En décembre prochain, je compte passer de l'Argentine (Concordia) en provenance de Puerto Iguazu vers l'Uruguay (Salto) en direction de Montevideo.
D'après ce que j'ai lu, il y a possibilité de passer le fleuve en bus ou en ferry.
Est-ce que qqun pourrait me raconteur leur experience dans les 2 cas de figures mentionnés.
Le point qui m'intéresse principalement concerne les formalités douanières. Il y a aussi les horaires que je ne connais pas et s'il y a des jours où la fréquence des bus ou des ferries est plus importante et s'il y a des jours où il n'y a pas de service.
En décembre prochain, je compte passer de l'Argentine (Concordia) en provenance de Puerto Iguazu vers l'Uruguay (Salto) en direction de Montevideo.
D'après ce que j'ai lu, il y a possibilité de passer le fleuve en bus ou en ferry.
Est-ce que qqun pourrait me raconteur leur experience dans les 2 cas de figures mentionnés.
Le point qui m'intéresse principalement concerne les formalités douanières. Il y a aussi les horaires que je ne connais pas et s'il y a des jours où la fréquence des bus ou des ferries est plus importante et s'il y a des jours où il n'y a pas de service.
Merci à l'avance pour vos commentaires
elnom (simon)
Bonjour
Je suis actuellement à Mercédès en Uruguay , je serai le 25 novembre à Salto d'où je vais passer ensuite en Argentine à Concordia, je vous donnerai à ce moment les modalités de passage entre les deux pays.
Patrick
Merci de votre obligeance.
Je ferai le passage inverse le 8 décembre
Je serai à Puerto Iguazu du 4 au 8 déc.
elnom (simon)
Bonjour
Je suis arrivé de San Ignacio par bus à Concordia à 6h AM, j'ai pris le bus de la compagnie Flecha qui part à 7h05AM et arrive à Salto vers 8H30AM. De Salto il y a plusieurs bus qui partent vers Montevideo.
Le passage de l'immigration se fait très rapidement avec juste un tampon urugayen.
Le prix du ticket de bus est de 87,25 pésos argentins.
Dans la gare de Salto il est possible de changer les pésos argentins en pésos uruguayens au taux de 1.5 Pésos UR pour 1 pésos AR.
Bon voyage
Patrick
Merci pour l'info
J'aurais toutefois une question pour préciser un point.
Vous dites que le passage de l'immigration ....de Concordia vers Salto.... si j'ai bien compris n'a nécessité que le tampon de l Uruguay (tampon d'entrée). Voilà qu'il y a quelques jours je suis allé de Buenos Aires (Argentine) à Colonia del Sacramento (Uruguay). À l'aller, l'immigration de l'Argentine a étampé mon passeport comme quoi je partais de l'Argentine et la chaise à côté il y avait l'immigration de l'Uruguay qui a étampé mon passeport comme quoi je m'en allais en Uruguay ....et cela avant même d'entrer sur le bateau qui relie Buenos Aires à Colonia del Sacramento. Lorsque je suis revenu de Colonia vers Buenos Aires, l'action inverse s'est produite. Du côté Uruguayen. J'ai vu mon passeport étampé par l'immigration Uruguay comme quoi je quittais l'Uruguay et la chaise à côté il y avait l'agent d'immigration de l'Argentine qui a étampé mon passeport comme quoi j'entrais à nouveau en Argentine. Donc 4 tampons dans mon passeport pour un aller/retour Argentine-Uruguay dans la même journée.
Si je comprends bien votre propos, l'immigration de l'Argentine n'a pas étampé votre passeport lors de votre passage de Concordia à Salto pour dire que vous sortiez de l'Argentine
Est-ce bien ce que je dois comprendre?
Merci pour l'info
J'aurais toutefois une question pour préciser un point.
Vous dites que le passage de l'immigration ....de Concordia vers Salto.... si j'ai bien compris n'a nécessité que le tampon de l Uruguay (tampon d'entrée). Voilà qu'il y a quelques jours je suis allé de Buenos Aires (Argentine) à Colonia del Sacramento (Uruguay). À l'aller, l'immigration de l'Argentine a étampé mon passeport comme quoi je partais de l'Argentine et la chaise à côté il y avait l'immigration de l'Uruguay qui a étampé mon passeport comme quoi je m'en allais en Uruguay ....et cela avant même d'entrer sur le bateau qui relie Buenos Aires à Colonia del Sacramento. Lorsque je suis revenu de Colonia vers Buenos Aires, l'action inverse s'est produite. Du côté Uruguayen. J'ai vu mon passeport étampé par l'immigration Uruguay comme quoi je quittais l'Uruguay et la chaise à côté il y avait l'agent d'immigration de l'Argentine qui a étampé mon passeport comme quoi j'entrais à nouveau en Argentine. Donc 4 tampons dans mon passeport pour un aller/retour Argentine-Uruguay dans la même journée.
Si je comprends bien votre propos, l'immigration de l'Argentine n'a pas étampé votre passeport lors de votre passage de Concordia à Salto pour dire que vous sortiez de l'Argentine
Est-ce bien ce que je dois comprendre?
Merci de préciser ce point
Simon
Bonjour
Vous avez bien compris , de Salto vers Concordia je n'ai vu que l'immigration argentine à l'entrée, et de Concordia à Salto je n'ai vu que l'immigration urugayenne à l'entrée , j'ai été surpris de n'avoir aucun tampon de sortie à chaque passage. C'est un gain de place sur le passeport.
Bon voyage
Patrick
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Hi there,
I know there are similar topics here and elsewhere, but they’re a few years old, and I need an up-to-date answer to make sure I don’t throw over 1000 € out the window. Thanks for your patience.
I’m planning a trip from France to Alberta/British Columbia, and I’m unsure about which bank card to use for the security deposit with the rental company (I’m thinking of going with AVIS).
I contacted Avis Canada, and they told me a credit card is absolutely required. I asked my bank for a credit card (a *real* credit card), but they only offered me a deferred debit card.
My question: For a rental with Avis Canada, is a Gold International Mastercard deferred debit card usable for the security deposit needed to finalize the rental? Is the "CREDIT" label enough? (Some cards say "CREDIT" and others say "CARTE DE CREDIT"—seems minor, but it’s actually a big deal in how the card works.)
I’ve seen conflicting info everywhere I look... My bank says it’s *usually* okay (the deferred debit card), while Avis Canada insists it *must* be a credit card, not debit—even when I mention the deferred debit card.
I know the whole credit card concept is already confusing, and on top of that, some sites say a deferred debit card counts as a credit card, while others say it doesn’t.
Thanks to anyone who can share a recent experience!
Have a great day
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I’m writing to ask for some info—I’ve heard that you **must** have travel insurance to land in Zanzibar.
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Hi, are there any travelers who’ve recently crossed the border between Karakalpakstan (Uzbekistan) and Beineu in Kazakhstan?
It was closed for a while.
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I bought a one-way flight (Ryanair) and a return flight (EasyJet) to spend a week in Morocco in April.
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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).
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Cheers,
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Hello,
We’ll soon be moving to Madagascar long-term.
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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?
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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.
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Hello,
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Hello, HAPPY NEW YEAR 2026!
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