Cyprus announces new country categorisation concerning COVID-19

New changes have been announced by the Epidemiological Monitoring Unit  of  the  Ministry of Health as regards the categorisation of countries based on new epidemiological risk assessment and they will come into effect from Thursday, 12th August.

Specifically, Croatia, Sweden and Serbia are moved from Green Category to Orange.

Estonia, Lebanon and Israel are moved from Orange category to Red.

The categorisation for the countries of the European Union and the European Economic Area (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway) as well as Switzerland, in the Green, Orange or Red Categories, is based upon that of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

With regard to third countries (United Kingdom, Russia, Ukraine, Israel, Lebanon, United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Belarus, Qatar, Serbia, United States of America, Armenia, Georgia, Bahrain), in addition to Kuwait and Canada as of 1/6/21, as well as those countries included in the updated list of the European Council Recommendation (EU) 2021/89 for the gradual lifting of temporary restrictions for non-essential travel within the EU, these are evaluated epidemiologically by the Ministry of Health and are categorised into the Green, Orange and Red categories.

The Ministry of health notes that the following categorisation of countries, based on the epidemiological risk assessment, is extremely dynamic and may be modified at any moment as the pandemic evolves and the epidemiological data changes. For this reason, new data will be announced and the list of countries will be updated frequently.

Green Category countries – Low risk countries at current stage

European Union member states: Austria, Bulgaria, Germany, Latvia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Czech Republic
Schengen members: Liechtenstein, Norway
Third countries: Australia, North Macedonia, Jordan, Canada, New Zealand, Singapore
It is noted that passengers coming from the Green Category countries are not required to hold a COVID-19 test certificate or self-isolate.

Orange Category countries – Countries with possibly low risk but greater uncertainty compared to the Green Category

European Union member states: Belgium, Croatia, Sweden, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Finland, Greece
Small states: Vatican City
Third countries: Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Qatar, China (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan), Bahrain, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia

It is noted that passengers coming from Orange Category countries shall be required to undergo a PCR laboratory test within 72 hours prior to departure and to possess a certificate showing a negative PCR result.

It is also clarified that passengers from Orange Category countries who are Cypriot citizens and their family members (alien spouses and their underage children), and persons legally residing in the Republic, may undergo the molecular examination upon arrival in the Republic, provided that they fulfil one of the following preconditions:

1. Passengers who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

2. Passengers aged 16 to 18 who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

3. Minor passengers between 12 and 15 years old, or

4. Passengers who can not be vaccinated for medical reasons, upon presentation of a relevant certificate from the Ministry of Health of the Republic.

It is noted that the examination cost will be borne by themselves and in addition, such persons shall remain in self-isolation until the test result is issued. They can then terminate their isolation, following a negative test result, which must be submitted to the electronic platform CyprusFlightPass, through the passenger’s profile.

Red Category countries – Increased risk countries compared to the Green and Orange Categories:

European Union member states: France, Estonia, Denmark, Ireland, Spain, Malta, Netherlands, Portugal
Small states: Andorra, Monaco, San Marino
Schengen members: Switzerland, Iceland

Third countries: Azerbaijan, Lebanon, Egypt, Israel, Albania, Armenia, Georgia, United Arab Emirates, United States of America, United Kingdom, Japan, Kuwait, Belarus, Montenegro, Moldova, Brunei, South Korea, Ukraine, Russia

It is noted that passengers coming from Red Category countries shall be required to: a) undergo a PCR laboratory test within 72 hours prior to departure proving a negative PCR result and b) undergo a laboratory test upon their arrival in the Republic of Cyprus.

The examination cost will be borne by themselves and in addition, such persons should remain in self-isolation until the test result is issued.

It is also clarified that passengers from Red Category countries who are Cypriot citizens and their family members (alien spouses and their underage children), and persons legally residing in the Republic, may undergo the molecular examination upon arrival in the Republic, provided that they fulfil one of the following preconditions:

1. Passengers who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

2. Passengers aged 16 to 18 who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

3. Minor passengers between 12 and 15 years old, or

4. Passengers who can not be vaccinated for medical reasons, upon presentation of a relevant certificate from the Ministry of Health of the Republic.

