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Short Description: Complete guide to Greece’s Schengen Airport Transit Visa (Type A): who needs it, eligibility, documents, fees, process, refusals, and official sources.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-02
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Greece |
| Visa name | Schengen Airport Transit Visa |
| Visa short name | A |
| Category | Short-stay Schengen visa for airport transit only |
| Main purpose | To allow certain nationals to transit through the international transit area of a Greek airport while connecting to a flight to a non-Schengen destination |
| Typical applicant | Air passenger changing planes in Greece without entering the Schengen area |
| Validity | Usually valid for the transit journey and dates granted on the visa sticker; exact validity depends on the consulate’s decision |
| Stay duration | No entry into Greece/Schengen territory; transit only within the international transit area |
| Entries allowed | Usually one or more airport transits as issued; check visa sticker |
| Extension possible? | Generally no; airport transit visas are not designed for extension |
| Work allowed? | No |
| Study allowed? | No |
| Family allowed? | No separate family status under this visa; each traveler who requires a visa must qualify and apply individually |
| PR path? | No |
| Citizenship path? | No |
The Schengen Airport Transit Visa, usually called a Type A visa, is a short-stay Schengen visa category that allows certain non-EU/non-Schengen nationals to pass through the international transit zone of an airport in a Schengen state, including Greece, while waiting for a connecting flight to a non-Schengen country.
It exists because some travelers are considered visa-required even for airside transit, depending on their nationality or individual circumstances. The visa allows a person to remain in the airport transit area during a connection, but does not allow entry into Greece or the Schengen area.
In Greece’s system, this is a visa sticker/entry clearance document, not a residence permit, not a work permit, and not an e-visa. It is issued under the Schengen Visa Code framework and applied by Greece through its consular authorities.
Key points
- It is for airport transit only.
- It is not for tourism, visiting family, attending meetings in Greece, or overnight stays that require passing border control.
- It is a Schengen visa type, but much more limited than a normal short-stay Type C visa.
- Final permission to transit remains subject to airline rules, border checks, and airport layout/operational requirements.
Official and alternate naming
Common official names include:
- Airport Transit Visa
- Schengen Airport Transit Visa
- Type A Visa
- In EU legal texts: airport transit visa
Greek missions may simply list it under Schengen visa categories as A visa or Airport Transit.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
This visa is for a narrow group of travelers.
Ideal applicants
Transit passengers
This is the main intended group.
You may need this visa if:
- you are a national of a country subject to airport transit visa requirements, and
- you will connect through a Greek airport, and
- you will remain in the international transit area, and
- your final destination is outside the Schengen area.
Who this visa is generally not for
Most of the following people should not use a Type A visa unless their trip is genuinely airport-only transit:
- Tourists: need a Schengen short-stay visa (Type C) if visa-required
- Business visitors attending meetings in Greece: usually need Type C
- Job seekers: Type A is not suitable
- Employees/workers: need the proper national work visa/residence authorization
- Students: need a study visa/residence route if entering Greece
- Spouses/partners/dependents visiting or joining family: usually Type C or national visa depending on purpose/duration
- Researchers
- Digital nomads
- Founders/entrepreneurs
- Investors
- Retirees
- Religious workers
- Artists/athletes
- Medical travelers
- People marrying in Greece
- People collecting residence permits
- People whose itinerary requires exiting the airport, changing terminals landside, or changing airports
Diplomatic and official travelers
Diplomatic, service, or official passport holders may have different exemption rules depending on nationality and international agreements. These rules are nationality-specific and must be checked with the relevant Greek consulate.
Warning: If your connection requires you to pass through Greek border control even briefly, a Type A visa is usually the wrong visa. You may need a Type C short-stay visa instead.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purpose
The permitted purpose is very limited:
- Transit through the international transit area of a Greek airport
- Connecting to a flight to a non-Schengen destination
- In some cases, multiple airport transits if the visa is issued that way
Prohibited purposes
A Type A visa does not authorize:
- tourism in Greece
- tourism anywhere in Schengen
- entering Greece to stay in a hotel
- passing through border control
- collecting baggage and re-checking it landside if that requires entry
- domestic travel within Greece
- meetings in Greece
- employment
- remote work from Greece
- internships
- study
- volunteering
- paid performances
- journalism work in Greece
- medical treatment in Greece
- marriage in Greece
- religious activity in Greece
- family reunion
- investment/business setup in Greece
- long-term residence
Common misunderstandings
“I’m only in the airport for 4 hours, so I never need a visa.”
Not always true. Some nationalities require an airport transit visa even for a short connection.
“I won’t leave the airport, so a Type A always works.”
Not always. If your airport routing requires: – changing airports, – overnight landside transfer, – collecting baggage and re-checking after immigration, – a terminal transfer that is not fully airside,
then you may need a Type C visa, not Type A.
