ermany will offer free coronavirus tests to all returning travelers in new measures agreed Friday, as concerns grow over a rise in infections due to summer travel.
"Those returning from risk countries should be tested, and those returning from non-risk countries will also have the option," said Berlin health minister Dilek Kalayci after the measures were agreed by the health ministers of Germany's 16 states.
The tests would be initially non-mandatory, and the costs would be covered by the state, she said.
The new measures will see test facilities installed at airports across the country so that those returning from risk zones can be tested directly on arrival.
Those who refuse a test or test positive on arrival will be forced to quarantine at home for 14 days.
Frankfurt, Germany's largest airport, had already been offering tests for a fee.
Berlin's city government has meanwhile announced that it plans to introduce airport tests from next week.
Read also: Germany's Bavaria plans free coronavirus tests at airports
Those returning from non-risk countries would not be tested at the airport, but could receive a free test from their local health authority, said Kalayci.
Germany's public health institute RKI currently considers 130 nations worldwide to be "risk countries", with EU and Schengen area neighbors among the exceptions.
The new measures come amid growing fears that a rise in summer tourism could lead to a surge in coronavirus cases in Germany, which has fared relatively well in the crisis so far.
This week, the eastern city of Cottbus recorded its first new cases in three months after a family of four tested positive after returning from holiday to Mallorca.
Traditionally a popular destination for German tourists, Mallorca has recently tightened its coronavirus regulations after a rise in the number of cases.
Federal Health Minister Jens Spahn has repeatedly warned against allowing Mallorca to become a "second Ischgl", in reference to the Austrian ski resort which became one of Europe's coronavirus hotspots early in the pandemic.
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