Family holiday to Greece ruined when little-known passport rule leaves 'devastated' Mum sobbing at airport
Family holiday to Greece ruined when little-known passport rule leaves 'devastated' Mum sobbing at airport
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Family holiday to Greece ruined when little-known passport rule leaves 'devastated' Mum sobbing at airport

Miranda Pell 🕒︎ 2025-11-05

Copyright manchestereveningnews

Family holiday to Greece ruined when little-known passport rule leaves 'devastated' Mum sobbing at airport

A mum's family holiday to Greece was ruined when she was told she couldn’t board her flight because of a little-known passport rule. Wendy Melville, 46, was turned away at the airport gate while her husband Gerry, 49, and their two kids Henry, 16, and Kate, 13, were let through. Staff pointed out that Wendy's passport was due to expire in January 2026, and therefore she wasn't allowed to fly due to the so-called “three-month rule”. The rule is that many countries require travellers to have between three and six months’ validity left on their passport from the date of arrival or departure. Join the Manchester Evening News WhatsApp group HERE Wendy, from Bedford, Bedfordshire, told Luxury Travel Daily: " I was absolutely gutted, I was in tears. It let me check in online and didn’t flag anything - if it had, I would have had time to get a new passport.” The family arrived at Luton Airport at around 4am for their 6am flight to Crete, Greece, on 26 October. Wendy said: “When we checked my bag in, it told me to speak to a member of staff. I thought it was just a tech issue - I wasn’t panicking. Then they told me my passport expires within the next few months and they were really sorry but couldn’t let me on. “We had to choose between all of us going home and losing the holiday or me staying behind and trying to get a new passport. I sent my children away with their dad and said I’d join them. It was devastating.” Determined not to miss out entirely, Wendy booked the first available passport appointment two days later. But the mix-up cost her £250 for the new passport, £106 for a hotel near Gatwick, and £86 for a replacement flight. She finally joined her family on the third day of their trip. Wendy said: “It ended up being an expensive mistake and I had to wait four hours for my new passport. I’d never heard of the rule. Your passport is valid but you can’t use it - it’s bonkers. “What’s the point in having an expiry date? Everyone in the passport office was saying how common it is because you look at the date and think it’s valid.” Luckily, Wendy made up for lost time once she arrived, as she explained: “When I finally got there, it was lovely. I made the most of the all-inclusive I’d missed out on, so it was a great holiday in the end. “But people need to know the rule - always check your expiry date and the entry rules of the country you’re going to.”

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