title: "Travel compliance & readiness — the complete 2026 guide"
description: "A primary-source reference on ETIAS, UK ETA, ESTA, Schengen 90/180, passport buffers, cabin electronics rules and connectivity for cross-border travelers in 2026."
last_verified_date: 2026-06-08
Travel compliance & readiness — the complete 2026 guide
<p className="last-verified">Last verified: 2026-06-08</p>
Why 2026 is a watershed year for travel-readiness
The cross-border compliance landscape has changed more in twelve months than in the previous decade. The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) targets a Q4 2026 launch, bringing visa-exempt nationals into a pre-screening regime that mirrors the U.S. ESTA. The UK Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) is now mandatory for nearly every visa-exempt visitor, including those transiting Heathrow. The U.S. ESTA fee rose to $40 on 30 September 2025, and the EU Entry/Exit System (EES) began biometric collection at Schengen external borders.
The practical kit travelers carry has tightened in parallel. IATA rules cap lithium-ion power banks at 100 Wh without airline approval. Cabin-bag dimensions diverge by carrier in ways that catch seasoned flyers. eSIM adoption has shifted roaming economics so dramatically that a local data plan abroad is often cheaper than a single day of post-paid roaming.
This guide is the hub. The seven tools at bordertriptools.com each answer one question deterministically — Is my passport valid for Spain? How much power bank can I bring on Lufthansa? Do I need a UK ETA if I'm only connecting at LHR? Use the checklist below before any trip; click through to the relevant tool: passport, etias, uketa, schengen, cabin, adapter, powerbank.
Pre-departure compliance checklist
Run this list at least 14 days before departure. Several items have lead times measured in weeks, not hours.
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Passport validity buffer. Most destinations require a passport valid for at least six months beyond your planned departure date. Check your country pair at passport.bordertriptools.com — it accounts for entry- and exit-date math, not just expiry minus today.
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Visa or travel authorisation. As of June 2026, U.S. and Canadian passport holders traveling to the UK need a UK ETA (£16, valid two years); EU/EEA passport holders entering the United States need an ESTA ($40 from 30 September 2025); non-EU visa-exempt travelers entering the Schengen Area will need an ETIAS approval (€20 for ages 18–70) once it goes live in Q4 2026. Verify at etias.bordertriptools.com and uketa.bordertriptools.com.
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Schengen 90/180 day budget. Non-EU visitors making repeat trips must not exceed 90 days within any rolling 180-day window. The math is unintuitive. Use schengen.bordertriptools.com to model trips against past entries before you book.
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Electronics in the cabin. Power banks must fly in carry-on, never in checked baggage, and must stay within IATA Wh limits. Confirm at powerbank.bordertriptools.com.
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Voltage and plug compatibility. Single-voltage U.S. devices (120 V) plugged into European 230 V outlets will burn out without a voltage converter. Most modern laptop and phone chargers are dual-voltage; hair tools, shavers and CPAPs often are not. Confirm at adapter.bordertriptools.com.
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Cabin-bag dimensions. Each airline publishes its own limit. Ryanair's free personal item is 40×20×25 cm; Lufthansa allows 55×40×23 cm carry-on; easyJet and Iberia diverge again. Check at cabin.bordertriptools.com.
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Connectivity plan. Decide between roaming, a local SIM, or an eSIM before boarding. eSIMs activate before you land and avoid the airport-kiosk markup.
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Customs declarations, vaccinations, insurance. Country-specific. Check the official destination portal (gov.uk for the UK, travel.state.gov for the U.S., the European Commission's travel-europe.europa.eu for the EU).
Border crossing & visa requirements
Three regimes dominate 2026 cross-border travel for visa-exempt nationals: ETIAS, the UK ETA, and the U.S. ESTA. A fourth — the Schengen 90/180 rule — governs how long any non-EU visitor can stay across the bloc.
ETIAS. Per the European Commission at travel-europe.europa.eu/etias, ETIAS enters operation in Q4 2026, with a phased transition into 2027. It applies to roughly 60 visa-exempt nationalities (U.S., Canada, Australia, Japan, UK, Brazil and others) and authorises stays up to 90 days in any 180-day window for tourism, business, transit, or short-term study. The fee is €20 for applicants aged 18–70; under-18s and over-70s are exempt. Most decisions arrive within minutes; a small percentage trigger manual review up to 30 days. ETIAS is not a visa and does not guarantee entry. Apply only through the official portal — intermediary sites mark up the fee. Test your case at etias.bordertriptools.com.
UK ETA. Per the UK Home Office, as of April 2026 the ETA is mandatory for nearly all visa-exempt visitors, including landside transit at UK airports. The fee is £16, the authorisation is linked to the passport, and it remains valid for two years or until passport expiry, allowing multiple visits of up to six months each. Most decisions return within three working days; apply at least 72 hours before travel. The landside-transit rule is the surprise: at Heathrow, where many connections force a terminal change, an ETA is required even if you never legally enter the UK. Confirm at uketa.bordertriptools.com.
