US, UK, and Australian passports each open between 180 and 190 doors in 2026 — Schengen Europe (with ETIAS coming online), Japan, Singapore, most of Latin America, Hong Kong, Taiwan. From late 2026, all three nationalities will need ETIAS (EUR 7) to enter the Schengen Area, the UK requires an ETA from US/Australian visitors, and China reopened a unilateral 30-day visa-free program. A direct, current guide.
22 min read
In January 2026 the Henley Passport Index — which ranks the world's passports by number of destinations accessible without a prior visa — placed the United States in 7th-9th position, the United Kingdom in 5th-7th, and Australia in 5th-7th. Each opens 180 to 190 doors, some with no paperwork at all, others requiring an online fee of USD 10 to USD 25 before boarding.
But "visa-free" hides traps. Three very different realities live inside the term: fully free entry (passport stamp on arrival, no cost, no pre-authorization), entry requiring mandatory electronic pre-authorization (UK ETA for Americans, ETIAS for Schengen, K-ETA for Korea, eTA for Canada), and entry with visa on arrival (visa purchased at the destination airport). Treating the three as equivalent is why so many travelers get turned away at the gate.
The thesis of this guide is simple: US, UK, and Australian passports are among the strongest in the world, but not omnipotent. Knowing exactly what each delivers at every destination is the difference between a smooth trip and a night sleeping in the Frankfurt terminal.
What "visa-free country" really means — three categories to distinguish
TL;DRThe first layer is full exemption — arrive at immigration, show passport, get the stamp. The second is mandatory electronic pre-authorization (ETIAS, UK ETA, K-ETA, eTA Canada) for USD 7 to USD 25. The third is e-visa or visa on arrival — technically a visa, but the process is simplified. All three count toward the Henley Index destination total.
The first layer is full exemption. You arrive at immigration, show your passport, receive the stamp. That's it. This is the case for Japan, Singapore, Mexico, Morocco, South Africa, and most of Latin America and the Caribbean. No fee, no online form, nothing beyond a passport valid for at least six months from the date of entry.
The second is electronic pre-authorization. You fill in an online form, pay a fee (typically between USD 7 and USD 25), and receive an authorization linked to your passport number before boarding. It is not a consular visa. There is no interview. But without it, you do not board. Examples: ETIAS for Schengen Europe (from late 2026), UK ETA (mandatory for American and Australian travelers since 2025), K-ETA for South Korea, eTA for Canada.
The third is the e-visa or visa on arrival. Here the boundary is thinner. Technically a visa, but the process is simplified: requested online (e-visa) or paid at the destination airport upon arrival (VOA). Turkey, Egypt, India, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Tanzania, Cambodia operate this way. The Henley Index counts these modalities in the 180-190 destination totals, which is why those numbers need an asterisk.
Schengen Europe — the new ETIAS reality for US, UK, AU passports
TL;DRTwenty-nine countries form the Schengen Area in 2026. US, UK, and Australian travelers enter visa-free for 90 days within any rolling 180-day window. From late 2026 (date has shifted), ETIAS becomes mandatory: EUR 7, valid 3 years, electronic. Not a visa — pre-authorization processed in minutes.
Twenty-nine countries form the Schengen Area in 2026. Americans, British, and Australians enter with passports valid for 90 days within any rolling 180-day window. This is a hard cap — you cannot stack two consecutive periods in different Schengen countries.
Complete Schengen list: Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Netherlands, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Czech Republic, Romania, Sweden, and Switzerland.
Outside Schengen but within Europe, visa-free for all three: Ireland (90 days, no time limit for British), Serbia, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia, North Macedonia, Georgia, Armenia, Moldova, Ukraine (with security caveats).
The major change in 2026 is ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorization System). Mandatory for US, UK, and Australian travelers, EUR 7 (free for under 18 and over 70), valid 3 years or until passport expires, multiple entries. Official start date has slipped several times — currently expected in late 2026. Check the European Commission's official site before each trip. Do not confuse ETIAS with a visa: it is electronic pre-authorization, no interview, typically processed in minutes.
Asia — where the most changed in 2026
TL;DRAsia is where Western passports gained the most ground in the past two years. Key shifts:
Asia is where US, UK, and Australian passports gained the most ground in the past two years. The relevant changes:
| Country | Modality 2026 | Stay | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Japan | Visa-free | 90 days | Free |
| Singapore | Visa-free | 90 days | Free |
| South Korea | K-ETA required | 90 days | KRW 10,000 (~USD 7) |
| Thailand | Visa-free + digital ETA | 60 days | Free |
| China | Visa-free (unilateral program) | 30 days | Free |
| Hong Kong | Visa-free | 90 days | Free |
| Taiwan | Visa-free | 90 days | Free |
| Philippines | Visa-free | 30 days | Free |
| Indonesia (Bali) | Visa on arrival | 30 days | IDR 500,000 (~USD 35) |
| Vietnam | e-visa | 90 days | USD 25 |
| Malaysia | Visa-free | 90 days | Free |
| Cambodia | Visa on arrival or e-visa | 30 days | USD 30 |
| Sri Lanka | e-visa (ETA) | 30 days | USD 50 |
| Maldives | Visa on arrival | 30 days | Free |
| India | e-visa | 30/90 days | USD 25-100 |
| Nepal | Visa on arrival | 90 days | USD 30-125 |
| Turkey | Visa-free (US, UK, AU) | 90 days | Free |
The big surprise is China. After decades of requiring a complex consular visa, Beijing renewed in 2026 its unilateral visa-free program for up to 30 days for US, UK, Australian, and most European passport holders, for tourism, transit, and short business. Note: does not apply to study, work, or extended stays.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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