January 3, 2026
- Updated guide for 2026 with explicit mention of visa-free entry or 60-day stamp
- Added requirement to complete the All‑in‑One Travel Digital Form 48–72 hours before arrival
- Included nationality lists for prior-visa-required and visa-free groups with examples
- Added concrete document requirements and amounts (passport 6+ months, $100/day ≈ MUR 4,500)
- Added fees, processing-time ranges, and enforcement statistics (deportations, fines, 2025 data)
(MAURITIUS) Mauritius still offers one of Africa’s easiest entry rules in 2026: most visitors arrive visa-free or get a stamp on arrival for 60 days, provided they carry basic proof of travel plans and money. That simplicity matters for families planning holidays, traders attending meetings, and remote workers testing the island before committing to a longer permit.

Who controls entry: nationality and the 60-day stamp
Before booking flights, confirm whether you qualify for visa-free entry or a visa on arrival. Over 100 nationalities — including the United States (🇺🇸), United Kingdom, Canada (🇨🇦), Australia, and most EU countries — typically receive an initial 60 days for tourism or business.
A smaller group must obtain a visa before travel. Countries regularly listed in that category include Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Sudan, Syria, Somalia, and North Korea.
Note: “Visa-free” does not mean “no questions asked.” Immigration officers still check:
- passport validity,
- return or onward tickets,
- accommodation details,
- and proof of funds.
Plan to arrive with a paper or digital folder you can open quickly at the counter.
Key point: nationality determines the whole pathway — confirm it early.
The required digital step: All‑in‑One Travel Form
Every foreign visitor must submit the All‑in‑One Travel Digital Form before arrival. It replaces the old paper disembarkation card and is intended to speed up airport processing.
- Complete it about 48 to 72 hours before your flight.
- Keep the QR code ready on your phone and as a screenshot.
- Use the official government portal: Safe Mauritius “All‑in‑One Travel”.
According to VisaVerge.com, this form is now the single most common reason travelers get held up at check-in, because airlines require it before boarding.
Documents to prepare for short stays (tourism or business)
For a standard visit under the 60-day rule, bring originals when possible and keep backups in email. Officials commonly expect:
- Passport validity: at least 6+ months beyond your stay, with 2 blank pages.
- Return or onward ticket: booked and dated.
- Accommodation proof: hotel booking, host invitation, or address.
- Proof of funds: officials often look for $100 per day (about MUR 4,500).
- Health paperwork: a yellow fever certificate if arriving from an endemic area.
Business visitors should also carry a simple letter or email showing the purpose of meetings. Visitors entering as tourists or business travelers are barred from local paid work.
Documents summary table
| Document | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Passport | 6+ months validity, 2 blank pages |
| Ticket | Return or onward ticket, booked |
| Accommodation | Booking, host invitation, or address |
| Funds | ~$100/day (≈ MUR 4,500) |
| Health | Yellow fever certificate when relevant |
| Business proof | Letter/email stating purpose of meetings |
A realistic entry timeline: from booking to the immigration desk
Most visitors won’t file a separate visa application, but the process still has predictable steps. Keep them tight to reduce stress.
- Confirm your category (visa-free, visa on arrival, or prior visa required) and check passport expiry.
- Complete the All‑in‑One Travel Form 48–72 hours before departure and save the QR code.
- Assemble your entry pack: ticket, accommodation, funds proof, and any health certificate.
- Arrive ready to answer questions about your itinerary and confirmation that you won’t work locally.
- Check the stamp before leaving the counter, including the allowed stay (usually 60 days).
At Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam Airport, officers may take biometrics and do routine health screening measures that became standard after COVID-era controls. Processing is usually quick when documents match the questions.
Stay limits, extensions, and the “six months in a calendar year” trap
The initial stamp is often 60 days, but travelers sometimes plan longer beach stays or repeat visits. Key points:
- Extensions are allowed on a case-by-case basis and must be handled inside Mauritius, not at the airport.
- Tourist stays can reach six months in a calendar year in some situations.
- U.S. citizens: guidance references 180 days per calendar year visa-free.
Apply for an extension before your current permission expires and be prepared to show updated accommodation and funds. Treat expiry dates as firm: overstays carry penalties that can derail future trips.
When you must apply before travel: higher-risk lists and transit limits
If your passport is from a country in the “prior visa required” category, obtain a visa before boarding. Student entry also requires pre-approval from a Mauritian institution.
Transit rules to watch:
- Transit under 24 hours: usually allowed with an onward ticket.
- Longer layovers: may trigger a visa requirement.
- Nationals of Afghanistan, Algeria, DR Congo, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria, Sudan, or Yemen face stricter transit treatment and should not assume airport transit will be automatic.
Fees and processing times to budget for
- Visa-free/arrival stamp: generally free.
- Advance visa fees (tourist/business): commonly €20–€100.
- Embassy processing: typically 3 to 15 days, many cases 5 to 10 days.
- Practical document/related costs: estimated MUR 2,000–5,000 (≈ $45–$110).
- Long-term schemes: additional $500–$2,000 for legal and medical steps.
Plan time and money for supporting paperwork and potential embassy processing.
Compliance: what gets visitors fined, removed, or banned
Mauritius enforces entry rules. Major violations and consequences:
- Common offenses: overstays and undeclared work.
- Penalties cited include fines up to MUR 10,000 (≈ $220), possible jail, and 5-year bans in serious cases.
- Enforcement scale: in 2025, the guide reports 2,300+ deportations tied to overstays and work violations, with airlines carrying removal costs estimated at $5M+.
- Example: a U.S. visitor was reportedly fined $500 in November 2025 for undeclared freelancing.
Warning: remote work still requires the right permission. Do not assume short-stay tourist/business entry covers paid online work.
Turning a short stay into a long-term plan: permits and schemes
If you decide to stay longer or work on the island, the route depends on purpose:
- Occupation Permit (through the Economic Development Board): used for paid work or running a business; can be valid up to 10 years for high-value roles.
- Retired Non-Citizen Scheme: for people 50+ transferring €40,000+ annually.
- Property Development Scheme: requires €375,000+ in real estate.
- Young Professional Scheme: for applicants under 40 with a salary of MUR 60,000+ per month.
- Premium Visa: a one-year renewable option for remote workers with foreign clients; framed as having no tax on foreign income under that scheme. Processing through the EDB portal now runs around 2 weeks, after a reported 15% application rise in 2025.
Where to verify rules before you fly
Mauritius updates country lists and technical requirements frequently. Confirm details close to travel. Official resources include:
- Mauritius Passport and Immigration Office — posts official entry and permit information, including contact points for extensions and compliance.
- Economic Development Board portal — for permits and longer-term schemes.
Business visitors should note some additional limits cited in the guide:
- Up to 120 days per year for certain business-related visits, with a maximum 90 days per trip.
- Social visits: capped at 45 days.
- Medical treatment entries: can run up to six months at registered clinics.
This guide details Mauritius’s 2026 entry requirements, highlighting the 60-day visa-free stay for many nationalities. It emphasizes the necessity of the All-in-One Digital Form and proof of financial means. The article also covers penalties for overstaying, specialized long-term residency schemes like the Premium Visa for remote workers, and specific transit restrictions for high-risk nationalities, ensuring travelers remain compliant with local immigration laws.
