu’on n’a pas encore fait__
si ça peut te rassurer le risque qu'ils te refusent l'entrée est minime si tu joue leur jeu et répond simplement à leurs question, pas trop rentrer dans les détails mais leur faire savoir que tu es là juste pour le tourisme...
Ils vont te demander si tu as des contacts en Palestine ou Jerusalem, même si tu en as il vaut mieux répondre "non" car à mon avis ils vont se renseigner sur la personne et peut-être l'embêter aussi si ils veulent vraiment...
Bref dis toi que tu as à faire à des paranos, essaye donc de les rassurer avec tes réponses.... :-)
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I’m heading to Laos next spring, but I have a question about the Thai arrival/departure form. I’ll be flying PAR-BKK, then taking the train to Laos (so exiting Thailand), and later re-entering Thailand by train to catch my return flight. Do I need to fill out two forms in this case?
Hi there,
I have a 9-seater passenger vehicle that I use for my business in Paris, transporting people.
I’m planning to go to Algeria with my family.
The vehicle registration lists my company as the owner.
Can I get a TPD (Temporary Admission Document)?
Will I need a KBis extract or a power of attorney?!?
Thanks for your help.
Worst case, I can add my personal name as a co-owner on the registration, but that would be a real shame!
Hi,
I’m bringing Seresta, an anxiolytic (tranquilizer) from the benzodiazepine family,
to help me sleep.
I’ll have the prescription with me.
Will this be a problem at customs, and do I need to declare it?
Same question for antibiotics?
Thanks a bunch!
Hi,
I’m writing to ask for some info—I’ve heard that you **must** have travel insurance to land in Zanzibar.
What’s the process, and which insurance should I get?
Thanks in advance for your feedback!
Best,
Seb
Hi there,
I’m a French citizen living in Switzerland, and I set up an RV LLC in Montana, USA. Through that, I was able to register 3 vehicles (an RV, a Jeep, and a Harley) with Montana plates.
I’d like to spend 3 months in Mexico, but it seems complicated—maybe even impossible—to cross the border from the US with all 3 vehicles.
Can anyone give me some advice?
Hi, are there any travelers who’ve recently crossed the border between Karakalpakstan (Uzbekistan) and Beineu in Kazakhstan?
It was closed for a while.
Thanks for any info!
I bought a one-way flight (Ryanair) and a return flight (EasyJet) to spend a week in Morocco in April.
My passport expires 3 weeks after the return date.
Some websites say the passport must be valid for 3 months at the time of entry.
However, it will still be valid both on entry and return, but its validity will only be 1 month at the time of entry (and 3 weeks on the return date, everything prepaid).
It's an individual family trip.
The consulate can't give me an answer—they're still looking into it (really!)
Last year, we stayed for 3 months in Thailand, north of Khao Lak, and were able to benefit from the 2-month visa exemption, renewable for one month by going to Takua Pa to validate a 1-month extension (1,900 baht).
This year, it’s a disaster for us—not only were we planning a 4-month stay, adding a visa run in between (which some say is quite risky), but the law is apparently changing in the coming months with the return of the 1-month exemption (plus the usual 1-month option). So, we looked into applying for a 6-month multiple-entry visa, allowing a maximum of 60 consecutive days in Thailand. However, I can’t find anywhere the minimum time required outside Thailand between two stays—do any of you have an idea?
Thanks for the info! If you’d like tips on Khao Lak and the surrounding areas, we’ve got some experience, though things change fast!
Cheers,
Bruno.
My partner, our 8-year-old daughter, and I are going on vacation to Gex.
We’ve decided to spend one day in Switzerland and another in Italy. Will we need ID (national ID card or passport)? Do we also need ID for our daughter?
Hello,
We’ll soon be moving to Madagascar long-term.
As a French national, I need to obtain a short-stay visa that can be converted to a long-stay one. To do this, I have to send the required documents to the Madagascar embassy in Paris.
No issues with that procedure so far.
If I get this visa, once I arrive in Madagascar, I’ll need to provide the same documents to the Ministry of the Interior in Anosy. I’m trying to find an email address or website for the Ministry to check which documents I need to submit (I think they ask for additional ones).
If you have any info on this, I’d appreciate your replies.
Best regards,
M. Buisson Eric
I’d like to know if anyone has already applied for a private visa to Russia with an invitation from a Russian resident.
I traveled earlier this year with an e-visa, but since I want to stay longer, I’ll be visiting my friend who lives in eastern Russia.
