Orange wrote:
I always thought it was 3 months since the entry stamp is for 90 days, but after reseraching a little and getting misled by the US State Dept travel website, I'm now convinced it's technically 6 months.
What convinced you that the US State Department has it wrong? What is the basis for your being convinced it is 6 months and what does technically mean?
From the Costa Rican Embassy Web site
A passport valid for at least 30 days (expiration date has to be 30 days or more after arrival date)...
A pre-paid airline ticket to exit Costa Rica (either to return to your country or to go to another country)
source:
http://www.costarica-embassy.org/consul ... o_visa.htm
From US State Department Web Site
ENTRY/EXIT REQUIREMENTS: For entry into Costa Rica, U.S. citizens must present valid passports that will not expire for at least thirty days after arrival, and a roundtrip/outbound ticket. Passports should be in good condition; Costa Rican immigration will deny entry if the passport is damaged in any way. Costa Rican authorities generally permit U.S. citizens to stay up to ninety days; to stay beyond the period granted, travelers must submit an application for an extension to the Office of Temporary Permits in the Costa Rican Department of Immigration. Tourist visas are usually not extended except under special circumstances, and extension requests are evaluated on a case-by-case basis. There is a departure tax for short-term visitors. Tourists who stay over ninety days may experience a delay at the airport when departing. Persons who overstayed previously may be denied entry to Costa Rica.
source:http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_1093.html
From Delta Airlines Web Site
COSTA RICA (CR)
Passport (must be valid at least 30 days after date of entry)
required.
Visa not required for a max. stay of:
- 90 days (excluding those residing in the Northern Mariana
Islands); or
- 30 days, for those residing in the Northern Mariana Islands.
Extension of stay can be arranged on arrival.
Minors: up to/incl. 17 years old must hold their own passport,
unless included in passport (which must contain photo of the
minor) of parent(s) accompanying minor.
Visitor must hold:
- return or onward ticket; and
- all documents required for next destination; and
- sufficient funds.
From the Travel Troubleshooter and American Airlines
Passport expiration CR
TRAVEL TROUBLESHOOTER
Your Passport is No Good ---
Gate agent's mistake leads to a canceled vacation.
By Christopher Elliott, Travel Columnist --- Tribune Media Services --- 19
Apr 07
Q: My husband and I recently purchased a package trip for two from
Minneapolis to Costa Rica. We paid $3,791, which included tickets on
American Airlines and accommodations.
When we arrived at the ticket counter, an American Airlines agent told us
that she would not issue us boarding passes because one of the two travelers
had a passport that expired in less than six months.
We decided to call off our vacation. We immediately advised our travel
agency about our change of plans. We later learned that Costa Rica has no
such passport rule - it merely requires that passports not expire less than
30 days after arrival in the country.
I wrote a letter to the airline and to our travel agency, requesting
reimbursement for the cost of our package. Our agency is doing its best to
help, but American Airlines has gone into radio silence. Can you help us get
through to someone?
- Nancy Dreher, Edina Minn.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx
A: It's unusual for a major airline to go into radio silence. Often, it just
takes time for it to answer your letter. But there are notable exceptions,
which faithful readers of this column will probably remember. Fortunately,
this isn't one of them.
When your ticket agent checked the entry requirements for Costa Rica, the
first paragraph applied only to passports for residents of the Northern
Mariana Islands, which "must have six months validity." Below that
paragraph, it indicates that all other U.S. passports only require 30 days
validity. The ticket agent read the first paragraph and believed that it
applied to you, when in fact it didn't.
"Our agent was incorrect to deny boarding," airline spokesman Tim Wagner
told me.
American is changing the reference material so that future errors won't be
made, moving the information on U.S. citizens higher in the document so that
there is less chance an agent will be confused.
So what of the apparent radio silence? It can take anywhere from six to
eight weeks to get a meaningful response from a travel company, and longer
if it is over a holiday. Your query happened to coincide with a major
holiday. (In a perfect world, it would take far less time for a company to
reply to a customer query, of course.)
I've been getting many reader questions about passport and visa rules
lately, and there seems to be a lot of confusion about what is required and
what isn't. My advice is to visit the U.S. State Department's Web site
before your international trip and read the foreign entry requirements for
your country.
Then make a printout. Yes, a printout. If you run into trouble, have it
ready.
American Airlines apologized and offered you the opportunity to rebook your
trip at no additional charge. Your travel agent also helped you make a claim
with your travel insurance company, which reimbursed you for your lost
vacation.