Travel to Jordan, cross Israeli border and fly back from Tel Aviv












7














A friend (Swiss citizen) and I (French citizen) plan on going hiking in Jordan and Israel in February and March.



What we plan to do:




  • We will arrive by the same flight (but separately) in Queen Alia International Airport (Jordan). We get our Jordan visas there.

  • We hike for a few weeks on the Jordan Trail, finishing in Aqaba (Red Sea).

  • We cross the Israeli border at Wadi Araba Crossing / Yitzhak Rabin Crossing
    (getting Israeli visas there) and start hiking on the Israel National Trail.

  • We join Tel-Aviv from our stop point (we don't know yet where we will stop hiking, as it will depend on our walking pace) and fly back home from David-Ben-Gurion airport.


Are there any caveats to this plan?










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    yesterday










  • Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
    – Shan-x
    19 hours ago












  • The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    10 hours ago
















7














A friend (Swiss citizen) and I (French citizen) plan on going hiking in Jordan and Israel in February and March.



What we plan to do:




  • We will arrive by the same flight (but separately) in Queen Alia International Airport (Jordan). We get our Jordan visas there.

  • We hike for a few weeks on the Jordan Trail, finishing in Aqaba (Red Sea).

  • We cross the Israeli border at Wadi Araba Crossing / Yitzhak Rabin Crossing
    (getting Israeli visas there) and start hiking on the Israel National Trail.

  • We join Tel-Aviv from our stop point (we don't know yet where we will stop hiking, as it will depend on our walking pace) and fly back home from David-Ben-Gurion airport.


Are there any caveats to this plan?










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    yesterday










  • Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
    – Shan-x
    19 hours ago












  • The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    10 hours ago














7












7








7







A friend (Swiss citizen) and I (French citizen) plan on going hiking in Jordan and Israel in February and March.



What we plan to do:




  • We will arrive by the same flight (but separately) in Queen Alia International Airport (Jordan). We get our Jordan visas there.

  • We hike for a few weeks on the Jordan Trail, finishing in Aqaba (Red Sea).

  • We cross the Israeli border at Wadi Araba Crossing / Yitzhak Rabin Crossing
    (getting Israeli visas there) and start hiking on the Israel National Trail.

  • We join Tel-Aviv from our stop point (we don't know yet where we will stop hiking, as it will depend on our walking pace) and fly back home from David-Ben-Gurion airport.


Are there any caveats to this plan?










share|improve this question















A friend (Swiss citizen) and I (French citizen) plan on going hiking in Jordan and Israel in February and March.



What we plan to do:




  • We will arrive by the same flight (but separately) in Queen Alia International Airport (Jordan). We get our Jordan visas there.

  • We hike for a few weeks on the Jordan Trail, finishing in Aqaba (Red Sea).

  • We cross the Israeli border at Wadi Araba Crossing / Yitzhak Rabin Crossing
    (getting Israeli visas there) and start hiking on the Israel National Trail.

  • We join Tel-Aviv from our stop point (we don't know yet where we will stop hiking, as it will depend on our walking pace) and fly back home from David-Ben-Gurion airport.


Are there any caveats to this plan?







visas borders israel jordan






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




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edited yesterday









Community

1




1










asked yesterday









Shan-xShan-x

769321




769321








  • 2




    Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    yesterday










  • Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
    – Shan-x
    19 hours ago












  • The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    10 hours ago














  • 2




    Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    yesterday










  • Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
    – Shan-x
    19 hours ago












  • The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
    – Andrew Lazarus
    10 hours ago








2




2




Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
– Andrew Lazarus
yesterday




Note that the exit stamp from Jordan will imply that you are going to Israel, even if Israel doesn't stamp your passport. This has implications for future travel plans in several Muslim countries.
– Andrew Lazarus
yesterday












Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
– Shan-x
19 hours ago






Can we ask to get stamped on a piece of paper? (I actually plan on going in Iran someday)
– Shan-x
19 hours ago














The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
– Andrew Lazarus
10 hours ago




The Internet says Jordan will stamp your passport, period. It doesn't matter if Israel does, because Jordanian exit through the Aqaba land border is a tell-tale sign you went to Israel, regardless of stamps. There's disagreement on this site whether Iran views a visit to Israel as a complete automatic visa disqualifier. Some other countries (e.g., Saudia) appear to retain this policy, though.
– Andrew Lazarus
10 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














If you walk from Amman to Aqaba you'll stay quite a long time in Jordan.



I guess you'll see Wadi mujib, Petra, maybe even Wadi rum ... It could worth to buy a Jordan pass.



I don't see any problem to join Israel in your itinerary although you should check the border status few days before you arrive.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




PyNico is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    5














    From a visa point of view, your plan sounds fine. Be sure to arrive early at Ben Gurion, because you may get selected for extra questioning. Enjoy your trip!






    share|improve this answer





















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      4














      If you walk from Amman to Aqaba you'll stay quite a long time in Jordan.



      I guess you'll see Wadi mujib, Petra, maybe even Wadi rum ... It could worth to buy a Jordan pass.



      I don't see any problem to join Israel in your itinerary although you should check the border status few days before you arrive.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




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























        4














        If you walk from Amman to Aqaba you'll stay quite a long time in Jordan.



        I guess you'll see Wadi mujib, Petra, maybe even Wadi rum ... It could worth to buy a Jordan pass.



        I don't see any problem to join Israel in your itinerary although you should check the border status few days before you arrive.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




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





















          4












          4








          4






          If you walk from Amman to Aqaba you'll stay quite a long time in Jordan.



          I guess you'll see Wadi mujib, Petra, maybe even Wadi rum ... It could worth to buy a Jordan pass.



          I don't see any problem to join Israel in your itinerary although you should check the border status few days before you arrive.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




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









          If you walk from Amman to Aqaba you'll stay quite a long time in Jordan.



          I guess you'll see Wadi mujib, Petra, maybe even Wadi rum ... It could worth to buy a Jordan pass.



          I don't see any problem to join Israel in your itinerary although you should check the border status few days before you arrive.







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          PyNico 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






          New contributor




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









          answered yesterday









          PyNicoPyNico

          1561




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          New contributor




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          New contributor





          PyNico is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          PyNico is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              5














              From a visa point of view, your plan sounds fine. Be sure to arrive early at Ben Gurion, because you may get selected for extra questioning. Enjoy your trip!






              share|improve this answer


























                5














                From a visa point of view, your plan sounds fine. Be sure to arrive early at Ben Gurion, because you may get selected for extra questioning. Enjoy your trip!






                share|improve this answer
























                  5












                  5








                  5






                  From a visa point of view, your plan sounds fine. Be sure to arrive early at Ben Gurion, because you may get selected for extra questioning. Enjoy your trip!






                  share|improve this answer












                  From a visa point of view, your plan sounds fine. Be sure to arrive early at Ben Gurion, because you may get selected for extra questioning. Enjoy your trip!







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered yesterday









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