“I have a valid visa for my final destination, so Greece does not matter.”
Incorrect. Greek/Schengen transit rules may still apply unless you fall under an exemption.
4. Official visa classification and naming
| Item | Official classification |
|---|---|
| Program name | Schengen Airport Transit Visa |
| Short code | Type A |
| Long name | Airport Transit Visa |
| Legal framework | EU Visa Code / Schengen rules, applied by Greece |
| Nature | Visa sticker for airport transit only |
| Residence permit? | No |
| Entry visa to Greece? | No, not for entry into Greek territory |
| Commonly confused with | Type C Schengen visa; national long-stay visa (Type D) |
Categories people confuse it with
Type A vs Type C
- Type A: airside airport transit only
- Type C: short-stay visa allowing entry into Schengen territory, subject to conditions
Type A vs Type D
- Type D: national long-stay visa for work, study, family reunification, etc.
- Type A: no residence rights at all
5. Eligibility criteria
Because this is a Schengen visa category, eligibility is driven mainly by nationality, itinerary, and transit conditions.
Core eligibility rules
You generally need to qualify if:
- you are from a nationality that requires an airport transit visa
- your transit is through a Greek airport in the Schengen area
- you are traveling onward to a non-Schengen destination
- you will remain in the international transit area
- you hold valid documents for your destination and any other transit points
Nationality rules
This is the single most important factor.
Under EU rules, certain nationalities are subject to the airport transit visa requirement. Greece may also apply certain rules through Schengen law and consular implementation. You must check the current nationality list with the Greek consulate handling your case and the EU visa rules.
In addition, even if your nationality is generally subject to ATV requirements, you may be exempt if you hold certain valid visas/residence permits from specified countries. Exact exemption categories must be checked carefully.
Passport validity
You should normally have:
- a valid passport or travel document
- issued within the accepted period under Schengen rules where applicable
- valid for the journey and usually beyond it
For airport transit, exact passport validity requirements may still follow standard Schengen document controls. If your passport is near expiry, confirm with the Greek mission.
Age
No minimum age for needing a visa. Minors who require a visa must generally apply too, with parental documentation.
Education, language, work experience
Not applicable for this visa.
Sponsorship, invitation, job offer, admission letter
Usually not applicable unless: – a sponsor is covering travel costs, or – supporting evidence is needed to explain the itinerary.
A job offer, school admission, or business plan does not make Type A appropriate.
Maintenance funds
Consulates may ask for proof that you can lawfully complete your journey, especially: – ticketing – right of entry to final destination – enough funds for the transit itinerary and emergencies
There is no widely published Greece-specific airport transit minimum funds rule on one single official page. This can be consulate-specific in practice.
Accommodation proof
Normally not applicable for true airside transit. But if your itinerary suggests a stay outside the transit zone, Type A may be refused as the wrong category.
Onward travel
Essential. You should have:
- confirmed onward booking
- lawful admission to final destination where required
- visas or residence permits for final destination/transit countries if needed
Health and character
As with Schengen visas generally, applicants may be refused on public policy, security, or public health grounds.
Insurance
Travel medical insurance is typically a key Type C requirement. For Type A, insurance rules may be less emphasized than for entry visas, but some consulates may still ask for supporting travel coverage or itinerary assurance. Check the local Greek mission’s checklist.
Biometrics
Usually required for Schengen visa applicants unless exempt under biometrics rules.
Intent requirements
You must show that: – your purpose is genuine airport transit – you do not intend to enter Greece – your documents match that purpose
Residency outside Greece
You usually apply through the Greek consulate/visa center responsible for your country of residence or lawful presence.
Quotas/caps/ballots
Not applicable for this visa.
Embassy-specific rules
Very important. Greek embassies/consulates often publish local instructions on: – appointment method – local checklists – accepted translations – visa center arrangements – payment method – passport return options
Special exemptions
Under Schengen rules, some travelers may be exempt from airport transit visa requirements, for example because they hold certain valid: – visas – residence permits – family member status linked to EU citizens – diplomatic documents
These exemptions are highly fact-specific and should be verified with the Greek consulate.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
You are likely ineligible if:
- your itinerary requires entry into Greece/Schengen territory
- your final destination is within Schengen
- you cannot prove onward travel
- you lack permission to enter the final destination
- your passport is invalid or damaged
- you apply under the wrong visa category
Common refusal triggers
| Refusal trigger | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Wrong visa class | Type A requested, but itinerary requires Type C |
| No valid onward visa | You cannot complete the journey lawfully |
| Incomplete documents | Consulate cannot verify facts |
| Inconsistent itinerary | Transit purpose appears unclear or implausible |
| Suspicious route | Routing seems artificial or unsupported |
| Unverifiable documents | Raises fraud concerns |
| Previous overstay/violation | Affects credibility and admissibility |
| Security/public policy concerns | Mandatory refusal grounds may apply |
| Invalid passport | Basic travel document failure |
| Interview inconsistency | Purpose or travel plan seems unreliable |
Weak travel history?
