On Thursday, the Federal Aviation Administration officially changed its rules and will no longer require passengers of commercial flights to turn off their personal electronic gadgets during takeoff and landing. Now, it seems that Europe and the United Kingdom will follow suit, according to a report from The Guardian.

The first flights to allow in-flight electronic devices like cellphones, tablets, and game consoles (with their cellular radios turned off) took off on Friday from US airports. Now, the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) are looking at their own rules banning electronic devices and consulting with the FAA to see how successful the new US rules are.

The CAA will follow whatever decision the EASA comes to, The Guardian says, and the pan-European authority will “come to a final decision that is expected 'relatively quickly' or 'within months.'” If the EASA does change the rules, the UK's air travel authority will implement the changes on an airline-by-airline basis. Each airline will be expected to present “safety cases” to the CAA before it will be permitted to instate the new rules.

“The airlines now have access to new methodology for the safety testing of devices, which could be a relatively quick process, especially as some airlines are likely to have already done a fair bit of testing,” the CAA told The Guardian.