For a connecting flight, will United need my final destination visa?
I am flying from New York to Islamabad and am connecting in the UK. The flight from New York to the UK will be with United Airlines.
Will United need to see a Pakistani visa or authorization to enter to board the plane? I am allowed to enter the UK with my Canadian passport.
I ask because I need to pick up my Pakistani national ID in the UK, during my connection (10+ hours), and then fly with that + my passport to Pakistan.
I have tried calling United Airlines and have received mixed answers each time. One United representative said I could get a 30-day visa on arrival in the airport in Pakistan so I'd be OK to fly, but I checked and apparently for that visa I need to be a part of a tour group.
I really just need to know if United cares about my final destination visa or if they leave that to the last-leg airline.
visas united-airlines pakistan
|
show 1 more comment
I am flying from New York to Islamabad and am connecting in the UK. The flight from New York to the UK will be with United Airlines.
Will United need to see a Pakistani visa or authorization to enter to board the plane? I am allowed to enter the UK with my Canadian passport.
I ask because I need to pick up my Pakistani national ID in the UK, during my connection (10+ hours), and then fly with that + my passport to Pakistan.
I have tried calling United Airlines and have received mixed answers each time. One United representative said I could get a 30-day visa on arrival in the airport in Pakistan so I'd be OK to fly, but I checked and apparently for that visa I need to be a part of a tour group.
I really just need to know if United cares about my final destination visa or if they leave that to the last-leg airline.
visas united-airlines pakistan
@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
2
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
1
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
2
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35
|
show 1 more comment
I am flying from New York to Islamabad and am connecting in the UK. The flight from New York to the UK will be with United Airlines.
Will United need to see a Pakistani visa or authorization to enter to board the plane? I am allowed to enter the UK with my Canadian passport.
I ask because I need to pick up my Pakistani national ID in the UK, during my connection (10+ hours), and then fly with that + my passport to Pakistan.
I have tried calling United Airlines and have received mixed answers each time. One United representative said I could get a 30-day visa on arrival in the airport in Pakistan so I'd be OK to fly, but I checked and apparently for that visa I need to be a part of a tour group.
I really just need to know if United cares about my final destination visa or if they leave that to the last-leg airline.
visas united-airlines pakistan
I am flying from New York to Islamabad and am connecting in the UK. The flight from New York to the UK will be with United Airlines.
Will United need to see a Pakistani visa or authorization to enter to board the plane? I am allowed to enter the UK with my Canadian passport.
I ask because I need to pick up my Pakistani national ID in the UK, during my connection (10+ hours), and then fly with that + my passport to Pakistan.
I have tried calling United Airlines and have received mixed answers each time. One United representative said I could get a 30-day visa on arrival in the airport in Pakistan so I'd be OK to fly, but I checked and apparently for that visa I need to be a part of a tour group.
I really just need to know if United cares about my final destination visa or if they leave that to the last-leg airline.
visas united-airlines pakistan
visas united-airlines pakistan
edited Jun 19 '16 at 23:39
user987091
asked Jun 19 '16 at 23:27
user987091user987091
1365
1365
@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
2
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
1
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
2
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35
|
show 1 more comment
@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
2
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
1
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
2
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35
@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
2
2
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
1
1
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
2
2
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35
|
show 1 more comment
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
I'm just posting the result of my experience in case anyone else somehow ends up in the same situation and has no options but to cancel the ticket or try traveling.
United Airlines didn't bother checking for a visa at all. In the UK, PIA made sure to check my Pakistani ID several times. I did thankfully have my ID with me before leaving the US (thanks Fedex), but I never showed it to UA. I also only got one boarding pass in the US.
My guess is that United has really low transfer volume to Pakistan and can safely leave the check to the last airline (maybe they have an agreement to?). Maybe also, because entry to Pakistan is allowed (and common) without a visa but an ID card, and they aren't equipped to check those.
However, I think that my situation was exceptional. The other answers posted are far clearer and better researched than what (several) United Airlines' own support staff could come up with.
Final destination visas should be ready before any travel - my type of situation should be avoided as much as possible (I ended up in it at last-minute because of a bad date mix-up).