It is noted that the examination cost will be borne by themselves and in addition, such persons shall remain in self-isolation until the test result is issued. They can then terminate their isolation, following a negative test result, which must be submitted to the electronic platform CyprusFlightPass, through the passenger’s profile.

Grey Category countries (Special Permission):

Countries that are not mentioned in the aforementioned categories (green, orange and red) are considered to belong in the Grey Category (Special Permission). For the Grey Category countries, entry into the Republic of Cyprus is only allowed for the following categories of passengers:

1. Cypriot citizens and family members (alien spouses and their underage children),

2. European citizens and citizens of European Economic Area countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway) and Switzerland,

3. Persons legally residing in the Republic,

4. Persons entitled to enter the Republic under the Vienna Convention, and

5. Third country nationals who are allowed to enter the Republic of Cyprus following a special permission from the Republic, as this is defined in the Quarantine Decree (N.9) of 2021, as this is modified each time.

It is noted that passengers coming from countries of this Category shall be required to undergo a laboratory test at a certified lab within 72 hours prior to departure for Cyprus and to possess a certificate showing a negative PCR result.

It is also clarified that passengers from this category who are Cypriot citizens and their family members (alien spouses and their underage children), and persons legally residing in the Republic, may undergo the molecular examination upon arrival in the Republic, provided that they fulfil one of the following preconditions:

1. Passengers who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

2. Passengers aged 16 to 18 who have been vaccinated with at least the 1st dose of vaccines approved by the Republic, or

3. Minor passengers between 12 and 15 years old, or

4. Passengers who can not be vaccinated for medical reasons, upon presentation of a relevant certificate from the Ministry of Health of the Republic.

Passengers arriving in the Republic of Cyprus from the Grey Category countries (Special Permission) shall remain in mandatory self-isolation or mandatory quarantine for a period of fourteen (14) days or alternatively, in mandatory self-isolation or mandatory quarantine for a period of seven (7) days provided that they undergo another Covid-19 test (at their own expense) on the 7th day and the result comes back negative.

They can then terminate their isolation, following a negative test result, which must be submitted to the electronic platform CyprusFlightPass, through the passenger’s profile.

Conditions applying to vaccinated passengers

The Ministry of Health clarifies that the following apply, as of 10 May, to vaccinated passengers arriving in the Republic of Cyprus from its points of entry:

Passengers holding a valid certificate of vaccination against COVID-19 arriving in Cyprus from abroad, regardless of their nationality and country of departure, shall be exempted from the obligation of laboratory testing and self-isolation/quarantine, subject to the following conditions:

1) They hold a valid certificate of vaccination issued by the following states:

(i) EU Member States (including Cyprus),

(ii) EEA Member States (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway),

(iii) Switzerland,

(iv) Israel,

(v) United Kingdom,

(vi) Russia,

(vii) United Arab Emirates,

(viii) Saudi Arabia,

(ix) Ukraine,

(x) Jordan,

(xi) Lebanon,

(xii) Egypt,

(xiii) Belarus,

(xiv) Serbia,

(xv) Qatar,

(xvi) Bahrain,

(xvii) United States of America,

(xviii) Armenia,

(xix) Georgia,

(xx) Canada

(xxi) Kuwait, and

(xxii) China.

2) They have been vaccinated either with one of the vaccines approved by the European Medicines Agency (Pfizer/BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Moderna, Janssen), or with Sputnik V vaccine, or with Sinopharm vaccine (BBIBP COVID-19), or with Sinovac vaccine, and have completed their vaccination scheme. It is noted that for vaccines that are administered in two doses, passengers must have been administered both doses, while for the Janssen vaccine (single dose vaccine) 14 days must have elapsed between the administration of the vaccine and the date of travel. More information is available on: https://cyprusflightpass.gov.cy/en/vaccinated-passengers.

It is also noted that all passengers, regardless of the country’s category, including those holding a valid certificate of vaccination, are obliged to apply for the CyprusFlightPass within 48 hours before the departure of their flight. Moreover, for the protection of public health and the monitoring of the epidemiological situation, passengers of selected flights (including passengers holding a vaccination certificate) may undergo a random laboratory molecular testing carried out by the Ministry of Health.