BRITS will need a vaccine passport to go on holiday in the future, Boris Johnson suggested today.
The PM is due to update the nation on vaccine passports and international travel on Monday.
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More than half the adult population have had their first vaccine, and ministers are looking at the role the passports could play in future.
Speaking at a B&Q in Middlesbrough today, Mr Johnson said in his strongest words yet on the issue: "There's definitely going to be a world in which international travel will use vaccine passports.
"You can see already that other countries, the aviation industry, are interested in this and there's a logic to that."
Countries around are setting up plans to ask people to prove their vaccination status before they are allowed in.
But Britain hasn't yet confirmed it will definitely be using them.
Michael Gove is conducting a review into the idea at the moment, and the PM has said he will give an update on Monday.
At the moment going on holiday is illegal – and travelling abroad without a valid reason in England could land you a fine of £5,000.
Everyone who does go abroad has to fill in the correct paperwork – or they will face a £200 fine.
The news comes after Wales' First Minister Mark Drakeford said earlier he hopes the PM puts back the date when people can go on holiday again.
He's not yet outlined a date in stone, but has said he hopes it could restart from May 17 onwards.
But rising cases of Covid across Europe mean it's looking less likely.
However, Mr Johnson has also suggested they could be used for pubs and restaurants in the UK too, and the review may allow individual businesses to set their own rules.
Ministers have stressed that they cannot rely on vaccine passports alone, and have indicated if they do allow pubs to demand them, they must also give the option for anti-body tests or Covid tests too.
The PM said this morning: "I think when it comes to trying to make sure that we give maximum confidence to businesses and customers in the UK, there are three things – there's immunity whether you have had it before so you have natural antibodies, whether you have been vaccinated, and of course whether you have had a test."
The PM is worried it could create a two-tier system.
He's keen for covid testing to be a part of any plans to open up the economy again, so it wouldn't discriminate against people who can't have the jab for medical reasons.
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