Have a check list – the sensible guide to travelling
Many years ago when I was a teenager, I set off with a mate from school on a train (well, a few trains) across Europe with a final destination of Istanbul. We both went away with backpacks, tickets and passports, our wits and not much else. We had the transit visas for Yugoslavia and Bulgaria that we needed in those days when the Berlin Wall was still very much in still standing, but that was about all the planning we did. We had a couple of scrapes, particularly losing each other in Belgrade when the coaches were shunted off to a different platform.
A bit of planning is never a bad thing because just thinking a bit in advance may save you a lot of pain when a problem occurs.Your check list will obviously depend on your destination. A driving trip through the Amazonian Rain Forest will obviously present more potential perils than a weekend getaway to Paris, but in a way the principle’s the same.
If you are travelling independently without the protection of a tour operator
There is a lot of information on the Foreign Office travel advice web site, particularly for “sensitive” countries. A travel guide will also be a good investment to help you get that little bit more from your trip as well as being a better read than the platitudes in the literature from the local tourist office
If you’re travelling within the European Union
Get a free European Health Insurance Card for free or reduced emergency care. It replaces the old E111 form. It won’t replace your travel insurance though.
Make sure your travel insurance covers everything you are likely to want to do
Are you going to play in a chess tournament? run a marathon? or jump off Niagara Falls in a barrel?* Even swimming in the Med has its dangers, you don’t want to meet to many jellyfish.
Make photocopies of your passport and other important documents
Keep them in a separate place just in case you mislay the originals or get them stolen. Even better, you could keep electronic copies on an online secure data storage site.
Talking of passports
If you haven’t already got one, you’ll have to go for an interview so the Passport Office can check you actually are who you say you are. Allow six weeks to get one.
For many countries outside the EU
Your passport must be valid for six months after you travel so check its expiry date.
Make sure you fill in the emergency contact details
It will make it much easier to contact someone should the need arise.
Tell people where you’re going and if possible
Give them an emergency contact number.
Take enough money with you
It’s always best to keep a mix of cash and travellers’ cheques. For many countries it’s an idea to have some US dollars, even these days.
If you’re planning to take significant amounts out of your own bank account
when you’re on the other side of the world, tell your bank before you go. There’s been a number of cases recently of well-intentioned but perhaps over-zealous banks blocking bank accounts because perfectly legitimate transactions were thought of as fraudulent.
If you’re planning to drive abroad
Make sure your licence is valid for that country and find out about the driving laws for where you’re going. It’s not just about driving on the other side of the road.
Drugs
Don’t go there. Watch Midnight Express to remind you why.
* Thinking about it, your travel insurer and the local constabulary might take a dim view of you jumping off Niagara Falls in a barrel. Best not do it.
Related posts:
- Driving your car in a foreign country – a guide to the basics
- World First Travel Insurance Check List
- Getting married abroad? Read this.
- Things to do when travelling abroad when pregnant
- An easy guide to getting a gap year right
Tags: Drive, Foreign Office, holiday, Travel Tips


January 17th, 2010 at 4:28 pm
Well said
January 17th, 2010 at 7:35 pm
[...] Have a check list – the sensible guide to travelling | World First Travel Insurance Blog blog.world-first.co.uk/327/have-a-check-list-the-sensible-guide-to-travelling – view page – cached Many years ago when I was a teenager, I set off with a mate from school on a train across Europe with a final destination of Istanbul. We both went away with [...]
February 19th, 2010 at 9:26 pm
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