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The seven destinations most likely to make the travel 'green list' this summer

Greece is high on our list of possible travel corridor destinations for 2021
Greece is high on our list of possible travel corridor destinations for 2021

It is the question on everyone’s mind. Will we, or will we not, be able to travel abroad this summer? And if so, where?

At this very moment, the rules are straightforward: you are not allowed to travel overseas for non-essential reasons. Those who do will have to take a test before travelling home, and either enter a ten-day quarantine at home (with two tests, on days two and eight, costing £210) or a mandatory stay at a Government-approved hotel (costing £1,750) if travelling in from a red-listed country.

That red list currently features 33 countries with high prominence of the South African and Brazilian variants, including Portugal, the UAE and South Africa itself. There are reports that Spain and the USA could soon be added to the list, due to local transmission of new variants and close travel links with South America and Portugal.

That’s what’s going on now. When it comes to our summer holidays, in the roadmap issued this week the Prime Minister said that May 17 is the earliest date that we will get away. On April 12, a newly re-formed Global Travel Taskforce will be reporting on whether it is safe to do so by May 17.

So let us work with one possible scenario. It is June 21. The UK’s vaccination drive has been a roaring success, Covid cases, deaths and hospitalisations are right down across the UK, new variants have failed to drive them up, and everyday life resembles some kind of normality. We have kept to the roadmap, as planned. Other countries are in similar positions, meaning we can start to open up our borders and build a ‘green list’ of countries we can visit on a travel corridor basis.

Of course, we are dealing with an ever-changing situation here (just two months ago we didn’t even know about the Kent, South African or Brazilian variants) so to predict the best bets for a summer holiday must come with a very big caveat: book at your own risk, and consider these factors before you do so.

But we do now have information and data beyond case numbers per 100,000 (the prime consideration for last year’s travel corridors list) which can help us to build a better idea of where we might be able to travel in the summer of 2021.

We have considered the following factors in building our green watchlist:

  • How is the vaccination drive going?

  • Did it reopen to UK arrivals in 2020, without quarantine?

  • Is the Government in support of vaccine certification to waive quarantine for arrivals?

  • What are the current case numbers?

  • Does it have hotel quarantine, or other prohibitive border policies in place?

Greece

Vaccines administered: 921,189 doses (8.59% of population have received a dose)

Cases per 100,000 (7 days): 111.3

There are a number of reasons why Greece is on our holiday green watchlist. The first is that it has a track record of opening its doors during a pandemic. Last summer Greece was one of the first destinations to reopen to tourism (on June 15) and Greece was a trailblazer when it came to testing arrivals rather than putting them into a mandatory quarantine.

Early in 2021, Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis became the first European leader to call for a vaccine certificate as a means to scrap quarantine and tests for arrivals. Speaking on Bloomberg in February, he said: “People will want to travel, especially during the summer, and it doesn’t make much sense not to facilitate travel – to the extent that we feel comfortable – to welcome people who have been vaccinated.”

Greece has formed a 'vaccination bubble' with Israel - Getty
Greece has formed a 'vaccination bubble' with Israel - Getty

“For those who have been vaccinated, we want to make it as easy as possible for them to be able to travel to Greece.” He added that those who have not been vaccinated will need to take tests to enter Greece.

Mitsotakis is already putting his vaccination certificate philosophy into action. Greece has formalised an agreement with Israel whereby vaccinated arrivals can travel between the two countries without quarantine, and Cyprus is reportedly looking to enter this ‘travel bubble’ by April 1. There have been reports this week that Athens is looking into welcoming vaccinated British holidaymakers 'by May'.

Greece’s own vaccination process is digitised and moving faster than many expected, and the country has a track record of controlling Covid-19 better than other European countries. To date, it has recorded 192,270 cases and 6,534 deaths. Portugal, a country with an equivalent population of just over 10 million, has by comparison recorded 804,956 cases and 16,351 deaths.

With all these things in mind, we are putting Greece high on our watchlist of countries for a summer holiday, if a travel corridors list were reintroduced.

