+xWhen our convictions are Spent, do we have to disclose our conviction on applying for a visa? They often ask " Have you ever been convicted of....?" In the Uk we can say no, but when applying for visas, how do other countries view our "pardon"? The new Shenghen visa application which comes into force in 2024 will not ask about convictions over 10 years old. Is this correct? Convictions from UK courts are only spent under the law in the various parts of the UK. That law doesn't apply anywhere else. Having said that, many countries would only want to see a police certificate for a full visa. For a travel authorisation, they would probably just ask the disclosure question(s) and rely on your honesty. The exception would be the USA from 2027, as the Enhanced Border Security Partnership agreement means they should have access to the UK's biometric information database. If your fingerprints generate a hit on their system, they will probably assume that you had been arrested at some point and will require a visa or proof of no criminal record. In terms of the EU system, ETIAS, that is another travel authorisation system, so they will ask you politely to disclose, but if you don't disclose, then if they have nothing on their databases they will issue an authorisation. All Schengen system alerts added by the UK were deleted by the time UK left the EU. Disclosure would only be required for a full Schengen visa for convictions in specified categories of offence in the previous 15 years. After 15 years, you wouldn't have to disclose. Credit to tedstriker for finding so much of this information and posting it on this forum.
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If you are to punish a man retributively you must injure him. If you are to reform him you must improve him. And men are not improved by injuries. (George Bernard Shaw)
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