Ireland Level 5 Lockdown: What it means?

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Ireland is about to enter Level 5 Lockdown, what effectively means almost a complete travel ban.

The Irish cabinet subcommittee on Covid-19 meeting has ended, with Ministers set to recommend an extension to the Level 5 lockdown until March 5.

Proposals for new travel restrictions will also be brought to tomorrow’s full meeting of Cabinet, but it is understood that no decision has been made on the Leaving Cert or a return to education, due next week.

Construction sites, apart from those currently allowed to operate, will remain closed until March 5. 

The Cabinet sub-committee on Covid agreed that all those coming from South Africa and Brazil where Covid variants have been found will face mandatory quarantine when entering the country.

One source said this would effectively amount to a travel ban for particular countries.

However, it is understood that this may take some time to implement as arrangements will have to be made with hotels.

Passengers entering from other regions will be expected to self-isolate and this will now be “legally binding and penal” and will no longer be advisory as has been the case.

It is understood that Ministers also discussed the possibility of testing people on arrival at airports as well as requiring a PCR test prior to travelling.

The number of new measures to curb the spread of the virus that will go to Cabinet tomorrow, include:

  • Garda checkpoints will be set up outside airports and ports to stop non-essential travel, with increased fines for those leaving for non-essential purposes – including an increased fine over the โ‚ฌ100 currently in place. It is understood that this could be increased to โ‚ฌ250. Checkpoints will also check for returning holidaymakers.
  • Mandatory hotel quarantine for all arrivals from South Africa and Brazil for at least five and up to 14 days at a state-designated hotel if they test positive on day five. All mandatory quarantine will be at the traveller’s expense.
  • The introduction of much stricter sanctions for breach of the five-kilometre rule to stop people flying. This will include fines for those who try to go abroad for non-essential reasons.
  • Mandatory hotel quarantine for 14 days as well as a fine of up to โ‚ฌ2,500 or up to six months in prison for those arriving into the country who don’t have a negative PCR test to address a loophole that allowed authorities punish people, but not to stop them entering the state.
  • A temporary suspension on all visa-free short-term travel for those coming from South Africa and South America.
  • Antigen testing at motorway services areas close to Dublin Port and Rosslare for hauliers travelling to France from Thursday.
  • Strengthening the passenger locator form with more questions asked and more follow-ups after a person arrives in the country, as well as new fines for breaches of the form.

About the author

Avatar of Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen Thomas Steinmetz has continuously worked in the travel and tourism industry since he was a teenager in Germany (1977).
He founded eTurboNews in 1999 as the first online newsletter for the global travel tourism industry.

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