As a sidenote, I also recommend trying to get a hold of UA staff working in the airport, or visiting the airport and talking to them directly, maybe on a similar flight a few days before. In retrospect, I should've asked the UA T1 call-centre support in the Philippines to transfer me.
add a comment |
Logically the outcome of your situation ought to be that United in New York will be able to issue you a boarding pass for the first leg, but not for the second -- and then you'd be free to check in for the second leg in London once you have arrived there and acquired the appropriate paperwork. You probably can't get your baggage checked through either, but it sounds like you'd have time enough to lug it around during your London layover anyway.
After all, United won't be in trouble with anyone for flying you to London; they can verify that you're entitled to enter request leave to enter there, and if you get stranded in the UK because your plans to acquire Pakistani ID there fall through and you're denied check-in for the second leg, that will not be United's problem, only your own.
However if you have called the airline themselves several times, and even they cannot get their own story straight, then you don't really benefit from being told by random people on the internet what we think the logical outcome should be. Even if we're right, based on reading the rules, that won't help you much if the check-in agent you encounter belongs to the faction within United who thinks they need to see travel documents that are valid all the way to your final destination.
(Personally, based on your information, though, I think I would chance it -- and hope the check-in agent can see the reason in your plans. How sure are you that those you talked to who told you otherwise understood fully that you're okay with only being checked in for the first leg from the beginning?)
add a comment |
According to United's Contract of Carriage:
Rule 19 Travel Documents
Each Passenger desiring transportation across
any international boundary is responsible for obtaining and presenting
all necessary travel documents, which shall be in good condition, and
for complying with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation. Any Passenger who, by
failing to comply with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation, causes UA any loss, damage
or expense of any kind, consents and acknowledges that he or she shall
reimburse UA for any such loss, damage or expense. UA is not liable
for any assistance or information provided by any employee or agent of
UA to any Passenger relating to such documents or compliance with such
laws, or for the consequences to any Passenger resulting from his/her
failure to obtain and present such documents, which shall be in good
condition, or to comply with such laws. Where legally permitted, UA
reserves the right to hold, photocopy or otherwise reproduce a travel
document presented by any Passenger. UA also reserves the right to
deny boarding to any Passenger whose necessary travel documents are
not in good condition according to UA's reasonable belief, or which
otherwise do not comply with laws of the specific country the
Passenger is departing from, transiting through, or traveling to.
I couldn't find a similar visa related thread over on flyertalk, but there are similarities with this passport issue:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-air-lines-skymiles/1592140-idb-dl-denied-us-boarding-domestic-flight-due-no-passports.html
There are a number of speculations about the reasons for denying boarding on a first leg when documents could later be procured for a following leg, such as the responsibility of returning the passenger to origin if they cannot board the later flights. However, I suspect this is just policy and that a document check flag will be set for this itinerary and must be completed prior to boarding the first flight.
It's possible that you might not have to, but in the absence of anyone saying they've managed to do the same thing, I'd prepare for the worst and consider back up plans.
add a comment |
Visa on arrival for Canadians is only available if:
You are invited by a company registered in Pakistan (and this requires prior approval); and your stay has to be for business purposes or;
You are part of a tour group and traveling through a designated tour operator.
Of course this isn't important as you are a Pakistani citizen and cannot be refused entry.
As far as United is concerned it depends on how you have booked the ticket. If it is one ticket they are well within their rights to refuse you boarding.
If your United ticket is just from NY to London, then they cannot refuse you as your Canadian passport allows you entry into the UK. They won't care about your next leg.
The NICOP (National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis) allows you visa free entry but you need to convince United of this and of the fact that you will have it in your possession when you arrive.
If you have a copy of the (new NICOP) you can ask for an emergency travel document at Pakistan embassy - although they might wonder why you don't have a Pakistani passport.
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
add a comment |
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
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oldest
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I'm just posting the result of my experience in case anyone else somehow ends up in the same situation and has no options but to cancel the ticket or try traveling.
United Airlines didn't bother checking for a visa at all. In the UK, PIA made sure to check my Pakistani ID several times. I did thankfully have my ID with me before leaving the US (thanks Fedex), but I never showed it to UA. I also only got one boarding pass in the US.
