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Travel

Visa-Free Countries for Tunisians: The Honest 2026 List8 min read

By Editorial Staff August 21, 2025
Written by Editorial Staff August 21, 2025
Tunisian Passport
17.8K

Last updated: June 2026. Visa rules change constantly — treat this as a starting point, not gospel, and confirm with the destination’s embassy before you book.

Quick Answer As of 2026, the Tunisian passport gives visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to roughly 70 destinations, ranking it around 70th in the world on the Henley Passport Index. But “70 destinations” hides three very different things: a handful you can enter with nothing but your passport, a larger group where you collect a visa at the airport, and a growing list where you apply online first. The genuinely visa-free world for Tunisians is mostly Africa, Turkey, Malaysia, a few Asian and Latin American countries, and a scatter of Caribbean and Pacific islands. The places most Tunisians actually want to go — the Schengen zone, the UK, the US, Canada, most of the Gulf — still require a visa arranged in advance.

Every Tunisian traveller knows the ritual. You find a cheap flight, you start to dream, and then you stop and ask the only question that matters: do I need a visa? For the holder of a Tunisian passport, the answer is rarely a simple yes or no. It is a spectrum — and understanding where a country sits on that spectrum is the difference between booking with confidence and being turned back at a gate.

This is the honest, current map of where the Tunisian passport can take you, and on what terms. We’ve sorted it the way it actually matters: not by a single headline number, but by how much work each destination demands of you before you go.

First, Read the Categories — They Are Not the Same Thing

Most “visa-free” lists lump everything together and mislead you. There are really four tiers, and the practical difference between them is large.

Visa-free (no visa at all). You show up with a valid passport and you’re admitted for a set period. Nothing to apply for, nothing to pay at the border. This is the only category that is truly effortless.

Visa on arrival (VOA). No advance paperwork, but you queue at the airport or land border, often pay a fee, and occasionally need supporting documents (a return ticket, proof of funds, a hotel booking). Convenient, but not guaranteed — a VOA can be refused, and conditions change without much notice.

eVisa / eTA (apply online first). Technically a visa, but you get it from your laptop instead of an embassy. Cheaper and faster than a consular visa, but you must do it before you fly — turning up without an approved eVisa means you don’t board.

Visa required (in advance). The traditional route: an embassy appointment, a file of documents, a fee, and a wait. This is where most of the world’s wealthy destinations sit for Tunisian passport holders.

Keep those four in mind as you read. A country in the second or third tier is reachable “without an embassy visit,” but it is not the same as walking off a plane on your passport alone.

Where Tunisians Travel With No Visa at All

These are the genuinely visa-free destinations — passport only, admitted on arrival. This is the list worth memorising, because it’s the one that lets you travel on a whim.

The Maghreb and the Arab world: Algeria (90 days), Libya, Mauritania, and Jordan (three months) remain open on the passport alone. Iran admits Tunisians visa-free for 15 days for tourism. Note the painful recent loss: Morocco, long a passport-only neighbour, now requires an electronic travel authorisation before you go — a real change for Tunisian travellers, which we covered when Morocco introduced its e-visa requirement.

Sub-Saharan Africa: Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Niger, and Senegal (most for 90 days) — much of West Africa is open — along with Kenya, South Africa (90 days), Mauritius (90 days), and Equatorial Guinea.

Asia and the Pacific: Turkey (90 days within 180 — the single most useful entry on this list for most Tunisians), Malaysia (90 days), Japan (90 days — a genuine and pleasant surprise), the Philippines (30 days), and the Pacific islands of Fiji, Micronesia, Samoa, and Vanuatu.

The Americas and the Caribbean: Brazil (90 days), Ecuador (90 days), Belize, Haiti, Dominica, Barbados (six months), Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Suriname (which adds a pre-paid entry fee).

Bonus territories: Hong Kong (30 days), the British Virgin Islands, the Cook Islands, Niue, and Northern Cyprus all admit Tunisians without a visa.

Where You Get the Visa at the Airport (Visa on Arrival)

No advance application, but expect a counter, a fee, and sometimes a document check.

Africa: Cape Verde, Comoros (45 days), Ghana (30 days), Guinea-Bissau (90 days), Burundi, and Namibia (90 days). Several others run a VOA or eVisa in parallel — Ethiopia, Madagascar, Mozambique, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and Tanzania among them; doing the online version first is usually smoother.