For Type A, “weak travel history” is usually less central than for visitor visas, but credibility still matters if the route or final destination documents are unclear.
Translation/notarization mistakes
These can matter if supporting documents are not in an accepted language or format under local consular rules.
Common Mistake: Applying for Type A when you have a long layover, overnight hotel stay, airport change, or self-transfer requiring immigration clearance.
7. Benefits of this visa
The benefits are narrow but real.
Main benefits
- Allows visa-required travelers to complete an otherwise lawful airside connection through Greece
- Can facilitate a planned international itinerary without entering Schengen territory
- May be issued for one or multiple transits, depending on the case
- Useful for travelers connecting to destinations outside Schengen through Greek airports
What it does not provide
- no residence rights
- no work rights
- no study rights
- no path to settlement
- no family migration benefit
- no social benefits
8. Limitations and restrictions
Core restrictions
- No entry into Greece
- No entry into Schengen territory
- No work
- No study
- No extension in the ordinary sense
- No conversion to residence status from transit
- Valid only for the airport transit conditions granted
Travel restrictions
- You must remain in the international transit area
- If operational circumstances force entry through border control, the airline and border authorities may require a different visa
- Not all airports/terminal transfers are suitable for Type A transit
Reporting obligations
Generally none beyond complying with visa conditions. But all travelers remain subject to: – airline document checks – border inspection – security screening
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Validity
The visa sticker will show: – validity dates – number of entries/transits – visa type
The exact validity is set by the issuing authority.
Stay duration
This visa does not grant a “stay” in Greece in the ordinary sense. It allows presence only in the international airport transit zone while waiting for the onward flight.
Entries allowed
Could be: – single transit – double transit – multiple airport transits
Always check the sticker.
When the clock starts
The visa is usable only within the dates printed on it. You must transit during that validity period.
Grace periods
No general grace period is publicly established for Type A. Assume strict compliance is required.
Overstay consequences
If you leave the transit zone or remain unlawfully, consequences can include: – refusal of entry – detention – removal – future visa refusals – immigration penalties under national/EU rules
10. Complete document checklist
Document lists vary by embassy/consulate and nationality. Always use the local Greek mission checklist.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa application form | Schengen visa form | Required to apply | Incomplete answers, wrong category |
| Appointment confirmation | Booking proof | Needed for submission | Wrong location/date |
| Visa fee receipt | Payment proof if prepaid | Administrative processing | Bringing wrong payment format |
| Cover letter if requested or useful | Brief explanation of transit | Clarifies route and purpose | Overexplaining or contradicting tickets |
B. Identity/travel documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passport | Main travel document | Identity and travel authorization | Damaged passport, insufficient blank pages |
| Copy of passport biodata page | Passport copy | File record | Poor scan quality |
| Previous passports/visas if requested | Travel history evidence | Verification | Omitting relevant prior visas |
| Residence permit in country of application | Proof of lawful residence | Jurisdiction check | Expired permit |
C. Financial documents
For Type A, these may be lighter than for visitor visas, but may still be requested:
- recent bank statements
- sponsor support evidence if someone pays
- employer salary slips if relevant
- proof that airfare is paid/secured
Common mistake: – submitting statements with unexplained large recent deposits
D. Employment/business documents
If relevant only to support credibility or funding: – employment letter – leave approval – company registration if self-employed
Not a core eligibility requirement for transit, but may help if requested.
E. Education documents
Usually not applicable.
F. Relationship/family documents
Only relevant for: – minor applicants – accompanying family members – sponsor relationships where costs are covered
Examples: – birth certificate – marriage certificate – parental consent
G. Accommodation/travel documents
| Document | Why needed |
|---|---|
| Confirmed flight itinerary | Proves transit route |
| Onward ticket | Shows departure from Greece airport |
| Visa/residence permit for final destination | Shows lawful entry rights |
| Other transit visas if needed | Shows full route is legal |
Accommodation proof is generally not relevant for pure airside transit.
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
Usually not central, but if another person/company is funding the journey, possible supporting documents include: – sponsorship letter – sponsor ID – sponsor financial evidence – proof of relationship
I. Health/insurance documents
Check local mission requirements. Travel insurance may not be emphasized in the same way as Type C, but if listed by the consulate, it must be provided.
J. Country-specific extras
These can include: – local residence proof – national ID card – visa copies – certified translations – parental authorizations for minors – special forms for certain nationalities
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
For children: – birth certificate – passport – application signed by parents/guardians as required – consent from non-traveling parent(s), if required – custody documents if parents are separated/divorced
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
Varies by consulate.