Iceland

Vaccines administered: 33,683 doses (9.44% of population have received a dose)

Cases per 100,000 (7 days): 1.46

Iceland is high on our ‘green watchlist’ given its Covid track record, vaccination drive, and approach to vaccinated arrivals. Last month, Iceland became one of the first countries in the world to waive quarantine or testing measures for residents arriving back into the country with an international vaccination certificate. Those who can provide proof they have previously had a Covid-19 infection are also exempt.

“The aim is to facilitate the movement of people between countries so that individuals can present a vaccine certificate at the border and are then exempt from Covid-19 disease control measures in accordance with the rules of the country concerned,” said a spokesperson for the Ministry of Health.

Iceland is a contender for opening up to vaccinated UK arrivals this summer - Getty
Iceland is a contender for opening up to vaccinated UK arrivals this summer - Getty

This applies primarily to nationals and residents returning to Iceland, but also to third country nationals who are exempt from current travel restrictions (ie, travelling for an essential purpose). It is not a great leap to deduce that, once travel restrictions are lifted, all third country nationals will be able to enter the country, quarantine-free, with an international vaccination certificate.

More so than many countries around the world, Iceland currently has a strong handle of the virus. In total, it has reported just 6,054 positive results and 29 deaths. Even for its population of 356,000, this is low. The case rate per 100,000 over 7 days is 1.46.

Granted, it may not guarantee heat, but a trip to Iceland over the summer will at the very least guarantee ‘light’ – from May to August, there is some degree of daylight during overnight hours, and close to the summer solstice in June the sun shines above the horizon at midnight.

Seychelles

Vaccines administered: 79,438 doses (82.75% of population have received a dose)

Cases per 100,000 (7 days): 157.14

The number to focus on here is the first, not the second. The first country in Africa to start a Covid-19 vaccination programme, the Seychelles has set itself the ambitious task of becoming the first country in the world to fully vaccinate 70 per cent of its adult population. With a population of 97,000, and generous vaccination donations from the UAE and India coming through, this is looking achievable (currently 24 per cent are fully vaccinated).

Right now, the Seychelles is leading the way when it comes to rebooting its grounded tourism industry – the island is welcoming in vaccinated visitors from any part of the world. So long as you have had two doses of a recognised vaccine (including AstraZeneca, Moderna, Pfizer), longer than two weeks ago, you can enter quarantine free.

The Seychelles is leading the charge with its vaccination drive - Getty
The Seychelles is leading the charge with its vaccination drive - Getty

Note that on January 7 the UK Government red-listed all arrivals from the Seychelles due to fears surrounding the South African variant, and the country is currently seeing its first serious spike in cases. However, if the Seychelles meets its vaccination targets, all evidence suggests transmission will come right down in the coming months, making it a leading candidate for a summer escape – though you may wish to wait until late autumn or winter, to catch the weather at its finest.

Israel

Vaccines administered: 8,145,032 (89% of population have received a dose)

Cases per 100,000 (7 days): 288.4

A slightly farther flung Mediterranean escape perhaps, and admittedly it has fewer connections than Italy and Croatia, but Israel cannot be ignored as a strong contender for a summer getaway.

The country is currently leading the charge when it comes to vaccinations. More than half of its population has received a first dose – higher than any other country in the world. What’s more, Israel has joined Greece in setting a precedent for a ‘vaccination bubble’, which Cyprus is also hoping to get in on. All arrivals between the countries can dodge quarantine on arrival with proof of immunity.

Israel could be an alternative option for a 2021 getaway - Getty
Israel could be an alternative option for a 2021 getaway - Getty

And the Israeli Government has made moves to expand the bubble later in the year. The Tourism Ministry has launched a new campaign, ‘Bring Tourism Back to Israel’, fronted by model Shir Elmaliach – they say they expect to open up to international arrivals “in the middle of 2021”.

The Caribbean

Over the last six months, the Caribbean has been the most reliable corner of the world when it comes to holiday options for Britons. Prior to the UK Government scrapping all travel corridors, there were eight Caribbean islands welcoming British travellers, including the likes of Barbados, Cuba, St Lucia and Antigua. All require testing prior to departure or on arrival, or both, as a means to dodge quarantine. Given their willingness to introduce new protocols, and their collective heavy reliance on tourism, it is quite possible that the islands will start accepting some kind of vaccination certificate as an alternative to a negative test.

