Can i go to morocco with an israeli stamp




















The train system has a good safety record. Trains, while sometimes crowded, are comfortable and generally on time. See our Road Safety page for more information. Web-based ride-sharing services are not legal in Morocco; however, some well-known companies UBER and Careem have attempted operations with limited success. Media reports of ride-sharing drivers being harassed and assaulted by regular taxi drivers were common.

Aviation Safety Oversight: The U. Maritime Travel: Mariners planning travel to Morocco should also check for U. Information may also be posted to the U. The CDC's latest guidance on international travel for vaccinated people can be found here. Subscribe to get up-to-date safety and security information and help us reach you in an emergency abroad. Check passport expiration dates carefully for all travelers! Antigua and Barbuda.

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Papua New Guinea. Republic of North Macedonia. Republic of the Congo. Saint Kitts and Nevis. Saint Lucia. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. San Marino. Sao Tome and Principe. Saudi Arabia. Sierra Leone.

Sint Maarten. Solomon Islands. South Africa. South Korea. South Sudan. Sri Lanka. The Bahamas. The Gambia. Trinidad and Tobago. Turks and Caicos Islands. United Arab Emirates. United Kingdom. Vatican City Holy See. Safe travels! Disclosure: As a traveler, I use all the companies I recommend and you should know that, if you buy any service through any of these links, I get a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Use Booking. Check on Hostelworld for for backpacker hostels. Trekking equipment, books, etc, check on Amazon. If you want to know all the companies I use to plan my trips, check my travel resources page. Do you need to keep this card and show it at your exit? The card is actually your visa — it replaces the stamp in your passport which constitutes a visa in countries that stamp you!

Whenever you would need to prove your legality of stay in Israel, you would need to show a passport and a visa. I just gave out a few examples. There are many more: when checking-in to a hotel usually the larger ones they might ask to see your visa, to see that you are entitled not to pay VAT as tourists are exempted. The main reason why places of businesses such as hotels and rental cars companies is that in Israel, if you are a non-Israeli citizen, you will be exempted of paying VAT sales tax on hotels and car rentals.

Also you should know that Israeli citizens entering israel also get this document. The rental places and hotels also ask for it because that is the only way to avoid paying tax.

I misplaced mine once and even though I was a foreigner I still had to pay the very hefty local tax. Do not lose it! Monica there are many Israeli citizens also holding a dual citizenship with a European country, the US, Canada, Argentina, Brazil etc… they still visit israel as tourists but their Israeli citizenship will restrict them from the tax exemption.

They are given the same Visa card as you when entering israel except that theirs included the information that they are Israeli citizens with their Israeli citizen identification number sort of social insurance number unlike you. Because the Law of Return allows anyone who has at least a proven Jewish grandparent in the world to claim for Israeli citizenship, that means one could be an Asian-American, an afro-American, or a Hasidic Jew and all could become Israeli citizens with or without speaking Hebrew, so one can not assume you are not Israeli in these conditions.

Happened to my colleague Australian when leaving Israel last month. It was a minor hassle, but no real drama. May I ask why did you land at that airport? Where did you come from? European low-cost airlines such as Ryanair and Wizzair use this airport to get people to Israels southernmost city Eilat as Eilat airport can only operate smaller aircrafts.

Yes, many of people I have met have entered Israel via Ovda and they still do stamp. I have a question, do you mean that if I have the border card and I enter overland from Jordan let say, King Hussein Bridge , then there is no need to apply for Israeli visa?? Hello Crissy, yes, I also know a few Israeli people who did a layover in Dubai, without any problem. What about a short, days long trip to Petra, from Eilat? Do you think, that when I ask on a border, Jordanians will not stamp my passport both on entry and exit crossing?

They stamped our passport without asking us if we preferred the extra card and we did not really have the opportunity to tell them either as they kept our passport in their office during the time we waited at the border control.

Both events occurred in Hi Martin, sorry to hear that! I am actually very surprised to hear it! But thank you for the info, I will add it in the post as extra measure.

Hi I want to travel to eilat i am muslim but i have EU passport will they stamp my passport,. However, you should better ask this to other Muslims who have been there, to see if they had a different treatment. You MAY be subjected to a lot of questions, and you just as well may be not. If you would be asked a lot of questions, just answer them politely — they are for your and everyone safety.

I travelled from Israel to Jordan, back to Israel then on to Egypt then back to Israel just this week on a tour. You cross to Jordan through Wadi Araba crossing, they stamped my passport.

You go through Taba border crossing to Egypt. They definitely stamp your passport both ways. So any immigration official will know you came from Israel. Hi Heather, thanks for the heads-up. Yeah, you should ask beforehand but I just was informed by a traveler that, even at Wadi Arabia, they stamped it on the way back to Israel.

Perhaps things have changed now? I am having a clinical clerkship in a hospital in Beirut for a month during summer. After my clerkship I want to go to Jordan and then Israel. Do you think I will have problems with entering Israel due to staying in Beirut for a month for non-tourism reasons? First, which kind of visa do you have? Do you just have a stamp? Most people can get a tourist visa free for 30 days. If you do have a different stamp or sticker, I also entered Israel with a residence visa for the United Arab Emirates.

Israel does not deny entry for people based on where they were. You can expect to be asked a lot of questions, and you must answer them all truthfully and politely, no matter how silly they seem.

The questions are designed to find out whether you are telling the truth, and as long as your purpose in visiting Israel is tourism and not any other activity, you should have no problems at all. I entered Israel with an Iranian visa in my passport in March I was held for questioning at Tel Aviv airport for 4 hours.