Official documents may need: – translation into an accepted language – notarization – legalization/apostille in some cases
Always follow the specific Greek mission instructions.
M. Photo specifications
Use the Schengen visa photo standard required by the relevant Greek mission/visa center. If the local official page gives exact dimensions/background rules, follow that precisely.
Pro Tip: For Type A applications, the strongest file is usually a very clean transit package: passport, residence proof, confirmed itinerary, final-destination visa/residence proof, and a short explanation letter.
11. Financial requirements
Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?
For Greece airport transit visas, a clear universally published fixed amount is not consistently stated across official pages. Financial sufficiency is usually assessed in the context of:
- ability to complete the trip
- genuine itinerary
- paid or bookable travel
- support for incidental transit costs if needed
Acceptable proof
- recent bank statements
- salary slips
- employer letter
- sponsor undertaking with sponsor bank statements
- proof of pre-paid travel
- evidence of lawful residence and stable status in country of application
Who can sponsor?
Potentially: – family members – employer – another lawful financial supporter
But a sponsor does not fix an ineligible itinerary.
Bank statement period
Usually recent statements are preferred; exact period varies by mission.
Hidden costs
Even if funds are modest, applicants should budget for: – visa fee – document copies – translation costs – visa center service charges – courier fees – travel insurance if requested – travel changes if routing changes
12. Fees and total cost
Official visa fee
Under Schengen rules, the airport transit visa generally follows the Schengen visa fee structure. However, fees can change, and some applicants may qualify for reduced fees or waivers.
Because fee updates occur, always check the latest official Greek mission or Ministry page.
Typical cost structure
| Cost item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Official Schengen visa fee; check current official page |
| Biometrics fee | Usually included in visa process unless special service arrangements apply |
| Service center fee | If a visa application center is used |
| Courier fee | Optional or location-specific |
| Translation/notary cost | Varies widely |
| Passport photo cost | Local market rate |
| Insurance cost | If required by the local checklist |
| Travel to appointment | Applicant-specific |
| Reapplication cost | Usually a new fee if refused and reapplying |
Children/dependents
Fee rules can differ by age and category under Schengen rules. Verify the latest official fee schedule.
Warning: Visa fees are usually non-refundable if the application is refused.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct visa
Check: – whether your nationality requires an airport transit visa – whether any exemption applies – whether your route is truly airside-only – whether Greece is the correct state to apply through
2. Gather documents
Collect: – passport – residence documents – flight itinerary – final-destination visa/residence permit – local checklist items – photos – supporting financial documents if required
3. Complete the form
Use the Schengen visa application form required by the Greek authority handling your application.
4. Pay fees
Pay as instructed by: – Greek consulate, or – the authorized visa application center
5. Book biometrics/interview if needed
Most applicants need an appointment.
6. Submit application
Submit: – at the Greek consulate, or – through the authorized service provider where applicable
7. Upload documents / send passport
This depends on the local process. Some locations require in-person submission of originals and copies.
8. Medicals/police checks if needed
Usually not a standard feature of Type A unless exceptional circumstances arise.
9. Track application
If a visa center is used, tracking may be available.
10. Respond to additional document requests
Do this quickly and exactly as requested.
11. Decision
You may receive: – approval – refusal – request for more documents
12. Visa issuance
Check the visa sticker carefully: – name spelling – passport number – validity dates – number of entries – visa type
13. Arrival steps
At the airport: – remain in the transit area – keep onward boarding pass and documents available – comply with airline and transit security procedures
14. Post-arrival registration
Not applicable for this visa.
15. Residence card / permit activation
Not applicable for this visa.
14. Processing time
Official standard times
Schengen visa processing often follows the general rule of a decision within a set period, but exact transit-visa timelines vary by mission and workload. Some official pages refer generally to Schengen visa processing rather than giving a Type A-specific number.
What affects timing
- seasonality
- security checks
- nationality
- completeness of documents
- need for consultation with other states
- local appointment availability
Priority options
Not always available. If available in your location, it would be listed on the official provider/consulate page.
Practical expectation
Apply well in advance, but within the accepted filing window under Schengen rules.
Pro Tip: Do not wait until the last week before travel. Appointment shortages are often a bigger problem than decision time.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
Schengen visa applicants commonly provide: – fingerprints – photo
Exemptions may apply in limited cases under Schengen rules.
Interview
A formal interview may or may not occur. Some applicants are simply asked clarifying questions at submission.
Typical questions
- Where are you traveling?
- Why are you transiting through Greece?
- What is your final destination?
- Do you have a visa/residence permit for that destination?
- Will you leave the transit area?
Medical tests
Generally not a standard Type A requirement.
Police clearance
Generally not a standard Type A requirement.
