Where do UK border checks currently take place for Eurostar trains from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy to London?










9















I know that when going from Paris, Brussels or Bourg-St Maurice, UK border checks are done at these stations, and when going from Marseille, you get off the train at Lille for the checks.



But what about the trains from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy? Some people say it takes place at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy, some people that you get off at Lille, and some that the checks are done in London.



Which is correct? Does anyone have recent experience?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:22






  • 1





    @GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

    – Crazydre
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:28











  • Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:11






  • 3





    Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:21






  • 2





    No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:35















9















I know that when going from Paris, Brussels or Bourg-St Maurice, UK border checks are done at these stations, and when going from Marseille, you get off the train at Lille for the checks.



But what about the trains from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy? Some people say it takes place at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy, some people that you get off at Lille, and some that the checks are done in London.



Which is correct? Does anyone have recent experience?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:22






  • 1





    @GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

    – Crazydre
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:28











  • Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:11






  • 3





    Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:21






  • 2





    No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:35













9












9








9








I know that when going from Paris, Brussels or Bourg-St Maurice, UK border checks are done at these stations, and when going from Marseille, you get off the train at Lille for the checks.



But what about the trains from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy? Some people say it takes place at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy, some people that you get off at Lille, and some that the checks are done in London.



Which is correct? Does anyone have recent experience?










share|improve this question
















I know that when going from Paris, Brussels or Bourg-St Maurice, UK border checks are done at these stations, and when going from Marseille, you get off the train at Lille for the checks.



But what about the trains from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy? Some people say it takes place at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy, some people that you get off at Lille, and some that the checks are done in London.



Which is correct? Does anyone have recent experience?







uk customs-and-immigration borders eurostar






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 28 '17 at 2:13







Crazydre

















asked Jul 16 '16 at 13:55









CrazydreCrazydre

53.5k12101237




53.5k12101237







  • 1





    Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:22






  • 1





    @GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

    – Crazydre
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:28











  • Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:11






  • 3





    Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:21






  • 2





    No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:35












  • 1





    Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:22






  • 1





    @GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

    – Crazydre
    Jul 16 '16 at 14:28











  • Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:11






  • 3





    Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

    – Gayot Fow
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:21






  • 2





    No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

    – Gagravarr
    Jul 16 '16 at 15:35







1




1





Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

– Gayot Fow
Jul 16 '16 at 14:22





Yo! This is all explained in the Wikipedia; did you check there?

– Gayot Fow
Jul 16 '16 at 14:22




1




1





@GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

– Crazydre
Jul 16 '16 at 14:28





@GayotFow I did, but like I said different sources say different things. That's why I wonder if there's anyone with recent experience

– Crazydre
Jul 16 '16 at 14:28













Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

– Gagravarr
Jul 16 '16 at 15:11





Marne-la-Vallée for EuroDisney is one of the locations where there's a juxtaposed border control. Only the original Eurostar stations have them, which is why the new south-of-France ones need you to change in Lille

– Gagravarr
Jul 16 '16 at 15:11




3




3





Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

– Gayot Fow
Jul 16 '16 at 15:21





Well! If you read something on Facebook, done and dusted. You can't get more authoritative than that, at least according to Abraham Lincoln :)

– Gayot Fow
Jul 16 '16 at 15:21




2




2





No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

– Gagravarr
Jul 16 '16 at 15:35





No Eurostar services do the immigration checks in St Pancras any more, it's all done with Juxtaposed border controls in France or Belgium. There are still the desks setup in STP, and they sometimes man them for additional checks, but the first immigration check is always done on the continent

– Gagravarr
Jul 16 '16 at 15:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















10














All Eurostar services are subject to Juxtaposed border controls. That means you clear the UK border somewhere on the Continent (generally in France, except for Brussels where it's in Belgium), and hence you also exit Schengen there too. Depending on the station, after Eurostar checkin you either do security first then France/Belgium exit then UK entry, or France/Belgium exit then UK entry then security.



Because of this, only stations that are fully setup with local and UK border staff on hand + appropriate facilities + segregated platforms can act as the "final" departure station for a Eurostar train. Pretty much, that means the "initial" set of Eurostar stations. That covers the "normal" ones of Calais / Lille / Paris / Brussels, plus the "special" ones running from the beginning of Disneyland Resort (Marne-la-Vallée/Chessy) and 2 of the Ski stations (Bourg St Maurice / Moutiers).