The actual interview only took 15 minutes, the rest of the time was just waiting luckily with free wifi! Some other people waiting in room for the same kind of reasons had to unlock their phones and show their social media accounts.

I guess the waiting time is completely random, depending on the amount of people they have to interview. On my way out I got the same kind of questions, just not the 4 hour waiting time. There I also had to explain why I went to Malaysia and if I still have contacts there etc. Hi there, thanks for the heads up. In March, there was some tension between both countries on Syrian territory, so that might explain why. Hi Eli, I am not sure about visas… This post is more aimed at people who travel to Israel, hence they may get a stamp.

Hi, I was wondering if you knew whether it is possible to travel to Egypt after visiting Israel, and vice versa? If you want to visit the rest of Egypt e. Cairo you need to either fly to Egypt or to go to Aquaba and take a boat to Nuweiba — which can be quite an adventure but also fun. My passport had a stamp from UAE at that time. That and a single women is an obvious sign for danger I had the same problem on the way back.

The first check in Berlin has not been a 15 minutes check only, they even took my backback in Berlin and have checked it behind a closed curtain! I was not able to see it what they were doing.

I mean check bags behind curtains. There is an existing bias agains single women traveling to Israel, which has been confirmed by other travellers at the airport too. Do you have any advise on this? In June I have to travel again the same way. Now I have an additional stamp from Egypt. I will see what has been changed. I have asked for an invitation letter from our customers now to make it more simple. I was wondering if I should travel maybe with my Hungarian passport becasue that only has my US entries included mainly, but decided to keep to the German, maybe that would be confusing for the Israelis, if they somehow see I have several passports.

You cannot really avoid this when leaving Israel. If you fly any other carrier, there may or may not be special checks which are usually much faster. I found it extremely helpful. I have a question that might sound extremely stupid, but others can be in my situation. I have no israeli stamps in my passport, but I have the stickers from tel aviv airport and anotherone from allenby bridge on the back cover of my passport, does those count as stamps?

Would those two stickers create problem if I go to Tunisia for work? Or is Tunisia still allowing people with Israeli stamps? Do you know if I will have any consequences if I take the stickers away from my passport and then go to Israel again?

How did you get them? Do you mind sending to a pic to my private email? Or just tell me what kind of sticker is it. That would be very helpful so I can update the post accordingly, thanks! Hey, I have several friends who have crossed the border to Israel multiple times and removed the sticker afterwards. Like Balerina said below: it seems to be just for security at the airport so they know how seriously to question you.

I do not think it is something official, probably it just helps the guys working at the security at the airport to cathegorize you and treat you accordingly. Hello , im planning to travel to Israel, from Cairo to Tel Aviv by Air, will the immigration stamp my passport?

Or tell them not to do so. I emailed you, but just saw that I could post here. I need advice regarding travel from Saudia Arabia to Israel via Jordan and back again. My husband works for a large company in Riyadh and I live in Israel. Husband has several passports including one with a Saudi work visa. I know he will get an entry stamp from Jordan when he arrives at the airport, and he will need when when he leaves from the airport to return to Riyadh. The question is, how does he safely exit and re-enter Jordan at the Sheikh Hussein crossing?

BTW — he will be entering and exit Israel on his Israeli passport. What do you mean by re-entering to Jordan safely? What do you understand by safely? If he uses his U. Passport with the Saudi Work Visa to enter Jordan, he will get a stamp in it.

Or should he use his other U. Then he will be getting a taxi to Sheikh Hussein where he will get an exit stamp? He will then enter and exit Israel with his Israeli passport. It is possible to cross the Israeli border into either Jordan or Egypt — but not to Syria or Lebanon. You must be careful, however, because the border control agents in Jordan or Egypt will stamp your passport upon entry and exit. An easy way around this is to simply ask the land agents in Jordan or Egypt not to stamp your passport when entering or exiting.

As I mentioned above, if you do end up with an Israeli or Jordanian or Egyptian land crossing stamp, all is not lost. You can apply for a second passport if you then later plan to visit a country such as Lebanon. If you plan to visit Jordan or Egypt by way of land crossing, you may need a visa, or to pay an entry or exit fee — and this may be different than the requirements for arriving by air.

Fees also depend on the specific border crossing. We have heard reports from a few TPG readers that they were able to pay with a credit card at some of the border crossings. You can always attempt to pay with credit card first, but have cash on hand just in case and in various currencies, if possible.

Procedures for all three crossings into Jordan are subject to frequent changes. US citizens with a valid day tourist entry card the small blue piece of paper I previously encouraged you not to lose can visit Bethlehem, which is just a few miles from Jerusalem.

Bring your passport along with the small entry card, though you may or may not have to show it at the border. Not all airlines fly to Israel. But there are a few interesting exceptions. They use a special airline, Air Sinai, which is actually owned by Egypt Air to operate any flights between the two countries.

In fact, Air Sinai was established in for the sole purpose of operating flights between Egypt and Israel. You may encounter heavy security and questioning before even checking in for your flight when flying Israeli carrier El Al, regardless of your departure airport.

The airline has much heavier security measures than other airlines for entering Israel. Non-Jewish flyers can expect routine questions pertaining to why they are visiting Israel and about any stamps in their passport from Muslim countries. Upon departure from the Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv, all passengers are questioned before check-in. In theory, the questioning should not be hostile: just very thorough and possibly invasive. During my exit from Israel a few weeks ago, I was questioned exhaustively about several stamps in my passport from destinations such as the UAE, Morocco, Malaysia and Indonesia.

I was asked if I knew people in any of those countries, where I had stayed and what my purpose was for traveling there. Megan Robertson, a video editor and producer at TPG, remembers being questioned about her visit to Turkey, as well as her reasons for visiting Israel.

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