Booking honeymoon before name change [duplicate]

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This question already has an answer here:



  • Plane booking - owner changed her name after getting married

    1 answer



For sake of question, we are UK based.



Myself and fiancée are looking to book our honeymoon for September this year to Singapore. She will be taking my surname after the wedding.



The issue is that her passport, which is in her maiden name, expires in May, and we do not get married until June. We do not want to pay to renew her current passport, and then have to pay again to change her name after the wedding.



If her passport was not due to expire, we would have just booked it in her maiden name and changed her name on the passport after the honeymoon.



If we were to book the honeymoon via Expedia, with flights via Qatar Airways, would this be safe enough to do by using her name with my surname, and then apply for the new passport after the wedding seeing as there are 2 full months between the wedding and travel date?










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marked as duplicate by Traveller, Giorgio, JonathanReez Feb 20 at 23:20


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.


















  • Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

    – H Moon
    Feb 20 at 18:33











  • Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 18:54












  • Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

    – smci
    Feb 21 at 0:39















5
















This question already has an answer here:



  • Plane booking - owner changed her name after getting married

    1 answer



For sake of question, we are UK based.



Myself and fiancée are looking to book our honeymoon for September this year to Singapore. She will be taking my surname after the wedding.



The issue is that her passport, which is in her maiden name, expires in May, and we do not get married until June. We do not want to pay to renew her current passport, and then have to pay again to change her name after the wedding.



If her passport was not due to expire, we would have just booked it in her maiden name and changed her name on the passport after the honeymoon.



If we were to book the honeymoon via Expedia, with flights via Qatar Airways, would this be safe enough to do by using her name with my surname, and then apply for the new passport after the wedding seeing as there are 2 full months between the wedding and travel date?










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by Traveller, Giorgio, JonathanReez Feb 20 at 23:20


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.


















  • Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

    – H Moon
    Feb 20 at 18:33











  • Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 18:54












  • Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

    – smci
    Feb 21 at 0:39













5












5








5









This question already has an answer here:



  • Plane booking - owner changed her name after getting married

    1 answer



For sake of question, we are UK based.



Myself and fiancée are looking to book our honeymoon for September this year to Singapore. She will be taking my surname after the wedding.



The issue is that her passport, which is in her maiden name, expires in May, and we do not get married until June. We do not want to pay to renew her current passport, and then have to pay again to change her name after the wedding.



If her passport was not due to expire, we would have just booked it in her maiden name and changed her name on the passport after the honeymoon.



If we were to book the honeymoon via Expedia, with flights via Qatar Airways, would this be safe enough to do by using her name with my surname, and then apply for the new passport after the wedding seeing as there are 2 full months between the wedding and travel date?










share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • Plane booking - owner changed her name after getting married

    1 answer



For sake of question, we are UK based.



Myself and fiancée are looking to book our honeymoon for September this year to Singapore. She will be taking my surname after the wedding.



The issue is that her passport, which is in her maiden name, expires in May, and we do not get married until June. We do not want to pay to renew her current passport, and then have to pay again to change her name after the wedding.



If her passport was not due to expire, we would have just booked it in her maiden name and changed her name on the passport after the honeymoon.



If we were to book the honeymoon via Expedia, with flights via Qatar Airways, would this be safe enough to do by using her name with my surname, and then apply for the new passport after the wedding seeing as there are 2 full months between the wedding and travel date?





This question already has an answer here:



  • Plane booking - owner changed her name after getting married

    1 answer







uk passports qatar-airways expedia






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 20 at 18:16









H MoonH Moon

262




262




marked as duplicate by Traveller, Giorgio, JonathanReez Feb 20 at 23:20


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Traveller, Giorgio, JonathanReez Feb 20 at 23:20


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

    – H Moon
    Feb 20 at 18:33











  • Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 18:54












  • Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

    – smci
    Feb 21 at 0:39

















  • Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

    – H Moon
    Feb 20 at 18:33











  • Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 18:54












  • Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

    – smci
    Feb 21 at 0:39
















Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

– H Moon
Feb 20 at 18:33





Not quite duplicate, as that was asking about a booking in the old name with a new passport. This is whether we can book in a new name without a passport in that name

– H Moon
Feb 20 at 18:33













Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:54






Are you certain that you must give the a passport at the time of booking? Most airlines do not in my experience require this. If your booking agent does, then the proper solution to this quandary will depend on their policies. Have you asked them? It is also generally possible to use a passport in a former name in connection with a legal document showing the change of name. Obviously it would be better to have a passport in her new name rather than being stuck carrying around the marriage certificate for the next ten years, but the possibility does exist.

– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:54














Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

– smci
Feb 21 at 0:39





Is the question whether you're obligated to supply her last name to the airline on the booking website, at the time of booking? or whether you can get her post-dated name change on a new passport before travel date?

– smci
Feb 21 at 0:39










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















10














What appears to be an official UK government web site has a form for getting a (post-dated) passport in your new name up to three months before the ceremony. The person who will conduct the ceremony has to sign, too. [Link updated using @phoog comment]






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 19:05











  • @HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

    – Joshua
    Feb 20 at 22:38

















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









10














What appears to be an official UK government web site has a form for getting a (post-dated) passport in your new name up to three months before the ceremony. The person who will conduct the ceremony has to sign, too. [Link updated using @phoog comment]






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 19:05











  • @HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

    – Joshua
    Feb 20 at 22:38















10














What appears to be an official UK government web site has a form for getting a (post-dated) passport in your new name up to three months before the ceremony. The person who will conduct the ceremony has to sign, too. [Link updated using @phoog comment]






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 19:05











  • @HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

    – Joshua
    Feb 20 at 22:38













10












10








10







What appears to be an official UK government web site has a form for getting a (post-dated) passport in your new name up to three months before the ceremony. The person who will conduct the ceremony has to sign, too. [Link updated using @phoog comment]






share|improve this answer















What appears to be an official UK government web site has a form for getting a (post-dated) passport in your new name up to three months before the ceremony. The person who will conduct the ceremony has to sign, too. [Link updated using @phoog comment]







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Feb 20 at 19:34

























answered Feb 20 at 18:46









Andrew LazarusAndrew Lazarus

12.8k22254




12.8k22254







  • 1





    The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 19:05











  • @HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

    – Joshua
    Feb 20 at 22:38












  • 1





    The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

    – phoog
    Feb 20 at 19:05











  • @HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

    – Joshua
    Feb 20 at 22:38







1




1





The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

– phoog
Feb 20 at 19:05





The page for that form is gov.uk/government/publications/…. I looked for that page because the presence of that form on their site doesn't necessarily mean that the form is currently authorized for use. Another advantage of the page is that it also links to the guidance, which talks a bit about the conditions of this procedure, which include that the applicant will be without a passport between the time of application and the date of the ceremony. It also mentions restrictions that some countries place on the use of post-dated passports.

– phoog
Feb 20 at 19:05













@HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

– Joshua
Feb 20 at 22:38





@HankyPanky: Oh look correct use of country codes.

– Joshua
Feb 20 at 22:38


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