COVID -19 UPDATES

To stay updated on face coverings, trip changes, and sky restrictions, call us at our Toll Free number.

If you have COVID-19, you can spread the virus to others. There are precautions you can take to prevent spreading it to others: isolation, masking, and avoiding contact with people who are at high risk of getting very sick. Isolation is used to separate people with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 from those without COVID-19.

These recommendations do not change based on COVID-19 hospital admission levels. If you have COVID-19, also see additional information on treatments that may be available to you.

This information is intended for a general audience. Healthcare professionals should see Ending Isolation and Precautions for People with COVID-19. This CDC guidance is meant to supplement—not replace—any federal, state, local, territorial, or tribal health and safety laws, rules, and regulations.

International travel is essential for maintaining relationships between friends and family, supporting both small and large businesses, and encouraging the free interchange of ideas and cultural practises. The science-based international air travel strategy improves both domestic and international air travel safety while also improving the safety of Americans living in their own country.

Testing Requirement
The requirement that travellers from China, Hong Kong, or Macau present a negative COVID-19 test or documentation of recovery before boarding an aircraft to the United States was abolished by the CDC on March 10, 2023.

Vaccination Requirement
Required Vaccinations
Noncitizen nonimmigrant air travellers will no longer be required to present documentation proving they have received the entire course of a recognised COVID-19 vaccination in order to board an aircraft to the United States as of 12:01am EDT on May 12, 2023.

Masking
While masks are no longer required on flights, The CDC still recommends wearing them.

 
 
 
 
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