
The quarantine mandate has been in place for all passengers above the age of 12 since 15 July, but will not be renewed after its expiration on 31 July.
Travellers from the UK will still have to show evidence of vaccination, recovery, or a negative Covid-19 test to be allowed entry into the Grand Duchy.
Anyone over the age of 12 will have to show either a vaccination certificate (fully vaccinated with either AstraZeneca, BioNTech/Pfizer, Johnson&Johnson, or Moderna, issued by a public or medical authority of an EU Member State or the Schengen Area), a certificate proving recovery from Covid-19 no older than 6 months, or a negative test.
The negative test must be no older than 72 hours in the case of a PCR, or 48 hours if an antigen test is taken.
Vaccine certificates issued from medical providers outside of the EU or Schengen Area do not appear to fall under the criteria mentioned above.
The UK has seen a dramatic wave of cases since May due to the spread of the so-called Delta variant first identified in India.
Case rates have dropped in the last week, but the impact of the full lifting of restrictions on 19 July is yet to be seen.
It is worth noting that UK travellers are not permitted to visit Luxembourg for non-essential reasons until after 30 September.