UK government to work on testing as quarantine alternative
John E. Kaye
- Published
 - News
 

In an effort to help airlines and airports kickstart travel and the wider economy, Britain is working with London’s Heathrow Airport on a plan to use COVID-19 testing to help shorten quarantine times.
Heathrow said on Wednesday that a testing area was ready to open should Britain approve a rule change and allow two tests, one on arrival and one some days later, to cut the quarantine time from the current two weeks.
Under the current rules, travellers to the United Kingdom from the United States, Spain, France and many other countries must self-isolate for 14 days when they arrive, deterring travel and heaping financial pressure on airlines.
Britain’s health minister Matt Hancock said the government was still working with Heathrow on the plan but there were challenges in ensuring all of those infected by COVID-19 were detected.
“I’m very glad that they’re making progress, but we’ve got to make sure that this is safe and secure because obviously that is absolutely top priority,” Hancock told LBC radio.
British Airways, easyJet and Ryanair have urged the government to allow quarantine to be replaced with testing, saying that Britain should follow Germany which has introduced a mandatory, free single COVID test for arrivals from high risk countries.
“We believe a UK testing protocol based on the German model would stimulate significant demand whilst protecting public health,” the airlines’ chief executives said in a letter to the transport minister on Monday.
Switching away from quarantine would boost key connections between the UK and Europe, and with the United States, and help the economy recover, they said.
Heathrow’s testing facility, set up by medical travel firm Collinson and airport services company Swissport, is ready to operate at Terminal 2 and could process 13,000 tests a day. Another facility at Terminal 5 will be ready in a few weeks.
Passengers would have to pay 150 pounds ($198) for the test, which the groups said would be a “gold-standard PCR test”, sensitive enough to detect COVID-19 before symptoms show.
Reported by Sarah Young and Kate Holton
Sourced Reuters
For more Aviation and Daily news follow The European Magazine
Sign up to The European Newsletter
RECENT ARTICLES
- 
Complex questions still need people, not machines, researchers find - 
Study links CEO political views to recognition of women inventors - 
GrayMatter Robotics opens 100,000-sq-ft AI robotics innovation centre in California - 
UAE breaks ground on world’s first 24-hour renewable power plant - 
WomenIN Festival 2025 unveils expanded programme in partnership with FNB - 
ITFC extends $30m financing to Uzbekistan’s Hamkorbank - 
New £2.5 million Rolls-Royce Phantom marks model’s centenary - 
UK faces surge in major cyber attacks, NCSC warns - 
Historian warns climate denial is causing “immense harm” as humanity nears a “major crunch point - 
The European Autumn 2025 edition out now - 
Study finds creative storytelling boosts confidence and career prospects for young people - 
Global development banks agree new priorities on finance, water security and private capital ahead of COP30 - 
South African students develop tech concept to tackle hunger using AI and blockchain - 
Global startup expo enters final day in Dubai as Expand North Star marks a decade of innovation - 
Bleisure boom turning Gen Z work travel into ‘life upgrade’ - 
Automation breakthrough reduces ambulance delays and saves NHS £800,000 a year - 
AI found to make people 15% more likely to lie, study warns - 
Global aerospace composites market to triple by 2034 as demand for lighter, greener aircraft accelerates - 
ICIEC to host 15th AMAN Union Summit as Islamic finance eyes closer trade integration - 
Matching words and images helps charities raise more money, study finds - 
UK to host African Development Fund summit as Africa pushes for food self-sufficiency - 
Off the blocks: LEGO and Formula 1 reunite for documentary on viral Miami Grand Prix stunt - 
Mergers and partnerships drive Africa’s mining boom – but experts warn on long-term resilience - 
New AI breakthrough promises to end ‘drift’ that costs the world trillions - 
Europe tightens grip on strategic space data as dependence on U.S tech comes under scrutiny 
								
























