What does “valid for” really mean on SWISS's online booking page?












15















I'm trying to check in online to a flight from Eastern Europe to the US that I booked with SWISS.
However, the online form is asking me to specify a country in the "Valid for" list, to which I have no idea how to respond.



I would go out on a limb and say "US", but that information would be redundant! It already knows I'm flying to the US and it asked me about my US visa information. I mean, it should be logical to assume that if a person has a US visa, it would be valid for the US, right?



Another guess I had is to specify my home country that issued the passport, but that would make even less sense, as the passport is meant to be "valid for" the entire world.



So what country should I specify in the "Valid for" field?



enter image description here










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  • 1





    Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 10:19











  • @GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:24








  • 1





    Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:30
















15















I'm trying to check in online to a flight from Eastern Europe to the US that I booked with SWISS.
However, the online form is asking me to specify a country in the "Valid for" list, to which I have no idea how to respond.



I would go out on a limb and say "US", but that information would be redundant! It already knows I'm flying to the US and it asked me about my US visa information. I mean, it should be logical to assume that if a person has a US visa, it would be valid for the US, right?



Another guess I had is to specify my home country that issued the passport, but that would make even less sense, as the passport is meant to be "valid for" the entire world.



So what country should I specify in the "Valid for" field?



enter image description here










share|improve this question







New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 10:19











  • @GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:24








  • 1





    Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:30














15












15








15








I'm trying to check in online to a flight from Eastern Europe to the US that I booked with SWISS.
However, the online form is asking me to specify a country in the "Valid for" list, to which I have no idea how to respond.



I would go out on a limb and say "US", but that information would be redundant! It already knows I'm flying to the US and it asked me about my US visa information. I mean, it should be logical to assume that if a person has a US visa, it would be valid for the US, right?



Another guess I had is to specify my home country that issued the passport, but that would make even less sense, as the passport is meant to be "valid for" the entire world.



So what country should I specify in the "Valid for" field?



enter image description here










share|improve this question







New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm trying to check in online to a flight from Eastern Europe to the US that I booked with SWISS.
However, the online form is asking me to specify a country in the "Valid for" list, to which I have no idea how to respond.



I would go out on a limb and say "US", but that information would be redundant! It already knows I'm flying to the US and it asked me about my US visa information. I mean, it should be logical to assume that if a person has a US visa, it would be valid for the US, right?



Another guess I had is to specify my home country that issued the passport, but that would make even less sense, as the passport is meant to be "valid for" the entire world.



So what country should I specify in the "Valid for" field?



enter image description here







check-in swiss






share|improve this question







New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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asked Jan 21 at 8:46









はいはいはいはいはいはい

1965




1965




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はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1





    Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 10:19











  • @GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:24








  • 1





    Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:30














  • 1





    Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 10:19











  • @GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:24








  • 1





    Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

    – はいはいはい
    Jan 21 at 10:30








1




1





Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jan 21 at 10:19





Travel document could be different to the document you have the visa (e.g. if you have two passports). But could you add also a screen shot of the German page. Maybe it is a translation error (lack of context). Or just an error. But no, your passport is not valid for all the world: every country decides which passport they consider valid (country and/or type: temporary passports have restrictions).

– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jan 21 at 10:19













@GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

– はいはいはい
Jan 21 at 10:24







@GiacomoCatenazzi The German version says "Gültig für" which as far as my German goes is the same exact thing. I agree about the passport, my point was that the passport is meant to be your universal ID across multiple countries. It is not meant to be "valid" in just one foreign country. Mine certainly isn't, at least.

– はいはいはい
Jan 21 at 10:24






1




1





Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

– はいはいはい
Jan 21 at 10:30





Funnily enough, the Russian version translates as "Valid until" which is just blatantly incorrect, considering you have to pick a country.

– はいはいはい
Jan 21 at 10:30










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















12














According to a SWISS representative on Twitter, you need to specify the destination country, which in this particular case is the US:




Yes, then it would be the country you're travelling to.
https://twitter.com/FlySWISS/status/1087295723387932672




I'm personally not very happy with the lack of common sense in the way the check-in form is composed, but that is the official answer. I can only guess that for some other destinations it is not as obvious whether or not a (non-US) visa would allow entry to some other country due to some international agreements.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 13:03











  • Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

    – Mehrdad
    Jan 21 at 18:58











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active

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12














According to a SWISS representative on Twitter, you need to specify the destination country, which in this particular case is the US:




Yes, then it would be the country you're travelling to.
https://twitter.com/FlySWISS/status/1087295723387932672




I'm personally not very happy with the lack of common sense in the way the check-in form is composed, but that is the official answer. I can only guess that for some other destinations it is not as obvious whether or not a (non-US) visa would allow entry to some other country due to some international agreements.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 13:03











  • Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

    – Mehrdad
    Jan 21 at 18:58
















12














According to a SWISS representative on Twitter, you need to specify the destination country, which in this particular case is the US:




Yes, then it would be the country you're travelling to.
https://twitter.com/FlySWISS/status/1087295723387932672




I'm personally not very happy with the lack of common sense in the way the check-in form is composed, but that is the official answer. I can only guess that for some other destinations it is not as obvious whether or not a (non-US) visa would allow entry to some other country due to some international agreements.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 13:03











  • Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

    – Mehrdad
    Jan 21 at 18:58














12












12








12







According to a SWISS representative on Twitter, you need to specify the destination country, which in this particular case is the US:




Yes, then it would be the country you're travelling to.
https://twitter.com/FlySWISS/status/1087295723387932672




I'm personally not very happy with the lack of common sense in the way the check-in form is composed, but that is the official answer. I can only guess that for some other destinations it is not as obvious whether or not a (non-US) visa would allow entry to some other country due to some international agreements.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










According to a SWISS representative on Twitter, you need to specify the destination country, which in this particular case is the US:




Yes, then it would be the country you're travelling to.
https://twitter.com/FlySWISS/status/1087295723387932672




I'm personally not very happy with the lack of common sense in the way the check-in form is composed, but that is the official answer. I can only guess that for some other destinations it is not as obvious whether or not a (non-US) visa would allow entry to some other country due to some international agreements.







share|improve this answer








New contributor




はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






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answered Jan 21 at 11:24









はいはいはいはいはいはい

1965




1965




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はいはいはい is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 3





    Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 13:03











  • Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

    – Mehrdad
    Jan 21 at 18:58














  • 3





    Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

    – Giacomo Catenazzi
    Jan 21 at 13:03











  • Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

    – Mehrdad
    Jan 21 at 18:58








3




3





Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jan 21 at 13:03





Sometime a US visa or a Schengen visa allows you to enter in third countries (such countries assumes that if you have such visa, you will not remain illegally in he country). And Guam has some special status. You may have a US visa for Guam (so you must have a transfer flight). But the form is ill formatted in any way. Other airlines ask for final destination, and your visas for the transfer airports, in a much more logical way.

– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jan 21 at 13:03













Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

– Mehrdad
Jan 21 at 18:58





Man, that tweet doesn't inspire confidence. "The country you're traveling to"? I'd have expected the response to be "USA" for someone who understood the confusion...

– Mehrdad
Jan 21 at 18:58










はいはいはい is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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