There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs. Very very occasionally, it's in use, and you have to re-clear UK immigration on arrival in St Pancras, showing them your passport and often your ticket too. I'm told that this tends to only happen when the police or border staff decide they want to speak with someone between the time they cleared the Juxtaposed border and arrival into London. I'd say I've had it maybe 1 in every 20 trips.



For all other Eurostar services, such as the new one serving Lyon and Marseille, there isn't the secure platform nor the border staff nor the space for immigration. So, for these trains, they stop them at Lille + get everyone off + get them through security + immigration in Lille, before re-boarding and carrying on to the UK. This takes about an hour, but does mean there's no 30 minute checkin time before leaving France.



.



There is one special other case which I think might be confusing you - Eurostar sell through tickets including a French TGV connection to a range of French stations, including some that they also run their own trains to. With those, coming back, you take a regular French TGV as far as Paris or Lille, then go through the normal Eurostar checking + immigration + security there before boarding your Eurostar.



Eurostar run only 3-5 direct trains per week to Disneyland Resort / Marne-la-Vallée, number depending on season and demand. At all other times, if you ask Eurostar to sell you a ticket to Marne-la-Vallée, they'll actually sell you a return to Lille plus TGV tickets to/from Lille to Marne-la-Vallée. If you book one of those services, then you won't be on a Eurostar all the way to Disney, and you'll do immigration + security when you change from TGV to Eurostar in Lille.



.



Otherwise, handy quick test for your journey:



  • If the journey has no changes and the duration is about the same (+-10 minutes) for the UK-Continent and Continent-UK directions, you'll do security+immigration at your starting station in France/Belgium

  • If the journey has connections (eg London to Lille, Lille to Marne-la-Vallée), you'll do security+immigration after your TGV leg but before your Eurostar leg on the way back

  • If the journey has no changes but the return duration is about an hour longer on the return (eg London-Lyon in 4 hours 40, Lyon-London in 5 hours 45), you'll be kicked off your Eurostar partway through the journey in Lille, to go through security+immigration in Lille





share|improve this answer

























  • (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

    – Relaxed
    Jul 17 '16 at 19:51


















6














The posted answer turned out to be wrong.



Went on this train a month ago, and it turns out that the UK does not operate a border checkpoint at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.



Consequently, as the train does not stop at Lille, this is the only route where UK border checks take place at the UK arrival stations.



In other words, the border screening area at St Pancras referred to in the answer:




There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs




is clearly there mainly for passengers from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.






share|improve this answer
























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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    10














    All Eurostar services are subject to Juxtaposed border controls. That means you clear the UK border somewhere on the Continent (generally in France, except for Brussels where it's in Belgium), and hence you also exit Schengen there too. Depending on the station, after Eurostar checkin you either do security first then France/Belgium exit then UK entry, or France/Belgium exit then UK entry then security.



    Because of this, only stations that are fully setup with local and UK border staff on hand + appropriate facilities + segregated platforms can act as the "final" departure station for a Eurostar train. Pretty much, that means the "initial" set of Eurostar stations. That covers the "normal" ones of Calais / Lille / Paris / Brussels, plus the "special" ones running from the beginning of Disneyland Resort (Marne-la-Vallée/Chessy) and 2 of the Ski stations (Bourg St Maurice / Moutiers).



    There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs. Very very occasionally, it's in use, and you have to re-clear UK immigration on arrival in St Pancras, showing them your passport and often your ticket too. I'm told that this tends to only happen when the police or border staff decide they want to speak with someone between the time they cleared the Juxtaposed border and arrival into London. I'd say I've had it maybe 1 in every 20 trips.



    For all other Eurostar services, such as the new one serving Lyon and Marseille, there isn't the secure platform nor the border staff nor the space for immigration. So, for these trains, they stop them at Lille + get everyone off + get them through security + immigration in Lille, before re-boarding and carrying on to the UK. This takes about an hour, but does mean there's no 30 minute checkin time before leaving France.