U.S. ESTA. For Visa Waiver Program nationals, ESTA is mandatory for air or sea travel to the United States. The fee rose from $21 to $40 on 30 September 2025 under the H.R.1 fiscal-year fee schedule (CBP, Federal Register 2025-16453). Approvals last two years or until passport expiry. Land-border arrivals from Canada or Mexico now use a paid I-94W process under the same change.
Schengen 90/180 rule. The Schengen Borders Code (Regulation (EU) 2016/399) limits non-EU visitors to 90 days within any rolling 180-day window, summed across the entire Schengen Area. The window is rolling, not calendar-based. Future-trip math means looking backward 179 days from your planned exit and counting prior Schengen days. The tool at schengen.bordertriptools.com handles this. Overstays trigger entry bans of one to five years.
A practical note on connectivity at the border: ETA, ETIAS and ESTA approvals are stored against your passport in carrier and border databases — no internet needed at the gate. You will want data on arrival for EES kiosks, ride-hailing, and maps. An eSIM activated before boarding (Airalo and Holafly publish regional plans for under €15 per week in Europe) avoids the airport-kiosk markup. Affiliate disclosure: bordertriptools.com earns commission on Airalo and Holafly purchases; your price is unchanged.
Electronics & cabin baggage rules
Three rule sets govern what you can bring into the cabin: lithium-battery limits (IATA), voltage compatibility (destination electrical standard), and cabin-bag dimensions (per-airline).
Lithium-ion power banks. Per the IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations 2026 and ICAO Technical Instructions, lithium-ion power banks must travel in cabin baggage only — never checked. Thresholds:
- Up to 100 Wh: allowed without airline approval. Covers nearly all consumer power banks (a 20,000 mAh 3.7 V pack = 74 Wh).
- 100 Wh to 160 Wh: allowed only with explicit airline approval, typically limited to two units per passenger.
- Over 160 Wh: forbidden on passenger aircraft.
If the Wh figure is not printed, compute Wh = (mAh ÷ 1000) × V; lithium-ion cell voltage is usually 3.7 V. The tool at powerbank.bordertriptools.com accepts mAh and converts. Several Asian carriers additionally prohibit using or charging power banks in flight as of 2025.
Voltage and plugs. Wall voltage varies: 100–120 V (U.S., Canada, much of Latin America, Japan) vs 220–240 V (UK, Europe, Australia, most of Asia). Plug shapes diverge — Type A/B (U.S.), C/E/F (continental Europe), G (UK and Ireland), I (Australia). Modern laptop and phone chargers rated "100–240 V, 50/60 Hz" need only a passive plug adapter. Single-voltage devices — most U.S. hair tools, some shavers, some CPAPs — need an active voltage converter. Plugging a 120 V-only device into 230 V with just an adapter will destroy it. Confirm at adapter.bordertriptools.com. Compliant universal adapters and USB-C GaN chargers are available through our Amazon affiliate links (disclosure: small commission; your price is unchanged).
Cabin baggage dimensions. Carriers publish dimensions including handles and wheels, and enforce them at the gate. Common 2026 limits: Ryanair free personal item 40×20×25 cm; easyJet free under-seat 45×36×20 cm; Lufthansa carry-on 55×40×23 cm + 8 kg; British Airways 56×45×25 cm; Iberia 56×40×25 cm. Low-cost carriers enforce strictly. Check at cabin.bordertriptools.com.
Passport validity buffer
The "six-month rule" is widely understood but inconsistently applied. Most countries require a passport valid beyond your planned exit date plus a buffer, not your entry date. A traveler arriving in Spain on 1 August 2026 with a passport expiring on 30 December 2026 leaves with four months of post-exit validity — short of Spain's three-month buffer.
Schengen Area countries require three months beyond intended departure under Article 6 of the Schengen Borders Code, though airline agents often apply six months conservatively. The UK requires only that your passport be valid for the duration of stay (the pre-2021 six-month rule no longer applies). The United States requires six months beyond intended stay unless your country has a bilateral exemption — the UK, most of the EU, Canada and several others qualify, needing validity only through the stay.
Strict six-month rules: Brazil, China, Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Turkey, Vietnam.
Three-month rules: Schengen Area (officially), Belarus, North Macedonia.
Validity-through-stay only: United Kingdom, Ireland, Mexico, most of Central America.
Renewals can take 6–11 weeks in standard service. The tool at passport.bordertriptools.com calculates required validity for your destination and trip dates and flags renewals you should start now.
Connectivity abroad
The post-paid roaming era is functionally over for cost-conscious travelers. EU regulation guarantees "roam-like-at-home" within the EU/EEA for EU/EEA subscribers, but does nothing for U.S., UK, or other non-EU travelers. Typical 2026 international roaming runs $10–$15 per day on major U.S. carriers and $5–$12 per day on UK carriers. A two-week trip can clear $150 in roaming alone.
