Two teens, aged 13, traveling alone internationally

7/2/2023 9:37:06 PM

This assumes that this is booked as a single itinerary. I think a self-connection would be a non-starter here.

Unfortunately rules around this vary a lot by airline and by country are often vague. From https://www.cph.dk/en/practical/traveling-with-children/unaccompanied-children

When it comes to children travelling alone, the rules vary from airline to airline, and there are no international guidelines for unaccompanied minors.

What you should be doing:

  1. Write a letter that authorizes the travel, states the details of travel and is signed by all legal guardians. Make sure each kid has at least two paper copies and an electronic copy if it.
  2. The kids should also have paper and electronic copies of all important travel document. Download the app from the airline, make accounts and make sure the reservation is associated with their account.
  3. Contact the airline and confirm that 13-year old’s are allowed to travel alone. Get it in writing if possible. If you are lucky, you may find it on the airline’s website. If they are flying on two different airlines (e.g. a code share) contact both airlines.
  4. The kids will have to go through passport control in Denmark as this is their entry port into the Schengen area. Make sure their passports are up to date (including photos) and practice a few questions that the immigration officer might ask. "where are your parent", "why are you travelling alone", "where will you be going", etc. Showing the letter will help.
  5. Make sure the kids have access to a telephone. Most airports do have WIFI but that can be hit or miss and also depends if their phone supports WIFI calling. WhatsApp is a good choice for WIFI calls (independent of you phone’s carrier). SIM card or international phone is another option.
  6. Write down the exact travel process step by step and go through it with the kids.
  7. Create some "call or text" points: when they arrive, when they are through immigration, when they are at the gate, etc. Make sure you are online during that event (even if it’s the middle of the night)
  8. Make sure they have access to money, if they need some. Unfortunately the currency in Denmark is Danish Krona (not Euro). Credit cards work well there too.
  9. work together through some "what if" scenarios and write down the plan. That helps the kids to think through the travel in more tangible and they are better prepared to handle and outliers.
  10. Provided they speak English, there will be no language problem. Most people in Scandinavia speak excellent English.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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