    .



    There is one special other case which I think might be confusing you - Eurostar sell through tickets including a French TGV connection to a range of French stations, including some that they also run their own trains to. With those, coming back, you take a regular French TGV as far as Paris or Lille, then go through the normal Eurostar checking + immigration + security there before boarding your Eurostar.



    Eurostar run only 3-5 direct trains per week to Disneyland Resort / Marne-la-Vallée, number depending on season and demand. At all other times, if you ask Eurostar to sell you a ticket to Marne-la-Vallée, they'll actually sell you a return to Lille plus TGV tickets to/from Lille to Marne-la-Vallée. If you book one of those services, then you won't be on a Eurostar all the way to Disney, and you'll do immigration + security when you change from TGV to Eurostar in Lille.



    .



    Otherwise, handy quick test for your journey:



    • If the journey has no changes and the duration is about the same (+-10 minutes) for the UK-Continent and Continent-UK directions, you'll do security+immigration at your starting station in France/Belgium

    • If the journey has connections (eg London to Lille, Lille to Marne-la-Vallée), you'll do security+immigration after your TGV leg but before your Eurostar leg on the way back

    • If the journey has no changes but the return duration is about an hour longer on the return (eg London-Lyon in 4 hours 40, Lyon-London in 5 hours 45), you'll be kicked off your Eurostar partway through the journey in Lille, to go through security+immigration in Lille





    share|improve this answer

























    • (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

      – Relaxed
      Jul 17 '16 at 19:51















    10














    All Eurostar services are subject to Juxtaposed border controls. That means you clear the UK border somewhere on the Continent (generally in France, except for Brussels where it's in Belgium), and hence you also exit Schengen there too. Depending on the station, after Eurostar checkin you either do security first then France/Belgium exit then UK entry, or France/Belgium exit then UK entry then security.



    Because of this, only stations that are fully setup with local and UK border staff on hand + appropriate facilities + segregated platforms can act as the "final" departure station for a Eurostar train. Pretty much, that means the "initial" set of Eurostar stations. That covers the "normal" ones of Calais / Lille / Paris / Brussels, plus the "special" ones running from the beginning of Disneyland Resort (Marne-la-Vallée/Chessy) and 2 of the Ski stations (Bourg St Maurice / Moutiers).



    There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs. Very very occasionally, it's in use, and you have to re-clear UK immigration on arrival in St Pancras, showing them your passport and often your ticket too. I'm told that this tends to only happen when the police or border staff decide they want to speak with someone between the time they cleared the Juxtaposed border and arrival into London. I'd say I've had it maybe 1 in every 20 trips.



    For all other Eurostar services, such as the new one serving Lyon and Marseille, there isn't the secure platform nor the border staff nor the space for immigration. So, for these trains, they stop them at Lille + get everyone off + get them through security + immigration in Lille, before re-boarding and carrying on to the UK. This takes about an hour, but does mean there's no 30 minute checkin time before leaving France.



    .



    There is one special other case which I think might be confusing you - Eurostar sell through tickets including a French TGV connection to a range of French stations, including some that they also run their own trains to. With those, coming back, you take a regular French TGV as far as Paris or Lille, then go through the normal Eurostar checking + immigration + security there before boarding your Eurostar.



    Eurostar run only 3-5 direct trains per week to Disneyland Resort / Marne-la-Vallée, number depending on season and demand. At all other times, if you ask Eurostar to sell you a ticket to Marne-la-Vallée, they'll actually sell you a return to Lille plus TGV tickets to/from Lille to Marne-la-Vallée. If you book one of those services, then you won't be on a Eurostar all the way to Disney, and you'll do immigration + security when you change from TGV to Eurostar in Lille.



    .



