An itinerary is simply a document that details your travel plans. It usually provides details of hotel bookings, flight arrangements, and daily activities or schedules for the duration of your stay. An itinerary is only required for journeys undertaken for tourism or private purposes. It must usually specify the places you intend to visit by way of schedule of activities.
Article 14(1)(a) of the Visa Code states an applicant
for a Schengen visa shall present documents indicating the purpose of the
journey. Further, Annex II(A) (3) (b) of the Code states that for journeys
undertaken for tourism or personal reasons, the applicant must submit
documentation relating to their itinerary.
The Visa Code describes itinerary to include
“confirmation of the booking of an organised trip or any other appropriate
document indicating the envisaged travel plans.”
Bookings on organised trip or tour guides and tickets
for entry into tourist sites could be submitted as evidence of itinerary.
A key requirement of an itinerary is that it must be
plausible. The schedule of activities must be arranged in a manner as to make
your plans credible. For example, it may be more reasonable to visit tourist
sites that are in close proximity to one another on a particular day, rather
than a disjointed schedule of visits that are miles apart from each another and
lacks coherence. If your itinerary is implausible or disjointed, this may raise
doubts about the credibility of the purpose of your visit and may cause your
visa to be refused.
Another requirement is that the duration of the
itinerary must be consistent with your travel dates. Specifically, it must be
consistent with the travel dates as shown on the visa application form, flight
booking, hotel
reservation, and travel
medical insurance. If your itinerary shows discrepancies with
travel dates shown on other documentation, your visa may be refused.
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