Three alternatives, ranked by typical 2026 cost-per-GB:
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eSIMs purchased before departure. Airalo and Holafly publish regional plans from around $4.50 for 1 GB / 7 days up to $35–$47 for 30-day unlimited Europe-wide data. Both install over Wi-Fi before you fly; your home SIM stays active for calls and SMS. Compatible with iPhone XS/XR and newer, Pixel 4 and newer, most 2020+ Android flagships. Affiliate disclosure: commission earned on these purchases; your price is unchanged.
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Local prepaid SIM on arrival. Usually the lowest cost-per-GB once in-country, but requires a passport at the kiosk, sometimes registration, and a 30–60-minute detour. Airport kiosks mark up 2–3× over high-street prices.
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Multi-trip eSIMs. For frequent travelers, multi-month plans amortise to under $3/GB.
Because connectivity is most acute at the border — for ride-hailing, EES kiosk QR codes, ETIAS lookup — set up your eSIM before boarding. The /etias and /uketa tools surface a connectivity prompt at the right moment.
Frequently asked questions
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<summary>When does ETIAS actually launch — should I apply now?</summary>
No — as of June 2026, ETIAS is not yet operational. The European Commission targets Q4 2026 launch with a transition period into 2027. Any site asking you to "apply for ETIAS now" is either a scam or an intermediary holding your application until the system opens. Apply only through the official EU portal at travel-europe.europa.eu/etias once it goes live.
</details>
<details>
<summary>Do I need a UK ETA if I'm only transiting through Heathrow?</summary>
Yes — as of April 2026, the UK ETA is required for landside transit at Heathrow and other UK airports. Airside-only transit (remaining in the international transit area without passing immigration) is exempt at most UK airports, but Heathrow's terminal layout often forces a landside transfer. Safe interpretation: if you collect and re-check baggage, or change terminals via the Heathrow Express, you need an ETA. Apply at least 72 hours before travel at gov.uk/apply-eta. Confirm at uketa.bordertriptools.com.
</details>
<details>
<summary>How is the Schengen 90/180 rule actually calculated?</summary>
For any day you plan to be in Schengen, look backward 179 days. Count every day in that 180-day window — including the planned day — that you were physically inside Schengen. That count must not exceed 90. The window is rolling, which is what catches frequent travelers: a trip ending on day 90 followed by a return on day 91 is not legal. The tool at schengen.bordertriptools.com models this against past entries; the official EU calculator is canonical.
</details>
<details>
<summary>Can I bring my 20,000 mAh power bank on a plane?</summary>
Almost certainly yes. A 20,000 mAh power bank at standard 3.7 V lithium-ion cell voltage works out to 74 Wh (20,000 ÷ 1000 × 3.7 = 74), comfortably below the 100 Wh IATA threshold — no airline approval required. It must travel in your cabin bag, not checked luggage, and must be removed during security screening if requested. Power banks with no printed Wh or mAh rating are typically refused at the gate; keep the original packaging or a clear label. Confirm at powerbank.bordertriptools.com.
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<details>
<summary>Do I need a voltage converter for Europe, or just a plug adapter?</summary>
Check the small print on your charger's brick. If it says "Input: 100–240 V, 50/60 Hz", you only need a passive plug adapter (Type C or F for most of continental Europe; Type G for the UK and Ireland). Nearly every modern laptop, phone, and tablet charger is dual-voltage. Single-voltage devices — most U.S. hair tools, some shavers, some CPAPs — need a voltage converter rated for the device's wattage. Plugging a 120 V-only device into 230 V with just a plug adapter will destroy it. Confirm at adapter.bordertriptools.com.
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<details>
<summary>Is the ESTA fee really $40 now?</summary>
Yes — as of 30 September 2025, the U.S. ESTA fee rose from $21 to $40 under the H.R.1 fiscal-year schedule (U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Federal Register 28 August 2025). The fee covers a two-year authorisation. Apply only through the official CBP portal at esta.cbp.dhs.gov; intermediary "ESTA" sites typically charge $60–$90 for the same service.
</details>
<details>
<summary>What's the cheapest way to stay connected in Europe for a two-week trip?</summary>
An eSIM purchased before departure is almost always cheaper than post-paid roaming for non-EU travelers. Airalo's "Eurolink" regional plan starts around $14 for 5 GB / 30 days; Holafly's unlimited Europe plan runs around $47 for 30 days unlimited (no GB cap, useful for hotspot use). Both work across 30+ European countries on one plan and install over Wi-Fi before you fly. A two-week trip on either is typically under $30 — compared to $140–$210 in post-paid roaming. Affiliate disclosure: bordertriptools.com earns commission on these purchases; your price is unchanged.
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Companion reading
<p className="affiliate-disclosure">Affiliate disclosure: bordertriptools.com participates in Airalo, Holafly and Amazon Associates. We earn commissions on qualifying purchases; placement reflects editorial judgment only.</p>
<p className="sources">Sources: European Commission, UK Home Office, U.S. CBP, IATA DGR 2026, Schengen Borders Code (EU) 2016/399.</p>