Can I travel to Dublin with a Permanent Residence Card ( issued from ITALY)?
I am a Lebanese citizin, living in italy for the past 6 years. I hold Lebanese passport and Italian permanent residence card.
Can i go to Dublin for few days without a visa?
Best Answer
The Irish Government has a website that tells you if you need a visa. It only asks about your nationality, not about permanent residence. From this, it appears that only your nationality matters and, as a Lebanese national, you need a visa.
If you don't want to trust this argument of "They'd ask about your permanent residence if it made a difference", you can look for more information on the website of the Irish embassy in Italy or telephone them at +39 06 585 2381.
Pictures about "Can I travel to Dublin with a Permanent Residence Card ( issued from ITALY)?"
Can I travel to Ireland with my Italian residence permit?
Please note that Ireland is not party to the Schengen Agreement, and a Schengen visa or residence permit does not entitle you to travel to Ireland without a visa.Can I go to Ireland with Carta di Soggiorno?
Show activity on this post. Your Italian residence permit allows you to travel within the Schengen area and to the Schengen-candidate EU members (Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, and Romania). It does not allow you to travel to the United Kingdom (where Edinburgh is), nor to Ireland.Can you travel with Italian residence permit?
All foreign national citizens who hold an EU long term residence permit or a valid residence permit of another type, can leave Italy and move freely within the Schengen area for tourism purposes, bringing with them just a passport and the residence permit.Can I use residence card to travel?
If you have settled or pre-settled status You can continue to use your residence card until it expires. You can use it to: re-enter the country if you travel abroad.WORKING IN IRELAND🇮🇪 WITH ITALIAN🇮🇹 REFUGEE PERMIT |CREDIT TO RICHIE FOR SHARING HIS EXPERIENCE|
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Maria Orlova, Leah Kelley, Maria Orlova, Tatiana Syrikova