January 2, 2026
- Updated title to ‘Guyana Visa Guide 2026’ and refocused content toward arrival expectations
- Added visa-free list noting nearly 60 countries and 90-day visa-free allowance
- Clarified that airport walk-up visa applications largely ended around 2023 and require pre-approval
- Included detailed pre-approval process timeline (4–6 weeks) and fee amounts (US$25/US$35/US$140)
- Added entry document checklist, extension rules (two 30-day extensions), and employer notification timing (4 weeks)
(GUYANA) Guyana now lets citizens of nearly 60 countries enter without a visa for short trips, but many other travelers must secure pre-approval before boarding if they plan to use a visa on arrival.
The shift matters because airport walk-up applications largely ended around 2023, and airlines can refuse boarding when approval emails are missing.

Start with your status: visa-free or pre-approved
For tourism or business visits of up to 90 days, visa-free entry covers travelers from the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, most Schengen countries, many CARICOM states, and several South American countries. Dual nationals with a valid Guyanese passport, or proof of birth in Guyana, also enter visa-free.
If your nationality is not on the exempt list, plan on an advance process. Guyana still issues visas on arrival for eligible travelers, but only after the Ministry of Home Affairs has granted pre-approval through its online system or via a Guyanese mission.
Visa-free entry travelers still face document checks
Visa-free entry doesn’t mean “show up and hope.” At check-in, airline staff often request a return ticket and an address in Guyana, because airlines can be fined for transporting inadmissible passengers.
At the border, officers decide the permitted length of stay—up to 90 days—and they can shorten it if your plan looks vague. Bring hotel confirmations or a host’s address, plus proof of sufficient funds for daily costs.
Business visitors should carry a letter from the company or event organizer stating the meeting dates and affirming that no local employment will be undertaken. If you plan repeated trips, keep copies of past entry stamps, since a pattern of back-to-back stays can trigger questions about undeclared work. For minors, carry consent letters if one parent travels, and keep passports accessible at all times.
The non-negotiables airlines and border officers check
Before you start any application, make sure these basics are solid—these are common reasons for being turned away:
- Passport validity: at least six months beyond arrival, plus a blank page for stamps.
- Return or onward ticket that matches your stated stay.
- Proof of funds, often shown through recent bank statements.
- Yellow Fever certificate if arriving from a risk area within five days.
Those rules apply even when you qualify for visa-free entry. Officers use them to confirm you are a genuine visitor, not an overstayer or an undeclared worker.
Documents that drive pre-approval decisions
Pre-approval is mostly a paperwork test. Successful files usually contain clear scans and consistent details across every document. Prepare the following:
- Passport biodata page and a recent color photo meeting the portal’s size rules.
- Birth certificate or other identity record requested for your category.
- Sponsor evidence, if required (e.g., a Guyanese ID card or passport copy).
- Invitation letter, plus contact details that immigration can verify.
- A 30-day bank statement showing you can fund your stay.
- Character certificate and medical report when requested for longer-stay categories.
VisaVerge.com reports that most avoidable refusals stem from missing sponsor papers, blurry scans, and bank statements that do not match the trip length or the stated job.
A five-stage timeline from planning to landing
Treat the trip like a short project. For many non-exempt travelers, the full cycle runs 4–6 weeks, even when published processing times look shorter.
- Confirm you need pre-approval and pick the right category (same day).
Visitor, business, student, and employment routes require different proof. Decide early—changing categories later often means starting again. -
Collect your file and line up your sponsor (1–2 weeks).
If a sponsor is required, obtain the invitation letter and sponsor ID copy first. Those documents anchor the rest of your submission. -
Submit online and pay the fee (1 day).
Guyana’s official channel is the Immigration Support Services eServices portal, which is used for visa on arrival pre-approval and related immigration requests. Visitor visa fees listed for this route include US$25 standard and US$35 expedited, and employment visa on arrival fees are listed at US$140. -
Wait for a decision and respond fast to follow-ups (2–4 weeks).
A clean file often moves within the published window. If an officer requests clearer scans or extra proof, respond quickly—delays usually reset travel plans. -
Travel only after you have the approval notice (flight day).
Carry printed copies and keep digital backups. On arrival, the border officer compares originals to your pre-approval record before issuing the visa on arrival and stamping the permitted stay.
What actually happens at Cheddi Jagan and other entry points
Arrival in Guyana is straightforward when your story matches your documents. Expect a short interview at the counter about your purpose, where you will stay, and how you will support yourself. Keep answers consistent with your invitation letter, hotel booking, or itinerary.
If entering on a pre-approved visa on arrival, officers may call the sponsor to confirm the relationship and reason for the visit. Embassy guidance often repeats the same message:
“Guyana welcomes visitors with warmth but expects adherence to procedures.”
Transit passengers also need to plan: transit without a visa is allowed for airport stops up to 7 hours with an onward ticket. Longer waits generally require a visa or permission that matches your plan.
Staying compliant after entry: extensions and work limits
Guyana’s visitor stay is not a work permit. Working without proper authorization risks fines, removal, and future entry problems.
For visitors needing more time, immigration rules allow up to two 30-day extensions, but you must apply before your current stay expires.
Employment cases follow a separate path. For an Employment Visa on Arrival, the employer is expected to notify the Ministry of Home Affairs 4 weeks prior to arrival. Employers must also comply with local requirements, including NIS and GRA obligations.
Practical cautions during Guyana’s oil boom
Guyana’s rapidly growing oil economy has increased business travel and recruitment pitches. That attention has also driven scams targeting job seekers from non-exempt countries.
A legitimate employer will provide a verifiable invitation, proper pre-notification, and a contract that matches the visa category. Treat any offer that asks for large “processing” payments, or promises airport approval without pre-approval, as a red flag. Border officers have tightened checks, and incomplete airport files have left travelers stranded.
Family members, students, and dual nationals
Families often travel together, but each passport is assessed separately. Accompanying spouses and children of sponsored workers can qualify for visa on arrival when the main applicant’s sponsorship is in order.
Students generally need proof of enrollment at an accredited institution and evidence of funds for living costs.
Dual citizens should enter and exit on their Guyanese passport when possible. This reduces questions at the counter and avoids mismatches between nationalities and entitlement to visa-free entry.
Leaving Guyana with a clean record
When departing, immigration and airlines may ask for proof you stayed lawfully—especially if you extended. Keep extension receipts and any approval notices with your passport.
Overstays can lead to exit fines, future entry bans, or tougher questioning on subsequent trips. If you used a visa on arrival, confirm the stamped expiry date before leaving the counter, since mistakes are easier to fix immediately.
Travelers who need an extra month should apply for an extension before expiry, not after. If you change hotels or contact numbers, inform your sponsor, since officers may call them during a later visit. Keep boarding passes as they help confirm travel dates.
Guyana offers visa-free entry to many, but those requiring visas must now obtain digital pre-approval before flying. Essential requirements include a six-month passport validity, return tickets, and proof of sufficient funds. Business travelers need specific invitation letters, and extensions must be filed before the initial stay expires. The process emphasizes documented proof of intent to prevent overstays during the country’s economic expansion.