Reuse of biometrics
Prior Schengen biometrics may sometimes be reusable depending on timing and system rules, but this is operationally determined by the processing authority.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official approval data
Country-by-country Type A approval-rate data for Greece is not consistently published in a simple official format for applicants. If no public official statistics are available for this exact subcategory, assume they are not readily available.
Practical refusal patterns
Based on official visa logic, common problems are:
- applying for Type A when the itinerary requires Type C
- no proof of legal admission to final destination
- missing residence permit in country of application
- inconsistent flight booking
- unrealistic transit timing
- expired or weak passport validity
- incomplete file
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Practical, ethical ways to improve a Type A case
- Use a direct and coherent itinerary
- Submit confirmed flight reservations, not inconsistent draft routes
- Include proof of your final destination visa or residence permit
- Add a short cover letter explaining the full route in one paragraph
- If you live in a country different from your nationality, include your valid residence permit
- If a bank statement shows a large recent deposit, explain it with evidence
- Use the exact local checklist from the Greek mission
- Make sure names and passport numbers match across all bookings
- If your route involves self-transfer risk, explain how baggage is checked through or reconsider the route
Strong supporting logic
A good Type A file answers these questions immediately:
- Why do you need this visa?
- Are you genuinely only transiting?
- Can you lawfully enter your final destination?
- Can you complete the journey without entering Greece?
18. Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
This section is practical advice, not legal rules.
Smart, lawful strategies
1. Choose an airport routing that is clearly airside
If your itinerary can be booked as a single ticket with baggage checked through, that often reduces confusion.
2. Put the route on one page
Create a one-page summary: – departure city – transit airport in Greece – connection time – onward destination – ticket reference – final-destination visa/residence status
3. Explain unusual routing
If your route through Greece is not the most obvious one, add a brief explanation.
4. Label documents clearly
For example: – 01_Passport – 02_Residence_Permit – 03_Flight_Itinerary – 04_Final_Destination_Visa – 05_Bank_Statement – 06_Cover_Letter
5. Be transparent about prior refusals
If asked, disclose them honestly and explain what changed.
6. Check airport operational reality
Even if legally eligible, some connections are impractical without passing border control. Confirm with the airline.
7. Submit readable copies
Blurred visa copies and cut-off passport scans cause needless delays.
8. Don’t over-document
A transit visa file should be clear, not chaotic.
Common Mistake: Applicants sometimes submit tourist-style files with hotel bookings and sightseeing plans. That can undermine a Type A application because it suggests intended entry into Greece.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
Is a cover letter required?
Not always, but it is often helpful.
What it should say
Keep it short: – who you are – your route – why you are transiting through Greece – that you will remain in the international transit area – that you hold permission for the final destination – list the enclosed evidence
What not to say
- do not mention tourism plans in Greece
- do not imply you may leave the airport “if there is time”
- do not include contradictory reasons for travel
Simple outline
- Applicant identification
- Flight route and dates
- Final destination and legal basis to enter
- Confirmation of airport-only transit
- List of attached documents
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Is sponsorship relevant?
Sometimes, but less than with visitor visas.
A sponsor may help with: – financial support evidence – explaining who is paying for tickets
Invitation letter structure
If someone funds the travel, the letter can state: – sponsor identity – relationship to applicant – what costs are covered – confirmation of lawful support – contact details
Sponsor mistakes
- vague letters
- no financial proof
- no ID copy
- no proof of relationship when relevant
Host accommodation proof
Not applicable for a true Type A airport transit case.
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
There is no dependent status under Type A. Each traveler is assessed individually.
Families traveling together
A spouse or child who is also nationality-subject to airport transit requirements may need a separate visa application.
Minor applicants
Extra documents often required: – birth certificate – parental consent – passports/IDs of parents – custody documents if applicable
Work/study rights of dependents
Not applicable.
Partner definition rules
Not generally relevant for transit, except where relationship proof is used for sponsorship or minor travel authorization.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
No work allowed.
Remote work
Not authorized. This is not a lawful status for performing work from Greece.
Self-employment
Not allowed.
Internships/volunteering
Not allowed.
Study rights
Not allowed.
Business meetings
Not allowed if this requires entry into Greece. A Type C visa may be needed for business visits.
Receiving payment in-country
Not applicable and not authorized under this visa.
Passive income
Holding passive income abroad is not the issue; the visa still does not authorize economic activity in Greece.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Entry clearance vs final admission
Even with a visa, you remain subject to: – airline boarding checks – airport transit controls – border authority discretion
Documents to carry
Carry copies of: – passport – visa – onward ticket – final-destination visa/residence permit – residence permit from country of departure if relevant
Onward ticket issues
A confirmed onward ticket is critical.
Return ticket issues
Usually not relevant unless tied to the larger itinerary.
Sponsor contact
If someone is funding your trip, carry their contact details if relevant.
Passport transfer to new passport
If your valid visa is in an old passport and you travel with a new passport, rules can be fact-specific. Check with the issuing Greek authority before travel.
