Bulgaria and Romania now part of the Schengen Area
FR

Translated into English.

Original post
B7
After 13 years in the Schengen waiting room, Romania and Bulgaria are fully joining the free-movement zone on Wednesday, January 1, 2025, by road and air. Already partially in the zone with the lifting of checks in March 2024 at airports and seaports, they received the green light from their European partners in mid-December to enjoy the same privileges at land border crossings.
TA Tatra Globetrotter ·
Hello,

Thanks for this reminder of what will only make travel easier. That said, I’m a bit surprised to read that it would be a “privilege.” To me, it’s simply the application of a fundamental and foundational principle: the free movement of people within the Schengen Area. Romania and Bulgaria are doing what’s needed to meet the standards—they’re fully integrating into the space, which is only normal. Just a quick side note: free movement within Schengen is very well respected in Central and Eastern European countries. The challenges to this freedom, which we hear a lot about these days, actually come from Germany, Austria, Slovenia, and sometimes France, where the press often misrepresents the topic.

Happy New Year to the East, then! 🙂.

Michel
MA Mathews Globetrotter ·
where there’s quite a bit of misinformation in the press on this topic.

What misinformation are we talking about?
TA Tatra Globetrotter ·
Hello,

what misinformation are we talking about?

Since you asked... 🤪 French media tends to downplay the restrictions on Schengen free movement in Germany or France by "normalizing" them, making it seem like the same applies everywhere, especially further east. From experience—even repeated experiences—I know that countries like Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, the Baltic states, and the Scandinavian countries are highly respectful of free movement, both in the spirit and the letter of the Schengen agreements. But that was just a side note and a tribute 🙂.

Michel
4E 4ecofuel Regular ·
That’s a good thing.

It reminds me of the 2 times I went to Romania in 1994 and 1999 when we had to wait 2-3 hours on the bus just to cross the border.
MA Mathews Globetrotter ·
hello waiting at the border to cross by bus isn't just something you see in Eastern European countries. I took the Geneva-France-Milan bus route and had to wait quite a while for the Italian police to check all the passports—it was easily a two-hour wait.
TA Tatra Globetrotter ·
Hi,

it took quite a while for the Italian police to check all passports, and it was easily a two-hour wait.

Under the Schengen free movement agreements, this kind of check is possible, but it must be occasional, exceptional, and justified by a good reason. Between Hungary and Romania, the authorities intend to respect the principle rules, as far as I know and as recent experience shows.

Michel
MA Mathews Globetrotter ·
But it has to be punctual, exceptional, and justified by a good reason.

Still, it took a long time at the checkpoint before passing through Aosta, basically at the end of the Mont Blanc tunnel. You should go tell that to the Italian police.
TA Tatra Globetrotter ·
still, it took forever at the checkpoint before getting through Aosta—basically at the end of the Mont Blanc Tunnel. You should go tell that to the Italian police.

That was exactly the point of my initial observation: a group of countries (Germany, Austria, Slovenia I think, France occasionally, Italy sometimes) has been exempting itself from the principle of free movement for some time now, for essentially political reasons. The Eastern European countries are much more respectful of this freedom.

Michel

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