January 3, 2026
- Updated visa-free eligibility numbers to 82 countries and 38 European countries through Dec 31, 2026
- Added specific entry rules and durations (30 days, 90-day annual caps, Poland/Lithuania/Latvia 90 days)
- Included new document and financial requirements: €25/day funds, €10,000 minimum insurance coverage
- Expanded visa categories and application details (Type B, C, D) and five-step application checklist
- Clarified entry restrictions: no visa-free if travelling to/from Russia and separate rules by entry point (Minsk airport, land/rail, Brest zone)
(BELARUS) Belarus kept broad visa-free entry rules into 2026, but the right path still depends on your passport, how you enter, and how long you stay. For many travelers, checking the Belarus visa requirements early prevents last-minute refusals at the border or an unexpected embassy appointment.

As of January 2026, Belarus offers visas for transit, short trips, and long stays, while citizens of 82 countries have some visa-free options with strict conditions on entry points.
Quick triage: visa-free route or embassy visa
Start with your nationality and your itinerary.
- Belarus extended visa-free entry for 38 European countries through December 31, 2026. That program works at all international road and rail border crossings.
- Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia citizens get up to 90 days per calendar year.
- Most other eligible Europeans get 30 days with a 90-day annual cap.
- British nationals (🇬🇧) enter visa-free for up to 30 days, with a maximum of 90 days per calendar year, through December 31, 2026.
- United States citizens (🇺🇸) need a visa for every entry because the earlier visa-free option ended in 2021.
Important restriction:
– Visa-free entry doesn’t apply if you travel directly from, or directly to, Russia, regardless of nationality — this rule commonly trips up frequent regional travelers.
Choosing the right visa category before you apply
If you don’t qualify for visa-free entry, pick the visa type that matches your purpose and length of stay:
- Type B (Transit visa) — for travelers crossing Belarus en route to a third country.
- Type C (Short-term visa) — common 30-day trips for tourism, business meetings, or short private visits.
- Type D (Long-term visa) — stays over 30 days: work, study, or longer business assignments.
- Private visit visa — usually requires an invitation letter from a host in Belarus (suitable for family trips where hotels are not the main plan).
Note: VisaVerge.com reports that most delays occur when travelers pick a category that doesn’t match their documents, rather than when a document is missing.
The Belarus visa application process in five actions
Applications normally run through the Belarusian embassy or consulate nearest you. You can submit:
- In person
- By registered mail
- Through an authorized travel agency
Consular guidance: apply no earlier than six months before the intended trip and avoid non-refundable bookings until the visa is issued.
Numbered steps
1. Fill out the standardized visa form in English, Russian, or Belarusian, in block letters or typed text, then sign it yourself. Parents or legal guardians sign for applicants under 18.
2. Build a document pack:
– Passport with two blank visa pages and validity 90 days after departure
– One color photo 35 x 45 mm, taken within six months
– Proof of health insurance
3. Add purpose-specific support papers:
– Hotel booking for tourism
– Company invitation for business
– Host invitation for private visits
– Onward tickets and a destination visa for transit
4. Show proof you can pay for the trip and stay:
– Belarus uses a minimum of €25 per day for standard visitors
– Border staff can ask for cash, cards, or traveler’s checks
5. Pay the consular fee, submit the file, and wait for review:
– Fees and payment methods vary by post — confirm instructions with the embassy or consulate handling your case
Document rules that cause the most refusals
Belarusian consulates apply strict format checks, and small errors can waste weeks.
Key document rules:
– Passport must be undamaged — no torn pages, erasures, or unauthorized markings.
– For applicants under 18:
– Include a full birth certificate showing both parents
– Copies of both parents’ (or legal representatives’) passports
– Travelers who once held USSR or Belarusian citizenship must show proof that that citizenship ended.
Photo requirements:
– Single color photo on a plain, evenly lit background
– Face should take 70–80% of the frame
– No sunglasses or hats unless an ethnic or religious reason is documented
Health insurance:
– Mandatory
– Must cover at least €10,000
– Valid across all of Belarus
– Match full trip dates
– Show insurer’s name, address, and phone number along with your full name
Visa-free options: Minsk Airport, land borders, and the Brest zone
Belarus’ visa-free options function as separate programs with distinct rules.
Minsk National Airport (air entry)
– 30-day visa-free entry for eligible nationalities
– Must arrive and depart only through Minsk National Airport (no switching to train exit)
– 30 days start on the date of the entry stamp
– Required documents at entry:
– Return or onward air ticket
– Health insurance meeting the €10,000 rule
– Evidence of funds at €25 per day
– Stays over five days trigger local registration duty (often handled by hotels/rentals)
Land and rail program (38 European countries)
– Entry allowed at any international road or rail crossing
– Re-entry allowed, with annual day caps varying by nationality
Brest (Terespol) zone
– 15-day visa-free zone via the Brest–Terespol border crossing
– Limits travel to the designated zone
– Registration required within five days
– Higher funds requirement: about €50 per day (described as two base amounts per day)
Where official rules live, and why you should check them before booking
Belarus changes entry rules by decree, so rely on official posts, not social media lists.
- The Ministry of Foreign Affairs publishes visa policy notices and visa-free program conditions on its official visa information pages: https://mfa.gov.by/en/visa/
- Your local Belarusian embassy or consulate posts the standardized form, current fee tables, and the address for submissions.
Consular warning: do not make irrevocable travel plans until the visa is granted.
Route planning caution:
– If your trip involves multiple countries, map your borders carefully.
– Example pitfalls:
– A visa-free stay that starts at Minsk Airport fails if you later exit by rail.
– A route that touches Russia can cancel visa-free eligibility even if you qualify on paper.
After entry: registration, stay limits, and extending time legally
Registration rules:
– If you stay more than five days, you must register with local police.
– Hotels often complete registration during check-in, but the traveler remains responsible.
– Keep proof of registration with travel documents — checks occur during departures and routine controls.
If you need to extend your stay:
– Contact the local unit of the Citizenship and Migration Department of the Ministry of Interior at your place of registration.
– The office can issue an exit visa or start a residence permit process, depending on your situation and visa category.
– Long-term travelers: plan early — your passport must remain valid for at least 90 days after the date you expect to leave Belarus.
Practical checks that save time at the counter
Most rejected files fail on basics. Do this quick audit before submission or boarding — airlines and border guards check documents and funds.
- Re-check the photo size: 35 x 45 mm and the six-month age limit.
- Carry insurance proof showing €10,000 coverage and Belarus-wide validity — not only a policy number.
- Bring funds evidence at €25 per day (or about €50 in the Brest zone) in an accepted form.
- Print copies of all documents and keep originals accessible.
Key takeaway: verify nationality-specific rules, entry/exit points, and document formats before you book non-refundable travel. Small errors in form or timing are the most common causes of refusals.
Belarus offers various entry paths including visa-free travel for 82 nationalities under specific conditions and traditional embassy visas for others. Key updates include extensions for Europeans through 2026 and strict rules against transit via Russia. Success depends on meticulous documentation, including health insurance and proof of funds. Travelers must register their stay if remaining in the country for more than five days to avoid legal issues.