Dual passport issues
Use the passport linked to the visa application and ensure consistency throughout the itinerary.
Transit complications
You may face problems if: – your baggage is not checked through – your connection requires terminal transfer through immigration – your flight is rescheduled overnight
Warning: A delayed or changed itinerary can turn a valid Type A transit plan into a situation where you need entry permission. Airlines and border authorities will not treat a Type A as a substitute for a Type C visa.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Generally no, not in the ordinary applicant-planning sense.
Can it be renewed?
A new application may be required for future travel.
Can you switch inside Greece?
No practical switching route exists from airport transit status to work, study, family, or residence status.
Restoration / implied status / bridging
Not applicable for this visa.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
PR path
No.
Citizenship path
No.
Does time count toward residence?
No. Airport transit does not create residence in Greece.
Indirect benefit?
Only in the very loose sense that lawful travel history can help future credibility, but this visa itself does not build toward Greek permanent residence or citizenship.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence risk
Normally negligible because this is airport-only transit and not a residence status.
Social security
Not applicable.
Registration obligations
None for normal airport transit.
Overstay and status violations
If you breach transit conditions or attempt unlawful entry/stay, consequences can be severe and may affect future travel.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
This area is extremely important.
Visa waiver and exemption issues
Whether you need a Type A visa may depend on:
- your nationality
- your passport type
- whether you hold a valid visa/residence permit from certain third countries
- whether you are a family member of an EU citizen in a qualifying situation
- diplomatic or official status
Because these exceptions are detailed and can change, verify them with the Greek consulate and current Schengen rules before applying.
Regional mobility rights
EU/EEA/Swiss citizens do not need this visa. Certain family members may have facilitation rights, but those cases are fact-specific.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Need parental documentation and, often, consent from non-traveling parent(s).
Divorced or separated parents
May need: – custody order – notarized consent – proof of sole guardianship where applicable
Adopted children
Adoption and guardianship papers may be required.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Transit itself is not a family migration category, but relationship documents should be accepted according to applicable law where relevant to sponsorship or minor accompaniment. Practical recognition issues may vary by document origin and local paperwork standards.
Stateless persons and refugees
Rules can be more complex and may depend on: – travel document type – country of residence – destination entry rights
Dual nationals
Use the passport relevant to the application. If one nationality is visa-exempt and another is not, the passport used for travel matters greatly.
Prior refusals
Disclose honestly if asked.
Criminal records
May trigger refusal on public policy/security grounds.
Urgent travel
Possible, but consulates are not obliged to expedite. Check local procedures.
Expired passport with valid visa
Needs official confirmation before travel; do not assume airline acceptance.
Applying from a third country
Usually you should apply where you are lawfully resident. Applying from a country where you are only temporarily present may or may not be accepted.
Change of name / gender marker mismatch
Bring official evidence linking identities across documents.
Previous deportation/removal
This can seriously affect visa approval and transit admissibility.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “Type A lets me spend a few hours sightseeing in Athens.” | False. Type A does not allow entry into Greece. |
| “Any airport connection counts as airside transit.” | False. Some connections require border control. |
| “If I have a U.S./Canada/UK visa, I never need a Greek transit visa.” | Not always. Exemptions are specific and must be checked officially. |
| “A hotel booking helps my transit application.” | Often the opposite. It may suggest you need a Type C visa. |
| “I can work on my laptop during my layover, so remote work is allowed.” | Transit status does not authorize work activity in Greece. |
| “A travel agent’s advice is enough.” | Always verify with the Greek consulate and official Schengen rules. |
| “Once the visa is issued, entry is guaranteed.” | No. Airline and border controls still apply. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
What happens after refusal?
You should receive a refusal notice stating the grounds.
Typical refusal reasons
- wrong visa category
- lack of destination visa/residence permit
- doubts about itinerary
- insufficient supporting evidence
- public policy/security concerns
Appeal / review
Schengen refusals generally include information on available remedies under the issuing state’s procedures. For Greece, the refusal notice should explain the available legal avenue and deadline.
Because procedures can change and may involve Greek administrative law, check the refusal notice carefully and consider legal advice if the issue is serious or urgent.
Refund?
Normally no fee refund.
When to reapply
Reapply only after fixing the refusal reason: – changed route – complete file – valid destination visa – clearer transit proof
Legal assistance
Useful if: – refusal is based on alleged fraud/security concerns – urgent business/family travel is affected – you need to challenge legal error rather than just reapply
31. Arrival in Greece: what happens next?
For a true Type A transit, “arrival in Greece” usually means arrival in the airport transit zone only.