    Otherwise, handy quick test for your journey:



    • If the journey has no changes and the duration is about the same (+-10 minutes) for the UK-Continent and Continent-UK directions, you'll do security+immigration at your starting station in France/Belgium

    • If the journey has connections (eg London to Lille, Lille to Marne-la-Vallée), you'll do security+immigration after your TGV leg but before your Eurostar leg on the way back

    • If the journey has no changes but the return duration is about an hour longer on the return (eg London-Lyon in 4 hours 40, Lyon-London in 5 hours 45), you'll be kicked off your Eurostar partway through the journey in Lille, to go through security+immigration in Lille





    share|improve this answer

























    • (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

      – Relaxed
      Jul 17 '16 at 19:51













    10












    10








    10







    All Eurostar services are subject to Juxtaposed border controls. That means you clear the UK border somewhere on the Continent (generally in France, except for Brussels where it's in Belgium), and hence you also exit Schengen there too. Depending on the station, after Eurostar checkin you either do security first then France/Belgium exit then UK entry, or France/Belgium exit then UK entry then security.



    Because of this, only stations that are fully setup with local and UK border staff on hand + appropriate facilities + segregated platforms can act as the "final" departure station for a Eurostar train. Pretty much, that means the "initial" set of Eurostar stations. That covers the "normal" ones of Calais / Lille / Paris / Brussels, plus the "special" ones running from the beginning of Disneyland Resort (Marne-la-Vallée/Chessy) and 2 of the Ski stations (Bourg St Maurice / Moutiers).



    There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs. Very very occasionally, it's in use, and you have to re-clear UK immigration on arrival in St Pancras, showing them your passport and often your ticket too. I'm told that this tends to only happen when the police or border staff decide they want to speak with someone between the time they cleared the Juxtaposed border and arrival into London. I'd say I've had it maybe 1 in every 20 trips.



    For all other Eurostar services, such as the new one serving Lyon and Marseille, there isn't the secure platform nor the border staff nor the space for immigration. So, for these trains, they stop them at Lille + get everyone off + get them through security + immigration in Lille, before re-boarding and carrying on to the UK. This takes about an hour, but does mean there's no 30 minute checkin time before leaving France.



    .



    There is one special other case which I think might be confusing you - Eurostar sell through tickets including a French TGV connection to a range of French stations, including some that they also run their own trains to. With those, coming back, you take a regular French TGV as far as Paris or Lille, then go through the normal Eurostar checking + immigration + security there before boarding your Eurostar.



    Eurostar run only 3-5 direct trains per week to Disneyland Resort / Marne-la-Vallée, number depending on season and demand. At all other times, if you ask Eurostar to sell you a ticket to Marne-la-Vallée, they'll actually sell you a return to Lille plus TGV tickets to/from Lille to Marne-la-Vallée. If you book one of those services, then you won't be on a Eurostar all the way to Disney, and you'll do immigration + security when you change from TGV to Eurostar in Lille.



    .



    Otherwise, handy quick test for your journey:



    • If the journey has no changes and the duration is about the same (+-10 minutes) for the UK-Continent and Continent-UK directions, you'll do security+immigration at your starting station in France/Belgium

    • If the journey has connections (eg London to Lille, Lille to Marne-la-Vallée), you'll do security+immigration after your TGV leg but before your Eurostar leg on the way back

    • If the journey has no changes but the return duration is about an hour longer on the return (eg London-Lyon in 4 hours 40, Lyon-London in 5 hours 45), you'll be kicked off your Eurostar partway through the journey in Lille, to go through security+immigration in Lille





    share|improve this answer















    All Eurostar services are subject to Juxtaposed border controls. That means you clear the UK border somewhere on the Continent (generally in France, except for Brussels where it's in Belgium), and hence you also exit Schengen there too. Depending on the station, after Eurostar checkin you either do security first then France/Belgium exit then UK entry, or France/Belgium exit then UK entry then security.



    Because of this, only stations that are fully setup with local and UK border staff on hand + appropriate facilities + segregated platforms can act as the "final" departure station for a Eurostar train. Pretty much, that means the "initial" set of Eurostar stations. That covers the "normal" ones of Calais / Lille / Paris / Brussels, plus the "special" ones running from the beginning of Disneyland Resort (Marne-la-Vallée/Chessy) and 2 of the Ski stations (Bourg St Maurice / Moutiers).



    There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs. Very very occasionally, it's in use, and you have to re-clear UK immigration on arrival in St Pancras, showing them your passport and often your ticket too. I'm told that this tends to only happen when the police or border staff decide they want to speak with someone between the time they cleared the Juxtaposed border and arrival into London. I'd say I've had it maybe 1 in every 20 trips.



