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Passport for Iceland's citizens From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Icelandic passports (Icelandic: íslenskt vegabréf) are issued to citizens of Iceland for the purpose of international travel. Beside serving as proof of Icelandic citizenship, they facilitate the process of securing assistance from Icelandic consular officials abroad (or public officials in the mission of another Nordic country in case an Icelandic consular official is absent).[4][5]
| |
---|---|
Type | Passport |
Issued by | Iceland |
First issued | Early-1900s (first version) 1 June 1999 (machine-readable passport) 23 May 2006[1] (biometric) 1 February 2019 (current version) |
In circulation | 354.815 (94.9% of citizens)[2] |
Purpose | Identification |
Eligibility | Icelandic citizenship |
Expiration | 10 years from date of issue (adults, 2018) |
Cost | 14,000 ISK (18–66) 6,000 ISK (children, elderly and disabled) 2x cost (urgent application)[3] |
As of 2023, 94.9% of Icelandic citizens possess an Icelandic passport.[6] It is one of three official documents issued by the Icelandic government, the others being the Icelandic identity card and the Icelandic driving licence.
The passport allows for the freedom of movement in any of the states of EFTA[7] and the EU/EEA. This is because Iceland is a member state of EFTA, and by virtue of it also being a member of the European Economic Area (EEA) and part of the Schengen Area. For travel within the Nordic countries no identity documentation is legally required for Nordic citizens due to the Nordic Passport Union.
In medieval times, while under the control of other Scandinavian powers, internal passports were required for certain individuals. The first legal instance of internal passports, then called Reisupassi or passi, were issued from 1781 for certain individuals travelling between regions of Iceland (mostly freemen). In the 19th century, the role of internal passports was questioned, progressively unenforced, and were officially repealed in 1907.[8]
International passports have been issued since at least the early 1900s for travel but were uncommon, usually issued by the Reykjavík Police and consisted of a stamped photograph attached to a folded piece of paper.[9] By the 1930s a standard international passport booklet was issued, in accordance with League of Nations standards, with a blue cover.[10] From 1929 until WWII, a 'Nordic Travel Document' (Icelandic: Norræn ferðaskírteini) was issued, for use only in Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland.[11]
In 1941, during the British occupation of Iceland of the Second World War, emergency laws were introduced requiring domestic identification. From 1942 until 1945, a simplified version of 'passports', essentially acting as identity documents, were issued by Icelandic police to all residents, who were required to carry them at all times.[12] The design was different from international passport booklets, being a simple blue printed paper card with a photograph.[13][14] The requirement to bear them at all times was abolished after the occupation.[12]
A new design was put into circulation in May 1987.[15] It featured a dark blue (near-black) cover, laser-printed pages, and a laminated information page.
The first machine-readable Icelandic passports were introduced on 1 June 1999,[16] having a blue cover, a machine-readable strip and improved security features. In 2004, 81% of Icelandic citizens had a passport.[17]
The first biometric passports were introduced in May 2006, with a middle hard-plastic page[18] and the validity was temporarily shortened from ten years to five. In June 2013, the chip was relocated to the back cover and the validity was restored to ten years.[18]
A new Icelandic passport design was introduced on 1 February 2019, featuring a slightly enlarged Icelandic coat of arms and sans-serif wording on the front cover, as well as a thinner top-laminate on the biodata page.[19] They are manufactured by the Polish Security Printing Works (Polska Wytwórnia Papierów Wartościowych ) in Poland.[20]
Icelandic passports are blue, with the Icelandic coat of arms emblazoned in the centre of the front cover. The words "ÍSLAND" (Icelandic), "ICELAND" (English) and "ISLANDE" (French) are inscribed above the coat of arms and the words "VEGABRÉF" (Icelandic), "PASSPORT" (English) and "PASSEPORT" (French) are inscribed below the coat of arms. Icelandic passports have the standard biometric symbol at the bottom.[21]
Vegabréf, the Icelandic word for passport, literally means "road letter", which was the Scandinavian word for internal passports when such existed in Scandinavia.
The Icelandic passport includes the following data:
The information page ends with the Machine Readable Zone.
Personal names containing the special Icelandic letters (ð, þ, æ, ö) are spelled the correct way in the non-machine-readable zone, but are mapped in the machine-readable zone. ð becomes D, þ becomes TH, æ becomes AE, and ö becomes OE.
Letters with accents are replaced by simple letters (e.g., é → E). This follows the standard for machine-readable passports.
The data page/information page is printed in Icelandic, English and French.
Visa requirements for Icelandic citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Iceland. As of 31 August 2024, Icelandic citizens had visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 184 countries and territories, ranking the Icelandic passport 10th in the world in terms of travel freedom (tied with Latvian, Slovakian, and Slovenian passports) according to the Henley Passport Index.[22][23]
As a member of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), Icelandic citizens have freedom of movement to live and work in other EFTA countries in accordance with the EFTA convention.[7] Moreover, by virtue of Iceland's membership of the European Economic Area (EEA), Icelandic citizens also enjoy freedom of movement within all EEA member states. The Citizens’ Rights Directive[24] defines the right of free movement for citizens of the EEA,[25] and all EFTA and EU citizens are not only visa-exempt but are legally entitled to enter and reside in each other's countries.
Inside Iceland and the other Nordic countries, an Icelandic identity card or Icelandic driving licence is sufficient for personal identification. Driving licences do not state citizenship and therefore are not usable in most cases as travel documentation.
The Icelandic identity cards, called Nafnskírteini, were updated in 2024 adhering to biometric ICAO and EU standards, allowing its use to exercise free movement throughout the EU/EEA, as well as a number of other European countries.
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