BRITS will have to follow the new EES rules in Greece this summer – despite previously saying they WON’T have to.
Called the Entry/Exit System, the new biometric scans required from Brits has already caused problems across Europe.
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Brits will not be able to skip the new biometric checks in Greece, in huge u-turn Credit: Alamy
This has seen queues as long as six hours at some airports due to the time each takes, with some families even missing their flights.
Last month, Greece said that Brits would be able to skip these queues in an attempt to ease fears.
The Greek Embassy said “As of April 10, 2026, British passport holders are exempt from biometric registration at Greek border crossing points.”
This was backed by the director of the Greek National Tourism Organisation in the UK, who said Brits will “no longer need to undergo additional EES biometric procedures, ensuring a smoother and more efficient arrival experience in Greece”.
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I avoided dreaded EES airport chaos in Spain – how I skipped the mega queues
However, in a u-turn, officials have now said that Brits will not be exempt and will have to follow the new EES rules.
The Greek Foreign Ministry said they have not received any information that “specific nationalities are temporarily exempt from the relevant procedure,” according to local media.
Instead, the rules will only be temporarily paused if there are high volumes of passengers at once, caused by a number of planes landing at the same time.
This won’t just affect Brits, but any non-EU nationals that have to go via the biometric scanners.
And queues have already started to cause problems – one passenger told local media it took “nearly two and a half hours to get through [passport control] in Athens” while island airports like Zante were facing similar wait times.
One source warned it was “just the beginning,” with summer seeing as many as 15,000 passenger a day travel through Athens, the busiest airport in Greece.
Huge queues have already been reported across Athens and Zante ahead fo summer Credit: Alamy
If you want to try and avoid the chaos, make sure your plane doesn’t land between 12pm and 2pm, they warned, as that’s when a huge number enter Athens at one point.
Portugal is also another country struggling with huge queues, with one expert saying a family waiting more than six hours because of the EES waits.
It was hoped that both Portugal and Italy would suspend the EES rules until after summer, but they have also echoed Greece in saying this would only be during busy passenger periods.
Ryanair has called on airlines to pause the roll out of the new rules – which started last week – until after summer.
Here are all of the countries where the EES rules are in place.
And here is how one person managed to avoid the long queues in Europe – with two clever hacks.