What happens
- airline/airport checks your onward boarding eligibility
- you remain in the international transit area
- you wait for the onward flight
- you board and depart
Not applicable for this visa
- residence permit collection
- address registration
- tax number
- social security registration
- local bank setup
- school or employer reporting
32. Real-world timeline examples
Example 1: Solo transit passenger
- Day 1: Checks whether nationality requires ATV
- Day 2–5: Gathers passport, residence permit, onward visa, tickets
- Day 6: Books consular/visa center appointment
- Day 15: Submits application and biometrics
- Day 25: Receives decision
- Travel date: Transits through Greek airport airside only
Example 2: Family with child
- Week 1: Confirm all family members’ visa needs individually
- Week 2: Gather child birth certificate and parental consent
- Week 3: Submit group appointments if allowed
- Week 5+: Receive passports
- Travel: Parents carry all family relationship and consent documents
Example 3: Worker resident in a third country traveling onward
- Confirms lawful residence in country of application
- Provides employment letter and bank statements only as supporting documents
- Main decision factors remain transit route and destination-entry proof
Example 4: Student traveling to a non-Schengen country via Greece
- Provides student residence permit in country of departure if applicable
- Provides student visa/admission-based travel permission for final destination
- Must still show Greece is airport transit only
Example 5: Entrepreneur/investor
Not a special category for Type A. Business profile does not change the transit-only legal limits.
33. Ideal document pack structure
Suggested order
- Application form
- Passport biodata page
- Current residence permit
- Flight itinerary
- Final destination visa/residence permit
- Additional transit visas if any
- Cover letter
- Bank statements/supporting finance docs
- Sponsor documents if applicable
- Minor/family documents if applicable
Naming convention
- 01_Application_Form
- 02_Passport
- 03_Residence_Permit
- 04_Flight_Itinerary
- 05_Final_Destination_Visa
- 06_Cover_Letter
- 07_Bank_Statements
- 08_Sponsor_Letter
- 09_Birth_Certificate
Scan quality tips
- color scans
- full page visible
- no shadows
- readable passport MRZ
- consistent orientation
- one PDF per section if allowed
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- [ ] Confirm Type A is the correct visa
- [ ] Confirm your nationality requires it
- [ ] Check whether any exemption applies
- [ ] Confirm transit will remain airside
- [ ] Confirm final destination entry permission
- [ ] Check local Greek mission checklist
- [ ] Book appointment
- [ ] Prepare photos and copies
Submission-day checklist
- [ ] Passport original
- [ ] Application form signed
- [ ] Appointment confirmation
- [ ] Photo(s)
- [ ] Flight itinerary
- [ ] Final-destination visa/residence proof
- [ ] Residence permit in country of application
- [ ] Fee payment method
- [ ] Extra documents for minors if relevant
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- [ ] Arrive early
- [ ] Carry originals and copies
- [ ] Know your route and connection details
- [ ] Be ready to explain why you will not enter Greece
- [ ] Answer consistently
Arrival checklist
- [ ] Carry passport with visa
- [ ] Carry onward boarding pass/ticket
- [ ] Carry destination visa/residence permit
- [ ] Confirm baggage is checked through if possible
- [ ] Check terminal/airside transfer rules in advance
Extension/renewal checklist
Not applicable for this visa in normal circumstances.
Refusal recovery checklist
- [ ] Read refusal ground carefully
- [ ] Identify whether the issue was legal or documentary
- [ ] Fix wrong itinerary/visa category problems
- [ ] Gather missing evidence
- [ ] Consider appeal only if there is a real legal basis
- [ ] Reapply with a cleaner file
35. FAQs
1. What does a Greece Type A visa actually allow?
It allows airport transit only in the international transit area of a Greek airport.
2. Can I leave the airport with a Type A visa?
No.
3. Can I stay overnight in a hotel near the airport?
Not if that requires entering Greece. You would generally need a Type C visa.
4. Do all nationalities need a Type A visa for Greece?
No. It depends on nationality and possible exemptions.
5. If I have a valid U.S. visa, do I still need a Greek airport transit visa?
Maybe not, maybe yes. Exemption rules are specific and must be checked officially.
6. Can I transit through Greece if my final destination is in Schengen?
Type A is not for that. If your destination is in Schengen, you generally need the appropriate entry visa.
7. Is Type A the same as a Schengen short-stay visa?
No. Type A is much narrower than Type C.
8. Can I attend a business meeting during my layover?
No, not under Type A.
9. Can I collect my baggage and re-check it?
If that requires passing immigration, Type A is usually insufficient.
10. Do children need a separate Type A visa?
If they are from a visa-required nationality and no exemption applies, yes.
11. Can I submit with dummy tickets?
Use whatever the official checklist permits, but your itinerary must be credible and consistent. Follow local mission instructions.
12. Do I need travel insurance?
Check the local Greek mission checklist. Requirements can vary in presentation.
13. How long does processing take?
It varies by mission, workload, nationality, and security checks.
