The case is being updated.
The regions concerned are Dalarna, Gotland, Gävleborg, Halland, Jämtland, Skåne, Stockholm, Södermanland, Uppsala, Västerbotten, Västernorrland, Västmanland, Västra Götaland, Örebro and Östergötland.
Norway follows the EU’s threshold for green countries from 5 July. Travelers from these countries are released from entry quarantine upon arrival in Norway.
The new green countries are:
Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, France, the Faroe Islands, Greece, Italy, Croatia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Romania, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, the Vatican City and Austria.
The following countries remain green:
Greenland and Iceland.
The following countries continue to be orange or red:
Ireland, Cyprus, Latvia, Monaco, the Netherlands and Portugal (orange).
Andorra, Spain and Great Britain (red).
For travelers from the United Kingdom, there will no longer be a requirement to complete parts of the quarantine period in quarantine hotels (going from dark red to red).
European holiday islands are turning green
The health authorities have assessed the infection situation on the islands as separate regions, instead of assessing the country as a whole.
The following islands turn green:
- Ionian Islands, Greece
- Crete, Greece
- North Aegean Islands, Greece
- Corsica, France
- Madeira, Portugal
- Sardinia, Italy
- Sicily Italy
The following islands / archipelagos turn red or orange:
- Azores, Portugal (orange)
- Balearic Islands, Spain (orange)
- South Aegean Islands, Greece (orange)
- Canary Islands, Spain (red)
From 5 July, the threshold for what is a green country will change, and entry quarters will be released when you return home from countries in the EEA / Schengen and the United Kingdom with less than 50 infected per 100,000 inhabitants in the last two weeks. Less than 4 percent of all corona tests must also be negative.
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