    For all other Eurostar services, such as the new one serving Lyon and Marseille, there isn't the secure platform nor the border staff nor the space for immigration. So, for these trains, they stop them at Lille + get everyone off + get them through security + immigration in Lille, before re-boarding and carrying on to the UK. This takes about an hour, but does mean there's no 30 minute checkin time before leaving France.



    .



    There is one special other case which I think might be confusing you - Eurostar sell through tickets including a French TGV connection to a range of French stations, including some that they also run their own trains to. With those, coming back, you take a regular French TGV as far as Paris or Lille, then go through the normal Eurostar checking + immigration + security there before boarding your Eurostar.



    Eurostar run only 3-5 direct trains per week to Disneyland Resort / Marne-la-Vallée, number depending on season and demand. At all other times, if you ask Eurostar to sell you a ticket to Marne-la-Vallée, they'll actually sell you a return to Lille plus TGV tickets to/from Lille to Marne-la-Vallée. If you book one of those services, then you won't be on a Eurostar all the way to Disney, and you'll do immigration + security when you change from TGV to Eurostar in Lille.



    .



    Otherwise, handy quick test for your journey:



    • If the journey has no changes and the duration is about the same (+-10 minutes) for the UK-Continent and Continent-UK directions, you'll do security+immigration at your starting station in France/Belgium

    • If the journey has connections (eg London to Lille, Lille to Marne-la-Vallée), you'll do security+immigration after your TGV leg but before your Eurostar leg on the way back

    • If the journey has no changes but the return duration is about an hour longer on the return (eg London-Lyon in 4 hours 40, Lyon-London in 5 hours 45), you'll be kicked off your Eurostar partway through the journey in Lille, to go through security+immigration in Lille






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 17 '16 at 13:55

























    answered Jul 17 '16 at 13:46









    GagravarrGagravarr

    47.4k39190399




    47.4k39190399












    • (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

      – Relaxed
      Jul 17 '16 at 19:51

















    • (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

      – Relaxed
      Jul 17 '16 at 19:51
















    (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

    – Relaxed
    Jul 17 '16 at 19:51





    (+1) It seems very easy once you read about it but the trick at the end is very clever!

    – Relaxed
    Jul 17 '16 at 19:51













    6














    The posted answer turned out to be wrong.



    Went on this train a month ago, and it turns out that the UK does not operate a border checkpoint at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.



    Consequently, as the train does not stop at Lille, this is the only route where UK border checks take place at the UK arrival stations.



    In other words, the border screening area at St Pancras referred to in the answer:




    There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs




    is clearly there mainly for passengers from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.






    share|improve this answer





























      6














      The posted answer turned out to be wrong.



      Went on this train a month ago, and it turns out that the UK does not operate a border checkpoint at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.



      Consequently, as the train does not stop at Lille, this is the only route where UK border checks take place at the UK arrival stations.



      In other words, the border screening area at St Pancras referred to in the answer:




      There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs




      is clearly there mainly for passengers from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.






      share|improve this answer



























        6












        6








        6







        The posted answer turned out to be wrong.



        Went on this train a month ago, and it turns out that the UK does not operate a border checkpoint at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.



        Consequently, as the train does not stop at Lille, this is the only route where UK border checks take place at the UK arrival stations.



        In other words, the border screening area at St Pancras referred to in the answer:




        There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs




        is clearly there mainly for passengers from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.






        share|improve this answer















        The posted answer turned out to be wrong.



        Went on this train a month ago, and it turns out that the UK does not operate a border checkpoint at Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.



        Consequently, as the train does not stop at Lille, this is the only route where UK border checks take place at the UK arrival stations.



        In other words, the border screening area at St Pancras referred to in the answer:




        There is a full border screening area on arrival in the UK at St Pancras. However, it's not normally in use, and you just walk through it before you walk through customs




        is clearly there mainly for passengers from Marne-la-Vallée Chessy.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 28 '17 at 2:12

























        answered Nov 27 '17 at 18:02









        CrazydreCrazydre

        53.5k12101237




        53.5k12101237



























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