For the visa application, does the invitation need to be on an official paper form issued by the Russian ministry? And most importantly, do I need to present the original for the application, or is there an electronic version that can be sent directly to the consulate in France?
Thanks for any info if you’ve gone through this process before!
I filled out the B2 form to apply for a visa, created an account on Atvis to pay the visa fees and schedule a meet-up, but every time I try to pay with my Boursobank Visa 1st card, they refuse the payment with a message telling me to check my details (address), even though everything is correct. Does anyone know why this is happening, or maybe they don’t accept Visa cards? Are you aware of this?
Thanks for your feedback!
Elisabeth
There are rumors going around about the ETA: it must absolutely be on your smartphone in the "ETA" app.
Paper documents might not be accepted.
Is this real or just a hoax?
Thanks, I’m leaving in 3 weeks. My passport is good to go and my ETA is still valid for a year, but I only printed the email I received.
Thanks everyone.
Hi there,
We need to apply for a B2 visa because we visited Iran in 2018. It currently costs $185, but they’re planning an additional $250 fee per person for the same visa—it’s been approved but not yet implemented. Does anyone know when this fee will take effect?
Thanks in advance!
Elisabeth
Hi there,
In November, we're heading off on a 4-month trip. We'll be landing in China and plan to leave the country via a land border into Vietnam.
I’ve read that China may ask for proof of exit within 30 days (flight ticket or other reservation). Since we’d be leaving by land, I’m wondering how this works in practice.
Has anyone here been in this situation recently?
Did the airline ask for an exit ticket before boarding?
Did Chinese authorities require proof upon arrival?
Is a train/bus ticket to Vietnam sufficient?
Is a cancelable or flexible reservation accepted?
Hi there,
Just a question that’s probably been asked before (though usually the other way around for my situation :))
My wife and I are heading to the US.
On her ticket, it only has her maiden name (e.g., Martine DUPOND).
On her passport, it’s written as Martine DUPOND épouse AVRY.
No issues for travel, I hope I did the right thing with the ticket?
Then for the ESTA, is just Martine DUPOND enough, or do I need to include the "épouse AVRY" part like on the passport?
Thanks in advance!
Hi there,
I’m spending a few days in San Pedro de Atacama (Chile) and would like to cross the Argentine border to make a loop toward Salta and then return to Chile to drop off the rental car.
I’ve heard that crossing the border can be tricky!
Is it possible with a rental company’s authorization? Which company, and at what cost?
Thanks for sharing your experiences!
Best regards,
Arnale
I saw on the French Embassy in Peru’s website and the Peruvian Consulate in Paris’s site that the rule is to have a passport valid for 6 months *after the arrival date* (not the return date).
I arrive in Peru on August 13, 2019 (for about twelve days), and my passport is valid until February 16, 2020.
That’s 6 months and 3 days after my arrival date in Peru. In my opinion, I’m good to go.
But could I still be denied entry if they say I don’t cover the return date or that I’m too close to the 6-month mark?
I read on the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs website that it’s possible to apply for a temporary driving permit in China, valid for 1 month.
I’m planning to rent a car (without a driver) to explore part of the country next August, so I was wondering:
Has anyone here already gone through this process upon arrival?
How long do the formalities take on the spot?
Is it possible to handle these steps in advance, before arriving in China?
Hi there,
My departure is slowly approaching, and now that I’ve got my Russian visa sorted, I’m fine-tuning the rest of my trip to Tajikistan. Since the Tajik visa is no longer required for stays under 30 days (for French nationals), I’ll need to visit the Ministry of Interior (OVIR) to register within 10 days of entering the country. No big deal, though, since I had to go there anyway to apply for my GBAO permit. 😉 However, I’ve *seen* several reports from travelers (mostly motorized) mentioning that you need an entry permit for Kyrgyzstan, which has to be arranged in advance at the Kyrgyz Ministry (consulate?) in Dushanbe. Otherwise, you’re *stuck* at the Kyzyl-Art border (with no Wi-Fi, of course, to try and sort it out). The most recent report was from a year ago, so I’d love to know if this is still the case and if it’s indeed at the Kyrgyz Ministry (consulate?) where you need to go for this pre-authorization.
Does anyone have any recent info on this?
Thanks in advance!
Hi everyone.
I’m leaving for almost 3 months in the Philippines (11 weeks total) starting in early May.
I already have my round-trip ticket.
