The consequence of having all under one roof at a major airport is a long walk. But also no transfers with busses, used at airports with more seperate terminals.
@@martinfrostnas6610 @JaViation If I am a Pakistani and have permisso di soggiorno Italia so what should they check from me Do they only check passport or also check soggiorno? With soggiorno where should I go , non EU or EU side
@@gamemaster1695 i’m from the US and have gone through Schiphol airport at least a dozen times. if you’re flying into Schiphol from a non EU/Schengen country your flight will land on the non-Schengen side of the terminal. when you get off the plane, you’ll need to go to Passport control first before you pick up your luggage and so on. once you go to passport control, they’ll ask you questions such as what you’ll be doing in the Netherlands, your reason of travel, how long you’ll stay there, stuff like that nothing too hard. they’ll stamp your passport pretty much meaning you’ve passed through customs and you’re good to go. they all speak English so don’t worry about any language barriers. if worst comes to worst just use Google translate
The consequence of having all under one roof at a major airport is a long walk. But also no transfers with busses, used at airports with more seperate terminals.
Love your video from London 👍👍
Thank you from Beverwijk👍
That is one long way.You don't have to go to the gym after this.Cool video
Yannis Moutafis
Well, it's a good way to stretch your legs after a long trip.:)
I wish everyone moved this quickly at the airport
Yes, including security checks
what if someone enters immigration but doesn't speak English. is it possible to use a translator?
You dont need to speak at immigration. Just show your passport.
@@joey68ify Bullshit, they'll routinely ask non-EU/Schengen citizens about their trip and then individually assess whether to let them in.
@@martinfrostnas6610 @JaViation
If I am a Pakistani and have permisso di soggiorno Italia so what should they check from me
Do they only check passport or also check soggiorno?
With soggiorno where should I go , non EU or EU side
@@gamemaster1695 i’m from the US and have gone through Schiphol airport at least a dozen times. if you’re flying into Schiphol from a non EU/Schengen country your flight will land on the non-Schengen side of the terminal. when you get off the plane, you’ll need to go to Passport control first before you pick up your luggage and so on. once you go to passport control, they’ll ask you questions such as what you’ll be doing in the Netherlands, your reason of travel, how long you’ll stay there, stuff like that nothing too hard. they’ll stamp your passport pretty much meaning you’ve passed through customs and you’re good to go. they all speak English so don’t worry about any language barriers. if worst comes to worst just use Google translate
@@gamemaster1695 with your residence card you can go to the eu side. Always show both in any eu country. Otherwise you get questions
I was waiting for the passport control. Bad video.
I wasn’t allowed to film there.