Asia: Thailand (15 days), Indonesia (the Bali route, via visa-on-arrival), the Maldives (a free visa on arrival, 30 days), Nepal, Bangladesh, and Timor-Leste, plus the territory of Macau. Cambodia, Laos, and Sri Lanka also offer a VOA-or-eVisa choice.

Middle East and the Americas: Lebanon (conditional, at Beirut and other ports), plus Nicaragua, Palau, Tuvalu, and Bolivia across the Atlantic and Pacific.

Where You Apply Online First (eVisa / eTA)

These need a few minutes at a screen before departure — quick, but not optional.

The ones most likely to matter to a Tunisian itinerary: Qatar (via the Hayya platform), South Korea (the K-ETA), Vietnam, Pakistan (a free electronic travel authorisation), Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. Africa adds a long roster — Botswana, Djibouti, Gabon, Nigeria, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, the Seychelles, and more — and the Caribbean contributes Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, and Saint Kitts and Nevis. Albania and Armenia round out the easy European-edge options.

Where You Still Need a Visa in Advance

This is the part the optimistic listicles tend to skip, and it’s the part that shapes most real travel plans.

The entire Schengen Area — France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and the rest — requires a Schengen visa arranged before travel, and the cost and rejection rates are no small matter: Tunisians spent over €16 million on Schengen visa applications in a single year, with a high share refused. The United Kingdom, United States, and Canada all require visas too — and the US recently added Tunisia to a list of countries facing large visa bond deposits, raising the bar further. Australia, China, India, Singapore, and most of the Gulf (Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Oman) sit in this tier as well. Even Egypt requires a visa for independent travellers, exempting only organised tour groups.

One to watch: Russia has announced visa-free entry for several African countries including Tunisia, which we reported when the policy was unveiled — but confirm it has actually entered into force before you count on it.

How to Use This List Without Getting Burned

Three rules keep travellers out of trouble.

First, re-confirm before you book, not after. Visa policies shift with diplomacy, season, and security, and a list — including this one — is a snapshot, not a guarantee. The destination’s own embassy or immigration website is the final word; the airline’s IATA Timatic check is the practical one.

Second, watch passport validity. A great many countries demand at least six months of validity beyond your travel dates, regardless of the visa rule. An in-date passport that expires in four months can end a trip before it starts — and renewing a Tunisian passport takes time you should budget for.

Third, read the conditions, not just the category. “Visa on arrival” can carry a return-ticket requirement; “visa-free” can carry an entry fee; an eVisa can specify which airport you must enter through. The headline tier tells you how hard it is; the fine print tells you whether you actually qualify.

The Honest Bottom Line

The Tunisian passport is a mid-table document, and the truthful summary is two-sided. The doors that open easily lead mostly south and east — across Africa, into Turkey and Malaysia and the wider Asian arc, and out to a scatter of islands few people ever reach. The doors that stay locked without paperwork lead north and west, to the Europe and North America that dominate most Tunisians’ travel dreams.

That is not a reason for gloom. Visa-free Turkey alone is a deep, rewarding country; Malaysia, Brazil, Japan, and the islands are the kind of trips a lifetime is short for. The art of travelling on a Tunisian passport is to stop measuring it against the passports that open every door, and to start with the surprisingly long list of places that already say yes.


From the Carthage Magazine Bookshelf

Carthage Magazine’s books are written for the journey into Tunisia — handy if you’re a member of the diaspora planning a trip home, or pointing visiting friends toward the country you came from:

  • All About Tunisia — the definitive English-language traveller’s guide. 572 pages, 27 chapters, all nine regions, every UNESCO inscription, five thematic trails — and the practical answers (visa, currency, transport, etiquette) most travellers wish they’d had on the plane. $24.99 · PDF & EPUB
  • Speak Like a Local — 200+ Tunisian Arabic phrases with native audio recorded in Tunis. The phrases for the taxi, the souk, the café, and the dinner table. $14.99 · PDF, EPUB, MP3
  • The Authentic Tunisian Cookbook — sixty traditional recipes from the heart of North Africa. For when you’re far from home and missing the food. $9.99 · PDF & EPUB

All three are available as a bundle for $39.99 — guide, language, and food, delivered together.

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Editorial Staff

Editorial staff account at Carthage Magazine, Tunisia's premier English lifestyle magazine with thousands of page-views per month and over 200,000 social media followers.

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1 comment

Jawher March 14, 2021 - 1:44 pm

Are you sure Ukraine is a visa free country for tunisian citizens ?

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The Authentic
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N° 01 · Cookbook

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$9.99 PDF · EPUB
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