The problem is, I don’t have time to get a 2-month visa because the process takes nearly a month.
From what I’ve read here and there, I need a return ticket valid for less than a month when I arrive in the Philippines to prove my good faith.
After that, I can apply for a 30-day extension at the immigration office.
I’m planning to either buy a fully refundable ticket to the nearest country or a fake ticket.
For 3 months, I’ll need to extend my visa two more times before my return date to France.
My question is this:
Will immigration ask me each time I extend my visa by one month to show proof of an exit ticket matching the new visa extension date?
Is it possible to extend directly by 2 months before the initial 30 days expire?
Thanks in advance for your experiences and tips! 😊
I’ve been to Thailand several times, but it was about 20 years ago…
There’s a new system in place now, it seems.
TDAC – Thailand Digital Arrival Card.
Before arriving, I apply for a TDAC, okay.
If during my stay I cross the border to spend a few days in Malaysia and then re-enter Thailand,
do I need to submit a new TDAC application?
Do I use the same TDAC as when I first entered the country?
Or do I initially have to pay for a Thai multi-entry visa?
Thanks in advance for your insights—I can’t find the answer online.
My partner (Mexican) entered France on January 21st as a tourist. She was therefore entitled to stay for 90 days in the Schengen Area. She’ll be leaving for Mexico on April 16th, so she’ll have “used up” 86 days.
She plans to return to France on July 18th. According to the European Commission’s Schengen calculator, this new stay “may be authorized for a maximum of 90 days.” That’s not very clear ("may be," "for a maximum of").
The text of Article 6 of the European regulation (2016/399) states that for a stay planned in the territory of the Member States, not exceeding 90 days in any 180-day period, one must examine "the 180-day period preceding each day of the stay." That’s not very clear either.
My partner wants to return to France for a 90-day period starting on July 18th. Is this possible?
There are two ways to look at it:
1) The first day she spent in the Schengen Area was January 21st. That day will drop out of the calculation 180 days later, on July 20th.
From July 20th, she’ll get back 1 day of possible stay; on July 22nd, 2 days; and so on. All the days from her previous stay (January 21st–April 16th) need to be outside the 180-day rolling window.
The last day of her stay was April 16th. Looking 180 days ahead, that brings us to October 13th. From that date, she’ll be able to return for a full 90 days.
2) The number of allowed days is calculated for each day of the new stay. In other words: the 180-day window is recalculated every day, not fixed at the entry date.
If she re-enters France on July 18th, she’ll only have a “credit” of 4 days. But with each day of her new stay, one day from the previous stay (January–April) will drop out of the calculation. The rolling window allows her to “replace” days from the previous stay with those of the new stay, without ever exceeding 90 days in any 180-day period.
In this case, my partner could stay in France for 90 days starting on July 18th.
The Prefecture doesn’t provide any information, nor does Air France, and in the forums I’ve checked, opinions are divided. Thanks for any insights you can share!
Hello,
We’re planning to travel to Indonesia (Sulawesi with family) next July and August for a stay longer than a month (about 6 weeks).
I’ve seen that it’s possible to get a 60-day visa before departure, but I’ve also read about people having a lot of trouble getting it (some even didn’t manage and had to leave without it).
We absolutely need to have these 4 visas BEFORE leaving because once we’re in Sulawesi, I’m not sure we’ll be able to go to an embassy to request a visa extension after 30 days.
In short, how can we **100% guarantee** that we’ll get our 4 60-day visas before our trip this summer?
Hello, HAPPY NEW YEAR 2026!
We’re heading back in October for a trip through Botswana, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
I have a question: for our route, we’ll need to cross the Zambia and Zimbabwe borders twice each. From experience, I know we won’t have any issues with Botswana.
But for the other two countries, I can’t find a clear answer.
All your tips are welcome!
I’m currently a student on a gap year, and I don’t plan to go back to school right away. That said, traveling really interests me. But I’ve been wondering: does being a student come with any perks when you decide to go abroad? The real question is whether I should re-enroll in a program just to keep that status without actually attending.
hi everyone,
I’m French and live in France, and my Thai girlfriend just told me she’s pregnant—she lives in Thailand. First step, a paternity test to set my mind at ease. What steps do I need to take to recognize the child? Can I do it before the birth or only after? Where do I need to go, and what paperwork is required?
Just to clarify, I want him to stay in Thailand but be able to come to France anytime without any issues!
Thanks for taking the time to read and reply.