Caribbean economies, such as Barbados, are heavily reliant on tourism - Getty
Caribbean economies, such as Barbados, are heavily reliant on tourism - Getty

The snag, of course, is that the summer isn’t the best time to visit the Caribbean. June to November is the official hurricane season, and statistically you are most likely to encounter a major storm in September or October. So with everything in mind, a Caribbean escape could be a safer bet for late autumn or winter.

Beware that cases have been on the rise recently. St Lucia, for example, has seen a significant surge in cases over the past month, and Barbados has seen a spike too. Vaccination drives are beginning on the islands, but at a slower rate than in the world’s most powerful nations. The islands have so far been reliant on vaccination donations, including 500,000 doses from Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India.

In Barbados, more than 25,000 people – approximately 12.5 per cent of the adult population – have already received their first inoculations. “This is a commendable start for a country that really did not have a lot in place for a vaccination programme,” Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley said.

The Balearic Islands

Vaccines administered (Spain): 3,829,465 (8.24% of population have received first dose)

Cases per 100,000 (Spain): 108.13

The Balearics (Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza, Formentera), have made positive sounds about welcoming UK holidaymakers from May through vaccination certificates.

The Balearic Islands' Minister for Tourism, Iago Negueruela, told Telegraph Travel: "The Balearic Islands has proposed to Spain’s central government that the archipelago becomes one of the first places where the vaccine passport is trialled.

Ibiza could be one of the first places to welcome British holidaymakers this summer - Getty
Ibiza could be one of the first places to welcome British holidaymakers this summer - Getty

“We are gradually reopening the economy, and we hope to kick start the tourism season in May. We are working hard behind the scenes to ensure a safe return to tourism so that we are ready for when British visitors are able to travel once more.”

What's more, case numbers are dropping on the islands – reaching their lowest point since August 2020.

There is precedent for the UK Government opening up regional travel corridors. At points in 2020, UK holidaymakers could visit the Portuguese islands of Madeira and the Azores, a number of Greek islands and the Canary Islands without needing to quarantine on their return. So even if mainland Spain remains closed to visitors, there is the possibility that the Balearics could fast-track a return of tourism.

In early March, Spain's Tourism Minister Fernando Valdes confirmed that Spain was in “discussions” with the UK and told Bloomberg: “For us the British market is our main market. But obviously since we are a member of the European Union, the solutions have first to be part of the discussions in the EU."

Sardinia

Vaccines administered (Italy): 4,283,925 (7.1 per cent of population)

Cases per 100,000 (Sardinia): below 50

Cases per 100,000 (Italy): 191.9

Sardinia is set to become the first region in Italy to enter a new "white" tier, which means restaurants and bars can reopen. The island has managed to keep infections below 50 cases per 100,000 at a time when cases are rising in other parts of the country – as business reopen in Sardinia, restrictions are tightening in Lombardy, Marche and Piedmont among other regions.

Sardinia is Italy's first "white zone" - Getty
Sardinia is Italy's first "white zone" - Getty

“We are seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. Finally cafes, bars and restaurants are going to be allowed to welcome clients also during the evening,” said Nicola Murru, director of Confesercenti Cagliari, the local business association. “We are going to have a spike in commerce, because people want to go out to eat at night,” he added.

Italy is leading the pack alongside France, Germany and Spain when it comes to vaccination doses administered to date, and Italy’s National Federation of Travel and Tourism Industry is applying pressure to the government to roll out vaccine passports to reopen its stagnant tourism industry.

Does this mean holidays to Sardinia will be on the cards, soon? Christian Solinas, the president of Sardinia, said that businesses would gradually begin to reopen, but warned international travel was some months away. So while travel to Sardinia is not imminent, it is not far-fetched to imagine that when travel does resume to Italy, this "white tier" island with a very low case rate will be front of the queue.

Where do you hope to visit in 2021? Comment below to join the conversation