What happens if you get Covid in Spain, France, Greece, USA?And DO you still want to isolate yourself in certain places?

WITH Covid cases on the rise in Europe, catching the holidays is a real possibility.

If this happens, the country has its own rules and regulations for which they test positive.

Here are the regulations for some of the most popular holiday destinations for Britons, if you contract Covid this summer.

If you have symptoms or test positive for Covid your stay in Spain, you are not required to self-isolate, but you are asked to inform direct contacts.

The Spanish government also recommends taking the following additional precautionary measures for 10 days from the diagnosis or onset of symptoms:

Hotels and other accommodation providers may have their own Covid protocols, which you will want to follow.

Your internet server may have a list of personal doctors they can call to assess your symptoms and take a Covid test.

You will be guilty of the charge of any remedy provided through a personal doctor or hospital.

Rapid lateral tests (“antigen tests”) are widely found in pharmacies in Spain for a fee.

If your symptoms persist or worsen, call your regional hotline.

Travelers who have tested positive for Covid during their stay in Greece in the past had to self-isolate for five days, but that is no longer the case, following an update to the main rule this week.

He announced that there would no longer be quarantine rooms in hotels.

Under the new guidelines, travelers to Greece will be able to decide whether they want to remain isolated for the remaining time in the country.

If you test positive for Covid in France and are fully vaccinated (including a booster) or if you have had Covid in the last 4 months, you will need to self-isolate for seven days.

It starts on the day you developed the first symptoms or seven days from the date of the positive result.

Self-isolation can be reduced to five days if you have a negative PCR or antigen test (supervised, self-administered) on the fifth day and have experienced any symptoms in the past 48 hours.

These isolation rules also apply to young people under the age of 12, regardless of their vaccination status.

If you are not vaccinated or partially vaccinated and have not had Covid in the last 4 months, you will need to self-isolate for 10 days.

Self-isolation can be reduced to seven days if you have a negative PCR or antigen test on the seventh day and have experienced any symptoms in the past 48 hours.

This may be only in your existing accommodation, however, the French government provides or pays for quarantine accommodation.

If you test positive for COVID-19 in Portugal, you’ll want to self-isolate, no matter how long you are.

If you are in mainland Portugal, you will need to self-isolate for at least seven days.

If you’re in Madeira, Porto Santo, or the Azores, you’ll want to self-isolate for at least five days.

If your check is positive in the United States, you will need to self-isolate for five days from the date of your positive check, regardless of vaccination status.

You are also asked to wear a mask that fits you well if you want to be in the presence of other people in your home.

You can end isolation after five full days if you have not had a fever for 24 hours, without fever medication, and if your symptoms improve.

Then, you’ll need to wear a mask that fits you well for a full 10 days whenever you’re in the presence of other people and asked not to go to places where you can’t wear a mask.

You must wait 10 full days for Array, so you may want to increase your balance if your check is positive with less than ten days remaining.

Different insurance companies will offer other policy grades if travelers have to cancel something in case of Covid.

Britons have been warned that restrictions may return if cases continue to rise as they are.

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