My guess is that United has really low transfer volume to Pakistan and can safely leave the check to the last airline (maybe they have an agreement to?). Maybe also, because entry to Pakistan is allowed (and common) without a visa but an ID card, and they aren't equipped to check those.
However, I think that my situation was exceptional. The other answers posted are far clearer and better researched than what (several) United Airlines' own support staff could come up with.
Final destination visas should be ready before any travel - my type of situation should be avoided as much as possible (I ended up in it at last-minute because of a bad date mix-up).
As a sidenote, I also recommend trying to get a hold of UA staff working in the airport, or visiting the airport and talking to them directly, maybe on a similar flight a few days before. In retrospect, I should've asked the UA T1 call-centre support in the Philippines to transfer me.
add a comment |
I'm just posting the result of my experience in case anyone else somehow ends up in the same situation and has no options but to cancel the ticket or try traveling.
United Airlines didn't bother checking for a visa at all. In the UK, PIA made sure to check my Pakistani ID several times. I did thankfully have my ID with me before leaving the US (thanks Fedex), but I never showed it to UA. I also only got one boarding pass in the US.
My guess is that United has really low transfer volume to Pakistan and can safely leave the check to the last airline (maybe they have an agreement to?). Maybe also, because entry to Pakistan is allowed (and common) without a visa but an ID card, and they aren't equipped to check those.
However, I think that my situation was exceptional. The other answers posted are far clearer and better researched than what (several) United Airlines' own support staff could come up with.
Final destination visas should be ready before any travel - my type of situation should be avoided as much as possible (I ended up in it at last-minute because of a bad date mix-up).
As a sidenote, I also recommend trying to get a hold of UA staff working in the airport, or visiting the airport and talking to them directly, maybe on a similar flight a few days before. In retrospect, I should've asked the UA T1 call-centre support in the Philippines to transfer me.
add a comment |
I'm just posting the result of my experience in case anyone else somehow ends up in the same situation and has no options but to cancel the ticket or try traveling.
United Airlines didn't bother checking for a visa at all. In the UK, PIA made sure to check my Pakistani ID several times. I did thankfully have my ID with me before leaving the US (thanks Fedex), but I never showed it to UA. I also only got one boarding pass in the US.
My guess is that United has really low transfer volume to Pakistan and can safely leave the check to the last airline (maybe they have an agreement to?). Maybe also, because entry to Pakistan is allowed (and common) without a visa but an ID card, and they aren't equipped to check those.
However, I think that my situation was exceptional. The other answers posted are far clearer and better researched than what (several) United Airlines' own support staff could come up with.
Final destination visas should be ready before any travel - my type of situation should be avoided as much as possible (I ended up in it at last-minute because of a bad date mix-up).
As a sidenote, I also recommend trying to get a hold of UA staff working in the airport, or visiting the airport and talking to them directly, maybe on a similar flight a few days before. In retrospect, I should've asked the UA T1 call-centre support in the Philippines to transfer me.
I'm just posting the result of my experience in case anyone else somehow ends up in the same situation and has no options but to cancel the ticket or try traveling.
United Airlines didn't bother checking for a visa at all. In the UK, PIA made sure to check my Pakistani ID several times. I did thankfully have my ID with me before leaving the US (thanks Fedex), but I never showed it to UA. I also only got one boarding pass in the US.
My guess is that United has really low transfer volume to Pakistan and can safely leave the check to the last airline (maybe they have an agreement to?). Maybe also, because entry to Pakistan is allowed (and common) without a visa but an ID card, and they aren't equipped to check those.
However, I think that my situation was exceptional. The other answers posted are far clearer and better researched than what (several) United Airlines' own support staff could come up with.
Final destination visas should be ready before any travel - my type of situation should be avoided as much as possible (I ended up in it at last-minute because of a bad date mix-up).