14. Can I expedite my application?
Only if the official submission location offers an expedited option.
15. Can I apply from a country where I am visiting temporarily?
Usually you should apply where you are lawfully resident. Temporary-presence applications may not be accepted.
16. What if my flight is changed after visa issuance?
Make sure the new routing still fits Type A conditions. If not, you may need a different visa.
17. Can I convert a Type A visa into a tourist visa in Greece?
No.
18. Does this visa count toward permanent residence?
No.
19. Can I work remotely during my layover?
The visa does not grant work rights in Greece.
20. What if I miss my connection?
Airport/airline handling will depend on the situation, but Type A does not authorize entry into Greece for an overnight stay.
21. Can I include a cover letter?
Yes, and it is often helpful.
22. What is the biggest reason for refusal?
Often, using the wrong visa category because the itinerary is not true airside transit.
23. Can I appeal a refusal?
Usually there is an appeal or legal remedy path stated in the refusal notice, subject to Greek procedure.
24. Will a prior Schengen refusal automatically cause refusal?
Not automatically, but it should be disclosed if asked and the new application must be stronger.
25. Can my spouse sponsor my transit?
Yes, potentially for financial support evidence, but sponsorship does not overcome wrong-category problems.
26. Do I need hotel bookings for a Type A visa?
Usually no, and they may suggest the wrong visa type.
27. Can I transit through multiple Schengen airports on a Type A visa?
That depends on the itinerary and transit structure. Multiple Schengen airport transits can become legally complex and may require closer review.
28. If I hold a residence permit from an EU country, do I need Type A?
Often exemptions may apply, but this must be checked against current official rules.
29. Can the airline refuse boarding even if I have the visa?
Yes, if they believe document requirements are not met for the full journey.
30. What if my name is spelled differently across documents?
Fix it before applying or provide official evidence explaining the discrepancy.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to Greece and Schengen airport transit visas. Always verify the most current local instructions with the Greek consulate or embassy responsible for your place of residence.
Primary official sources
-
European Commission – Who needs an airport transit visa:
https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/visa-policy/who-needs-schengen-visa_en -
European Commission – Short-stay visa rules and airport transit context:
https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/visa-policy_en -
Greece Ministry of Foreign Affairs – Visas overview / consular information:
https://www.mfa.gr/en/services/visas-for-foreigners-traveling-to-greece/ -
Greece Ministry of Foreign Affairs – Greek diplomatic authorities abroad:
https://www.mfa.gr/en/greece-bilateral-relations/ -
EU Visa Code Regulation (official EUR-Lex text):
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2009/810/oj -
Regulation (EU) 2018/1806 listing visa-required and visa-exempt third countries (official EUR-Lex text):
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2018/1806/oj -
Your Europe – Airport transit visa overview (EU official portal):
https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/travel/entry-exit/non-eu-family/visas/index_en.htm
How to verify your exact case
- Check whether your nationality is airport-transit visa required under current Schengen rules.
- Check whether any exemption applies based on your valid visas/residence permits.
- Check the local Greek embassy/consulate page for: – appointment rules – local checklist – fee payment method – processing arrangements
- Confirm with your airline whether your baggage and terminal transfer remain fully airside.
37. Final verdict
The Greece Schengen Airport Transit Visa (Type A) is best for a small, specific group of travelers: people who must legally transit through the international zone of a Greek airport on the way to a non-Schengen destination and who cannot rely on an exemption.
Biggest benefits
- enables lawful airport transit through Greece
- supports smooth onward international travel
- relatively narrow and straightforward when the itinerary is clean
Biggest risks
- using the wrong category when your route actually requires entry into Greece
- not proving legal admission to the final destination
- overlooking exemption rules
- assuming every airport transfer is airside
Top preparation advice
- verify that you really need a Type A visa
- confirm that your connection is truly airside
- present a very clear itinerary
- include proof of final-destination entry rights
- check the local Greek mission checklist and fee page before applying
When to consider another visa
Choose another route, usually Type C, if you need to: – leave the airport – overnight in Greece – change airports – clear immigration for baggage or self-transfer – visit, meet, study, work, or conduct any activity in Greece
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Whether your nationality currently requires an airport transit visa for Greece
- Whether you qualify for an exemption based on a valid visa or residence permit from another country
- The exact local checklist used by the Greek embassy/consulate or visa center in your country
- Current fees, including any reduced-fee or fee-waiver categories
- Current processing times and appointment wait times
- Whether travel insurance is required in your local filing post for Type A cases
- Whether your specific airport/terminal transfer in Greece is fully airside in practice
- Whether your airline will check baggage through to the final destination
- Whether your application can be submitted where you are if you are living or traveling in a third country
- Any updated rules affecting minors, dual nationals, refugee travel documents, or holders of special passports
- Any recent changes under Schengen/EU visa law or Greek consular practice