Maldives Passport Visa-free Countries (2026 List by Region)

If you hold a Maldivian passport and you’ve tried to pin down how many countries you can actually fly into without paperwork, you’ve probably hit the same wall everyone does: every site gives a different number. Wikipedia says 92. Get Golden Visa says 95. Passport Index lands lower. The rank swings from the high 40s to the high 50s depending on whose list you read.

Here’s the honest version, sourced and dated, with the destinations split into the three categories that actually matter when you’re booking a trip — truly visa-free, visa on arrival, and electronic authorization (eTA/eVisa). And grouped by region, because “92 countries” is useless when half of them are places you’ll never go.

The numbers, stated plainly

Based on the most granular public dataset — Wikipedia’s visa requirements table for Maldivian citizens, cross-checked against passport trackers in June 2026 — the headline figures are:

Access type Count (approx.)
Visa-free ~60 destinations
Visa on arrival ~18 destinations
eTA / eVisa ~45 destinations
Visa-free + visa on arrival (Henley basis) 92
Henley rank 49th

Why the disagreement between sources? Two reasons. First, some trackers fold visa-on-arrival into “visa-free” and others don’t — that alone shifts the count by 15 or 20. Second, the data moves: the Maldives signed new agreements through early 2026 (Ghana was announced in April 2026, still pending ratification at the time of writing). So a page that says “95” isn’t necessarily wrong; it’s counting differently or counting later. The 92/rank-49 figure is the Henley Passport Index basis, which combines visa-free and visa-on-arrival. We’ll use that as the anchor and tell you which bucket each country falls into.

What you can’t get into (read this first)

The Maldivian passport is genuinely strong across Asia, the Caribbean, and large parts of Africa. Where it runs into a wall is the wealthy West.

  • Schengen Area / EU — visa required. No visa-free entry to France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the lot. You apply in advance.
  • United States — visa required (B1/B2).
  • Canada — visa required.
  • Australia — visa required (or eVisitor/ETA route, applied for in advance).

So the “92 destinations” headline does not include any of the places most people picture when they think “easy travel from a powerful passport.” Worth knowing before you build a Eurotrip around it.

Visa-free destinations by region

These are the genuinely visa-free entries — show up, get stamped, walk through. Stays are the maximum allowed for tourism.

Close-up view of an open passport displaying various travel stamps in an airport setting.

Asia & the Gulf

This is where the Maldivian passport earns its keep. The standouts are the long stays in places people actually visit from Malé.

Country Max stay
UAE 90 days (extension possible for a fee)
Malaysia 90 days
Hong Kong 90 days
India 90 days
Russia 90 days (per calendar year)
Azerbaijan 90 days
Qatar 30 days
Singapore 30 days
Thailand 60 days
China 30 days
Indonesia 30 days
Philippines 30 days
Cambodia 30 days
Kazakhstan 30 days
Kyrgyzstan 30 days
Mongolia 30 days
Bangladesh 3 months
Pakistan 3 months
Brunei 14 days

The UAE entry is the quiet workhorse here — 90 visa-free days into Dubai or Abu Dhabi, extendable, makes the Gulf a default hub for Maldivians. Malaysia and Hong Kong matching that 90-day window is what pulls the passport’s “real-world usefulness” well above its raw rank. Qatar’s 30-day window rounds out the Gulf, and it’s worth noting the access runs both ways — the Qatari passport reaches a similar swathe of visa-free destinations, so Doha is an easy connecting point in either direction.

Europe

One name, and it surprises people: Ireland — 90 days, visa-free. Ireland isn’t in the Schengen Area, so this doesn’t bleak into wider EU access, but it’s a genuine 90-day stay in an English-speaking European country. The rest of Europe is visa-required or eTA (see below).