As a sidenote, I also recommend trying to get a hold of UA staff working in the airport, or visiting the airport and talking to them directly, maybe on a similar flight a few days before. In retrospect, I should've asked the UA T1 call-centre support in the Philippines to transfer me.
answered Jul 22 '16 at 3:59
user987091user987091
1365
1365
add a comment |
add a comment |
Logically the outcome of your situation ought to be that United in New York will be able to issue you a boarding pass for the first leg, but not for the second -- and then you'd be free to check in for the second leg in London once you have arrived there and acquired the appropriate paperwork. You probably can't get your baggage checked through either, but it sounds like you'd have time enough to lug it around during your London layover anyway.
After all, United won't be in trouble with anyone for flying you to London; they can verify that you're entitled to enter request leave to enter there, and if you get stranded in the UK because your plans to acquire Pakistani ID there fall through and you're denied check-in for the second leg, that will not be United's problem, only your own.
However if you have called the airline themselves several times, and even they cannot get their own story straight, then you don't really benefit from being told by random people on the internet what we think the logical outcome should be. Even if we're right, based on reading the rules, that won't help you much if the check-in agent you encounter belongs to the faction within United who thinks they need to see travel documents that are valid all the way to your final destination.
(Personally, based on your information, though, I think I would chance it -- and hope the check-in agent can see the reason in your plans. How sure are you that those you talked to who told you otherwise understood fully that you're okay with only being checked in for the first leg from the beginning?)
add a comment |
Logically the outcome of your situation ought to be that United in New York will be able to issue you a boarding pass for the first leg, but not for the second -- and then you'd be free to check in for the second leg in London once you have arrived there and acquired the appropriate paperwork. You probably can't get your baggage checked through either, but it sounds like you'd have time enough to lug it around during your London layover anyway.
After all, United won't be in trouble with anyone for flying you to London; they can verify that you're entitled to enter request leave to enter there, and if you get stranded in the UK because your plans to acquire Pakistani ID there fall through and you're denied check-in for the second leg, that will not be United's problem, only your own.
However if you have called the airline themselves several times, and even they cannot get their own story straight, then you don't really benefit from being told by random people on the internet what we think the logical outcome should be. Even if we're right, based on reading the rules, that won't help you much if the check-in agent you encounter belongs to the faction within United who thinks they need to see travel documents that are valid all the way to your final destination.
(Personally, based on your information, though, I think I would chance it -- and hope the check-in agent can see the reason in your plans. How sure are you that those you talked to who told you otherwise understood fully that you're okay with only being checked in for the first leg from the beginning?)
add a comment |
Logically the outcome of your situation ought to be that United in New York will be able to issue you a boarding pass for the first leg, but not for the second -- and then you'd be free to check in for the second leg in London once you have arrived there and acquired the appropriate paperwork. You probably can't get your baggage checked through either, but it sounds like you'd have time enough to lug it around during your London layover anyway.
After all, United won't be in trouble with anyone for flying you to London; they can verify that you're entitled to enter request leave to enter there, and if you get stranded in the UK because your plans to acquire Pakistani ID there fall through and you're denied check-in for the second leg, that will not be United's problem, only your own.
However if you have called the airline themselves several times, and even they cannot get their own story straight, then you don't really benefit from being told by random people on the internet what we think the logical outcome should be. Even if we're right, based on reading the rules, that won't help you much if the check-in agent you encounter belongs to the faction within United who thinks they need to see travel documents that are valid all the way to your final destination.
(Personally, based on your information, though, I think I would chance it -- and hope the check-in agent can see the reason in your plans. How sure are you that those you talked to who told you otherwise understood fully that you're okay with only being checked in for the first leg from the beginning?)
Logically the outcome of your situation ought to be that United in New York will be able to issue you a boarding pass for the first leg, but not for the second -- and then you'd be free to check in for the second leg in London once you have arrived there and acquired the appropriate paperwork. You probably can't get your baggage checked through either, but it sounds like you'd have time enough to lug it around during your London layover anyway.
After all, United won't be in trouble with anyone for flying you to London; they can verify that you're entitled to enter request leave to enter there, and if you get stranded in the UK because your plans to acquire Pakistani ID there fall through and you're denied check-in for the second leg, that will not be United's problem, only your own.
However if you have called the airline themselves several times, and even they cannot get their own story straight, then you don't really benefit from being told by random people on the internet what we think the logical outcome should be. Even if we're right, based on reading the rules, that won't help you much if the check-in agent you encounter belongs to the faction within United who thinks they need to see travel documents that are valid all the way to your final destination.
