Do I get trouble if my passport has only one stamp for entry but no exit stamp of a country boarder?
for some reason, like to avoid troublesome caused by visa, to use 2 passport to travel seems to be a solution. However, it raises a problem for "me" in each identity to have uneven entry-exit record on the boader of coutries.
Is that a very big trouble for my next entry to the country?
It happens when I enter the X country using Dutch passport and leaving for my motherland using the passport of motherland. It raises the problem: the "Dutch me" enter X country and never leave since the “me” leave X country using anther passport.
My question is:does it cause “the Dutch me” problem especially when “the Dutch me” go to X country again in the future?
Any advices are appreciated!
mooi03 said:
Do I get trouble if my passport has only one stamp for entry but no exit stamp of a country boarder?
for some reason, like to avoid troublesome caused by visa, to use 2 passport to travel seems to be a solution. However, it raises a problem for "me" in each identity to have uneven entry-exit record on the boader of coutries.
Is that a very big trouble for my next entry to the country?
It happens when I enter the X country using Dutch passport and leaving for my motherland using the passport of motherland. It raises the problem: the "Dutch me" enter X country and never leave since the “me” leave X country using anther passport.
My question is:does it cause “the Dutch me” problem especially when “the Dutch me” go to X country again in the future?
Any advices are appreciated!
Translation into slightly clearer terms:
I have dual nationality, of the Netherlands and Country X. Can I get problems from traveling on two different passports?
Answer:
No. In fact you should travel on two different passports. The Netherlands sees you exclusively as a Dutch citizen, and Country X sees you as exclusively X. In fact, it is the law in many countries that if you are a citizen of that country, you must enter that country on the passport of that country. (For instance, that is the law in the US. US citizens-- regardless of whatever other citizenships they have-- are required by law to enter the US on a US passport.)
You are only liable to cause yourself problems if you were to enter the Netherlands on your X passport or enter Country X on your Dutch passport. Most likely, nobody cares that you might have an entry stamp into X with no obvious exit stamp from somewhere else. (Unless Country X is some authoritarian country that insists on keeping track of its citizens' every movement, or you are trying to conceal the fact from them that you became a Dutch citizen, in which case, I'm sorry to say, that's your problem.)
Jeremy Bierbach, LLM
www.immigrate.nl
Actually unless you tell us which country do you mean by X , the answer given here are not the answers you are looking for. - You can definitely run into trouble at various places depending on what country is X. If X= Germany and travel within EU, no problem. If X = IRAN, Afganisthan etc ( no offence to anyone) then you can have serious problems. 1. Example you cannot go to X without a valid visa. So you show you X passport on entry claiming you are citizen. They may wonder how on earth you boarded the plane from Amsterdam? If you show your Dutch passport, they will definitely raise their eyebrows.
2. When you leave X , you cannot enter NL without a valid visa issued from X, so you show you NL passport. But your NL passport does not have a valid visa to enter X. It can create a lot of mess, in general you should travel on one passport and it is not like in mid air you switch passports. Obviously , it is easier if X is Germany, UK or simiar countries, then immigration does not really care. In general, you cannot buy a return ticket and go to schiphol and in mid air choose to show a passport you feel like.