ESTA return, does the “clock” reset when travelling across Panama - Cuba? [duplicate]









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  • Does flying to Panama from the US reset the ESTA time counter?

    1 answer



I'm currently staying in the US under the ESTA, but later on I'll travel to Panama, then to Cuba, and from there through Mexico back to Miami, where I'm catching a flight back to London. The thing is, my ESTA 90 days period will end during my visit in Cuba, but as far as I know, visiting Panama should be reseting the 90 days “clock”. My question is, is the ESTA trip period going to be reseted despite of coming back to US through Mexico which doesn't apply for the 90days count reset? Will I have to proove that I've visted Panama as well?



Thank for any advices and sorry for the long post!










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  • There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
    – Neusser
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:28






  • 5




    @Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
    – phoog
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:37










  • Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
    – Mark Mayo
    Aug 14 '17 at 9:34














up vote
3
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • Does flying to Panama from the US reset the ESTA time counter?

    1 answer



I'm currently staying in the US under the ESTA, but later on I'll travel to Panama, then to Cuba, and from there through Mexico back to Miami, where I'm catching a flight back to London. The thing is, my ESTA 90 days period will end during my visit in Cuba, but as far as I know, visiting Panama should be reseting the 90 days “clock”. My question is, is the ESTA trip period going to be reseted despite of coming back to US through Mexico which doesn't apply for the 90days count reset? Will I have to proove that I've visted Panama as well?



Thank for any advices and sorry for the long post!










share|improve this question















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This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
    – Neusser
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:28






  • 5




    @Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
    – phoog
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:37










  • Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
    – Mark Mayo
    Aug 14 '17 at 9:34












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • Does flying to Panama from the US reset the ESTA time counter?

    1 answer



I'm currently staying in the US under the ESTA, but later on I'll travel to Panama, then to Cuba, and from there through Mexico back to Miami, where I'm catching a flight back to London. The thing is, my ESTA 90 days period will end during my visit in Cuba, but as far as I know, visiting Panama should be reseting the 90 days “clock”. My question is, is the ESTA trip period going to be reseted despite of coming back to US through Mexico which doesn't apply for the 90days count reset? Will I have to proove that I've visted Panama as well?



Thank for any advices and sorry for the long post!










share|improve this question
















This question already has an answer here:



  • Does flying to Panama from the US reset the ESTA time counter?

    1 answer



I'm currently staying in the US under the ESTA, but later on I'll travel to Panama, then to Cuba, and from there through Mexico back to Miami, where I'm catching a flight back to London. The thing is, my ESTA 90 days period will end during my visit in Cuba, but as far as I know, visiting Panama should be reseting the 90 days “clock”. My question is, is the ESTA trip period going to be reseted despite of coming back to US through Mexico which doesn't apply for the 90days count reset? Will I have to proove that I've visted Panama as well?



Thank for any advices and sorry for the long post!





This question already has an answer here:



  • Does flying to Panama from the US reset the ESTA time counter?

    1 answer







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edited Aug 14 '17 at 13:16









DJClayworth

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asked Aug 14 '17 at 7:26









Martin

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marked as duplicate by Mark Mayo air-travel
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This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
    – Neusser
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:28






  • 5




    @Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
    – phoog
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:37










  • Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
    – Mark Mayo
    Aug 14 '17 at 9:34
















  • There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
    – Neusser
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:28






  • 5




    @Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
    – phoog
    Aug 14 '17 at 8:37










  • Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
    – Mark Mayo
    Aug 14 '17 at 9:34















There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
– Neusser
Aug 14 '17 at 8:28




There is no such thing as "resetting 90 days clock". The clock is paused, not resetted.
– Neusser
Aug 14 '17 at 8:28




5




5




@Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
– phoog
Aug 14 '17 at 8:37




@Neusser that is incorrect. The clock is never paused. The 90 days of the VWP are not like the 90 days of the Schengen area.
– phoog
Aug 14 '17 at 8:37












Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
– Mark Mayo
Aug 14 '17 at 9:34




Also relevant: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/79056/…
– Mark Mayo
Aug 14 '17 at 9:34










1 Answer
1






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Since you're reentering after the expiration of your 90-day period, the officer will have to admit you for a new period if you are in fact granted admission. Therefore, you should not need to show that you've been outside North America.



There is some ambiguity in the application of the "contiguous territory" rule, however, so it may nonetheless be helpful to be able to show that you've been to Panama.






share|improve this answer



























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Since you're reentering after the expiration of your 90-day period, the officer will have to admit you for a new period if you are in fact granted admission. Therefore, you should not need to show that you've been outside North America.



    There is some ambiguity in the application of the "contiguous territory" rule, however, so it may nonetheless be helpful to be able to show that you've been to Panama.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      Since you're reentering after the expiration of your 90-day period, the officer will have to admit you for a new period if you are in fact granted admission. Therefore, you should not need to show that you've been outside North America.



      There is some ambiguity in the application of the "contiguous territory" rule, however, so it may nonetheless be helpful to be able to show that you've been to Panama.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        Since you're reentering after the expiration of your 90-day period, the officer will have to admit you for a new period if you are in fact granted admission. Therefore, you should not need to show that you've been outside North America.



        There is some ambiguity in the application of the "contiguous territory" rule, however, so it may nonetheless be helpful to be able to show that you've been to Panama.






        share|improve this answer












        Since you're reentering after the expiration of your 90-day period, the officer will have to admit you for a new period if you are in fact granted admission. Therefore, you should not need to show that you've been outside North America.



        There is some ambiguity in the application of the "contiguous territory" rule, however, so it may nonetheless be helpful to be able to show that you've been to Panama.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Aug 14 '17 at 8:39









        phoog

        66.2k10146211




        66.2k10146211













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