(Personally, based on your information, though, I think I would chance it -- and hope the check-in agent can see the reason in your plans. How sure are you that those you talked to who told you otherwise understood fully that you're okay with only being checked in for the first leg from the beginning?)
edited Jun 20 '16 at 10:29
answered Jun 20 '16 at 9:31
Henning MakholmHenning Makholm
42.8k7105163
42.8k7105163
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add a comment |
According to United's Contract of Carriage:
Rule 19 Travel Documents
Each Passenger desiring transportation across
any international boundary is responsible for obtaining and presenting
all necessary travel documents, which shall be in good condition, and
for complying with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation. Any Passenger who, by
failing to comply with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation, causes UA any loss, damage
or expense of any kind, consents and acknowledges that he or she shall
reimburse UA for any such loss, damage or expense. UA is not liable
for any assistance or information provided by any employee or agent of
UA to any Passenger relating to such documents or compliance with such
laws, or for the consequences to any Passenger resulting from his/her
failure to obtain and present such documents, which shall be in good
condition, or to comply with such laws. Where legally permitted, UA
reserves the right to hold, photocopy or otherwise reproduce a travel
document presented by any Passenger. UA also reserves the right to
deny boarding to any Passenger whose necessary travel documents are
not in good condition according to UA's reasonable belief, or which
otherwise do not comply with laws of the specific country the
Passenger is departing from, transiting through, or traveling to.
I couldn't find a similar visa related thread over on flyertalk, but there are similarities with this passport issue:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-air-lines-skymiles/1592140-idb-dl-denied-us-boarding-domestic-flight-due-no-passports.html
There are a number of speculations about the reasons for denying boarding on a first leg when documents could later be procured for a following leg, such as the responsibility of returning the passenger to origin if they cannot board the later flights. However, I suspect this is just policy and that a document check flag will be set for this itinerary and must be completed prior to boarding the first flight.
It's possible that you might not have to, but in the absence of anyone saying they've managed to do the same thing, I'd prepare for the worst and consider back up plans.
add a comment |
According to United's Contract of Carriage:
Rule 19 Travel Documents
Each Passenger desiring transportation across
any international boundary is responsible for obtaining and presenting
all necessary travel documents, which shall be in good condition, and
for complying with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation. Any Passenger who, by
failing to comply with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation, causes UA any loss, damage
or expense of any kind, consents and acknowledges that he or she shall
reimburse UA for any such loss, damage or expense. UA is not liable
for any assistance or information provided by any employee or agent of
UA to any Passenger relating to such documents or compliance with such
laws, or for the consequences to any Passenger resulting from his/her
failure to obtain and present such documents, which shall be in good
condition, or to comply with such laws. Where legally permitted, UA
reserves the right to hold, photocopy or otherwise reproduce a travel
document presented by any Passenger. UA also reserves the right to
deny boarding to any Passenger whose necessary travel documents are
not in good condition according to UA's reasonable belief, or which
otherwise do not comply with laws of the specific country the
Passenger is departing from, transiting through, or traveling to.
I couldn't find a similar visa related thread over on flyertalk, but there are similarities with this passport issue:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-air-lines-skymiles/1592140-idb-dl-denied-us-boarding-domestic-flight-due-no-passports.html
There are a number of speculations about the reasons for denying boarding on a first leg when documents could later be procured for a following leg, such as the responsibility of returning the passenger to origin if they cannot board the later flights. However, I suspect this is just policy and that a document check flag will be set for this itinerary and must be completed prior to boarding the first flight.