Africa

Country Max stay
Mauritius 90 days
Botswana 90 days
Gambia 90 days
Tunisia 90 days
Zambia 90 days
Zimbabwe 3 months
Morocco 30 days
South Africa 30 days
Rwanda 30 days
Ghana 30 days (announced April 2026, pending ratification)
Malawi 30 days
Eswatini 30 days

Americas & the Caribbean

The Caribbean is where the long stays live. Six months is common.

Country Max stay
Panama 180 days
Antigua and Barbuda 6 months
Barbados 6 months
Dominica 6 months
Saint Lucia 6 months
Bahamas 3 months
Grenada 3 months
St. Vincent & the Grenadines 3 months
Brazil Visa-free
Costa Rica 90 days
Ecuador 90 days
Jamaica 90 days
Haiti 90 days
Suriname 90 days
Venezuela 90 days
Belize Visa-free
Guyana Visa-free
Trinidad and Tobago Visa-free

The six-month stays in Antigua and Barbuda — whose own passport is one of the Caribbean’s strongest for visa-free travel — make it one of the most generous landings on this list, while Costa Rica’s 90 days are the obvious base for anyone working their way through Central America.

Oceania

Country Max stay
Vanuatu 120 days
Fiji 4 months
Kiribati 90 days (per 12 months)
Micronesia 30 days

Visa on arrival

No advance application, but you pay or register at the border. These count toward the Henley 92 but are a different experience than walking straight through.

Sunny winter day at the United States international border port of entry.
Country Region Max stay
Samoa Oceania 90 days
Madagascar Africa 90 days
Marshall Islands Oceania 90 days
Guinea-Bissau Africa 90 days
Comoros Africa 45 days
Egypt Africa 30 days
Laos Asia 30 days
Macau Asia 30 days
Timor-Leste Asia 30 days
Cape Verde Africa 30 days (via EASE platform)
Palau Oceania 30 days (free)
Myanmar Asia 28 days (tourism)
Tuvalu Oceania 1 month
Bhutan Asia Variable (Sustainable Development Fee applies)

Palau is one of the easier ones here — a free 30-day permit issued at the border, and the Palauan passport itself opens up a respectable spread of destinations if you ever find yourself comparing Pacific options.

A note on Bhutan: “visa on arrival” undersells the cost. The Sustainable Development Fee is a daily charge, so Bhutan is open to you but not cheap.

eTA and eVisa destinations

Apply online before you fly. Most are quick, but they’re a step, not a stamp.

Smartphone displaying VISA on a laptop for online shopping experience.

The two that matter most to Maldivian travelers:

  • United Kingdom — 6 months, via the UK Electronic Travel Authorisation. This is new-ish and easy to miss. Maldivians can still stay in the UK up to six months for tourism or visiting family, but you now need an ETA approved before travel. It is not visa-free in the old walk-up sense, so plan for it.
  • Turkey — 90 days, eVisa. Fast online process, and a popular bridge between the Maldives and Europe.

Other notable eVisa/eTA options: Saudi Arabia (90 days), Sri Lanka (30-day ETA), Georgia (90 days within a 120-day window), Serbia (90 days), Seychelles (Electronic Border System, 3 months), Nepal (90 days, free on arrival or online), and a long list across Africa — Tanzania, Kenya-region neighbors, Ethiopia, Uganda, Namibia, Gabon, and more, most at 30 to 90 days.

How to actually use this

The pattern, once you see it, is simple. The Maldivian passport is a regional powerhouse, not a Western one. If your trips run toward the Gulf, Southeast Asia, the Caribbean, and Africa, you’ll rarely fill out a form in advance. If you’re aiming for Europe, North America, or Australia, budget the time and money for a visa application every time.

Two practical reminders:

  • The single biggest “gotcha” in 2026 is the UK ETA — long-time travelers remember visa-free UK entry and get caught out. Apply before you book non-refundable flights.
  • Counts and stays change. Treat any number you see — including these — as accurate to its date. Before you travel, confirm with the destination’s own immigration authority or the Maldives Ministry of Foreign Affairs visa pages, which track new bilateral agreements as they’re signed.