Covid certificate for entry from Switzerland to Italy

Covid certificate for entry from Switzerland to Italy - Woman walking through turnstile in subway

Italy requires an EU COVID-19 Green Certificate for entry from Schengen countries.

However, the Swiss digital certificate is not yet integrated into the EU system.

The EU website says

Phase-in period: if a Member State is not yet ready to issue the new certificate to its citizens, other formats can still be used and should be accepted in other Member States.

Does Switzerland fall under this and what formats are acceptable to Italy? Is the Swiss digital certificate nonetheless acceptable? Or are more traditional formats (e.g. vaccination booklet, separate attestations) required?



Best Answer

You should carry the paper documentation of the vaccinations. Now in EU there is a transition period, where also the "old" paper certifications are valid, with the hope that soon also the electronic certificate will be recognized by EU. OTOH there is a lot of geopolitics involved, so...we never know.

Note: very recently Italy changed rules for border crossing, and now they check much more compared to last week, e.g. all passengers on long distance trains.

EDIT/UPDATE:

Some additional passes were done, to approve Swiss electronic certificate as "green pass". It seems that now it lacks just the last step: the political green light (so just to make it official), and such green light it is expected within few days.

UPDATE #2:

Now the Swiss vaccination certificate is valid in the EU.




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More answers regarding covid certificate for entry from Switzerland to Italy

Answer 2

The International Certificate of Vaccination (ICVP), introduced in in the early 1930's, is and will remain the main form of, internationally recognized, proof (certification) of which vaccinations a person has recieved

  • and nothing more

Therefore, in situations where proof of vaccination is required, such as for entry from Switzerland to Italy, a International Certificate of Vaccination is sufficient.

This assumes that the person checking the certificate knows what to look for and what is considered to be valid.

In the present situation, where waiters are required to check these certificates, this poses a problem.

For this reason a QR-Code based digital solution has been developed.

But this solution does not replace the International Certificate of Vaccination, it only simplifies the process.

In the end, it is up to the traveler to insure has a needed documentation and that it is valid.


ICVP - Required components
The main portion of the ICVP is a form for physicians to fill out when administering a vaccine. This section is mandated by the WHO's 2005 International Health Regulations, in which they provide a model of the document. It includes places for the traveller's name, date of birth, sex, nationality, national identification document, and signature. Below that is a row for each vaccine administered, in which the physician must include the prophylaxis or vaccine administered, date, signature, manufacturer and batch number, dates valid, and an official stamp from the administering centre.

Below this, the document outlines requirements for validity. The ICVP is only valid for vaccines approved by the WHO. The form must be fully completed in English or French by a medical practitioner or authorized health worker and must include the official stamp of the administering centre. The certificate is valid for as long as the vaccines included are valid.

This ICVP may possibly be considered to be invalid:

  • due to the missing official stamp of the administering centre

Sources:

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