It's possible that you might not have to, but in the absence of anyone saying they've managed to do the same thing, I'd prepare for the worst and consider back up plans.
add a comment |
According to United's Contract of Carriage:
Rule 19 Travel Documents
Each Passenger desiring transportation across
any international boundary is responsible for obtaining and presenting
all necessary travel documents, which shall be in good condition, and
for complying with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation. Any Passenger who, by
failing to comply with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation, causes UA any loss, damage
or expense of any kind, consents and acknowledges that he or she shall
reimburse UA for any such loss, damage or expense. UA is not liable
for any assistance or information provided by any employee or agent of
UA to any Passenger relating to such documents or compliance with such
laws, or for the consequences to any Passenger resulting from his/her
failure to obtain and present such documents, which shall be in good
condition, or to comply with such laws. Where legally permitted, UA
reserves the right to hold, photocopy or otherwise reproduce a travel
document presented by any Passenger. UA also reserves the right to
deny boarding to any Passenger whose necessary travel documents are
not in good condition according to UA's reasonable belief, or which
otherwise do not comply with laws of the specific country the
Passenger is departing from, transiting through, or traveling to.
I couldn't find a similar visa related thread over on flyertalk, but there are similarities with this passport issue:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-air-lines-skymiles/1592140-idb-dl-denied-us-boarding-domestic-flight-due-no-passports.html
There are a number of speculations about the reasons for denying boarding on a first leg when documents could later be procured for a following leg, such as the responsibility of returning the passenger to origin if they cannot board the later flights. However, I suspect this is just policy and that a document check flag will be set for this itinerary and must be completed prior to boarding the first flight.
It's possible that you might not have to, but in the absence of anyone saying they've managed to do the same thing, I'd prepare for the worst and consider back up plans.
According to United's Contract of Carriage:
Rule 19 Travel Documents
Each Passenger desiring transportation across
any international boundary is responsible for obtaining and presenting
all necessary travel documents, which shall be in good condition, and
for complying with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation. Any Passenger who, by
failing to comply with the laws of each country flown from, through or
into which he/she desires transportation, causes UA any loss, damage
or expense of any kind, consents and acknowledges that he or she shall
reimburse UA for any such loss, damage or expense. UA is not liable
for any assistance or information provided by any employee or agent of
UA to any Passenger relating to such documents or compliance with such
laws, or for the consequences to any Passenger resulting from his/her
failure to obtain and present such documents, which shall be in good
condition, or to comply with such laws. Where legally permitted, UA
reserves the right to hold, photocopy or otherwise reproduce a travel
document presented by any Passenger. UA also reserves the right to
deny boarding to any Passenger whose necessary travel documents are
not in good condition according to UA's reasonable belief, or which
otherwise do not comply with laws of the specific country the
Passenger is departing from, transiting through, or traveling to.
I couldn't find a similar visa related thread over on flyertalk, but there are similarities with this passport issue:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-air-lines-skymiles/1592140-idb-dl-denied-us-boarding-domestic-flight-due-no-passports.html
There are a number of speculations about the reasons for denying boarding on a first leg when documents could later be procured for a following leg, such as the responsibility of returning the passenger to origin if they cannot board the later flights. However, I suspect this is just policy and that a document check flag will be set for this itinerary and must be completed prior to boarding the first flight.
It's possible that you might not have to, but in the absence of anyone saying they've managed to do the same thing, I'd prepare for the worst and consider back up plans.
answered Jun 20 '16 at 10:24
BerwynBerwyn
26.3k658133
26.3k658133
add a comment |
add a comment |
Visa on arrival for Canadians is only available if:
You are invited by a company registered in Pakistan (and this requires prior approval); and your stay has to be for business purposes or;
You are part of a tour group and traveling through a designated tour operator.
Of course this isn't important as you are a Pakistani citizen and cannot be refused entry.
As far as United is concerned it depends on how you have booked the ticket. If it is one ticket they are well within their rights to refuse you boarding.
If your United ticket is just from NY to London, then they cannot refuse you as your Canadian passport allows you entry into the UK. They won't care about your next leg.
The NICOP (National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis) allows you visa free entry but you need to convince United of this and of the fact that you will have it in your possession when you arrive.
If you have a copy of the (new NICOP) you can ask for an emergency travel document at Pakistan embassy - although they might wonder why you don't have a Pakistani passport.
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
add a comment |
Visa on arrival for Canadians is only available if:
You are invited by a company registered in Pakistan (and this requires prior approval); and your stay has to be for business purposes or;
You are part of a tour group and traveling through a designated tour operator.
Of course this isn't important as you are a Pakistani citizen and cannot be refused entry.
