Requirements for foreign tourists to visit Phu Quoc under pilot scheme

Hanoi (VNA) – After two years of “freezing”, the Phu Quoc island city in the
Mekong Delta province of Kien Giang is expected to be first destination in the country to receive
foreign tourists after the Government approved the Ministry of Culture, Sports
and Tourism’ proposal on a pilot
plan to welcome tourists back under the vaccine passport
programme.
Under the plan, visitors from countries with high
safety in COVID-19 prevention and control in regions such as Northeast Asia,
Europe, the US, the Middle East, and Australia will need to book package
tours of travel agencies if they want to go to Phu Quoc.
To enter the
country, visitors must meet certain requirements including a certificate of full vaccination or recovery from
COVID-19 not more than 12 months from the date of their release from hospital to the date of entry. They also have to present a
negative COVID-19 testing certificate issued by authorised agencies within 72
hours before departure.
Children
under 12 years old have to travel with
their parents or guardians that satisfy the above-mentioned papers.
Visitors are also required to install the Vietnam Safe Travel or the Healthy Vietnam apps and make a medical declaration through
those apps. In case visitors do
not meet all the necessary requirements, they may be denied entry and bear the
cost of returning to their home country or transit.
After
arriving in the country, visitors must comply with the Health Ministry’s 5K
message – khau trang (face masks), khu khuan (disinfection), khoang cach
(distancing), khong tu tap (no gatherings), and khai bao y te (health
declarations).
Any tourists who have suspicion symptoms forCOVID-19 at the entry point should follow quarantine
measures, and always turn on bluetooth and GPS after installing medical declaration
applications.
Visitors have to travel on
their designated cars in line with the approved schedule. Service staff, drivers, guides and tourists are required to wear
masks throughout the journey.

Under the tourism sector's plan, Phu Quoc will receive tourists for six months in two phases on a trial basis, starting from
October. In the first phase, lasting three months, the island is
expected to welcome 3,000-5,000 international visitors per month via charter
flights, with visitors' activities limited to certain sites.
Depending on the outcome of the first phase, the pilot programme would be scaled up to welcome 5,000-10,000 passengers per month on commercial
flights, and the sites opened to foreign visitors might be extended./.