As far as United is concerned it depends on how you have booked the ticket. If it is one ticket they are well within their rights to refuse you boarding.
If your United ticket is just from NY to London, then they cannot refuse you as your Canadian passport allows you entry into the UK. They won't care about your next leg.
The NICOP (National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis) allows you visa free entry but you need to convince United of this and of the fact that you will have it in your possession when you arrive.
If you have a copy of the (new NICOP) you can ask for an emergency travel document at Pakistan embassy - although they might wonder why you don't have a Pakistani passport.
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
add a comment |
Visa on arrival for Canadians is only available if:
You are invited by a company registered in Pakistan (and this requires prior approval); and your stay has to be for business purposes or;
You are part of a tour group and traveling through a designated tour operator.
Of course this isn't important as you are a Pakistani citizen and cannot be refused entry.
As far as United is concerned it depends on how you have booked the ticket. If it is one ticket they are well within their rights to refuse you boarding.
If your United ticket is just from NY to London, then they cannot refuse you as your Canadian passport allows you entry into the UK. They won't care about your next leg.
The NICOP (National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis) allows you visa free entry but you need to convince United of this and of the fact that you will have it in your possession when you arrive.
If you have a copy of the (new NICOP) you can ask for an emergency travel document at Pakistan embassy - although they might wonder why you don't have a Pakistani passport.
Visa on arrival for Canadians is only available if:
You are invited by a company registered in Pakistan (and this requires prior approval); and your stay has to be for business purposes or;
You are part of a tour group and traveling through a designated tour operator.
Of course this isn't important as you are a Pakistani citizen and cannot be refused entry.
As far as United is concerned it depends on how you have booked the ticket. If it is one ticket they are well within their rights to refuse you boarding.
If your United ticket is just from NY to London, then they cannot refuse you as your Canadian passport allows you entry into the UK. They won't care about your next leg.
The NICOP (National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis) allows you visa free entry but you need to convince United of this and of the fact that you will have it in your possession when you arrive.
If you have a copy of the (new NICOP) you can ask for an emergency travel document at Pakistan embassy - although they might wonder why you don't have a Pakistani passport.
answered Jun 20 '16 at 8:29
Burhan KhalidBurhan Khalid
36.6k372147
36.6k372147
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
add a comment |
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
Emergency travel documentation from the embassy/consulate was what I was going to do if I didn't get the NICOP delivered in time. IIRC They said that they could have it done by 5pm if I came in around 9am.
– user987091
Jul 22 '16 at 4:05
add a comment |
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@GregHewgill I'll be showing my Canadian passport. I am a Pakistani citizen - I have dual citizenship, and will be traveling with a Canadian passport. I can't prove to United that I'm allowed into Pakistan - I can prove that (to the other airline, with my ID) once I'm in the UK
– user987091
Jun 19 '16 at 23:38
Are you flying on one single reservation/ticket or two separate tickets? If they are separate tickets then your first flight to the UK will simply be treated as such, and United doesn't need to know that you have another flight to Pakistan. But if they are a single reservation/ticket then United may require you to show evidence that you can enter Pakistan before letting you on the plane.
– Alan Munn
Jun 19 '16 at 23:49
2
No, airlines are subject to big fines if they fly someone to a place for which they don't have a visa or a right to enter, so it is absolutely the airline's call to decide whether to let you fly. Why can you only get your Pakistani ID in London? Can't it be Fedexed to you before you leave?
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:03
1
@AlanMunn it's in Pakistan, and the best courier there, DHL, can deliver it to the US by Thursday at 12pm. I depart on Thursday at 7pm, but cannot be sure DHL will deliver when guaranteed. If I had it sent to the UK, it would arrive on Wednesday, leaving room for any delay.
– user987091
Jun 20 '16 at 0:29
2
If that's your only option, then I would suggest having a copy of the ID with you and explain the situation when you check in with United. That along with your Canadian passport may be sufficient for them to let you fly. Since you can legally get as far as London, United may not care. I suspect they have some discretion in the matter. Any other kind of Pakistani documentation (like a birth certificate) might also be helpful for you to make your case to them.
– Alan Munn
Jun 20 '16 at 0:35