January 3, 2026
- Updated entry policy to state every nationality is eligible for visa on arrival (2026)
- Added detailed 2026 requirements: passport ≥6 months, 1–2 blank pages, and €30–€60 fee range
- Included transit option: free 24-hour transit visa with onward proof
- Added step-by-step airport arrival process with estimated times and peak months
- Added penalties and specifics for overstays including fines, detention, and multi-year bans
- Added longer-term visa fees and embassy processing times (1-year €250, 10-year €500)
(MORONI) Comoros keeps one of the simplest entry systems in 2026: every nationality can get a visa on arrival, most often at Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport. For tourists and short-term business visitors, that usually means a single-entry stay of up to 45 days after a short airport process and a cash fee.

That ease matters because it reduces pre-trip paperwork, but it also shifts the burden to the arrival desk. If your passport, payment method, or onward plans don’t meet the checks, the airline can stop you from boarding or an officer can refuse entry on arrival.
2026 entry rules that shape every successful arrival
Comoros requires a visa for all foreign nationals, with no visa-free exemptions. The practical difference is that Comoros applies a universal visa on arrival policy at key entry points, including the main international airport in Moroni.
Plan around these baseline requirements:
- Passport validity: At least 6 months beyond entry.
- Blank pages: At least 1 blank page is the safe minimum; many travelers keep 2.
- Length of stay: Up to 45 days on the standard visitor visa on arrival.
- Fees: commonly reported as €30–€60 (about $30–$65 USD), paid in cash.
- Transit option: a free 24-hour transit visa with proof of onward travel.
VisaVerge.com reports that the biggest real-world problem at the airport isn’t the form itself. It’s travelers arriving with the wrong cash, unclear lodging details, or no onward ticket confirmation.
Quick reference table: baseline entry facts
| Requirement | Typical detail |
|---|---|
| Passport validity | ≥ 6 months beyond entry |
| Blank pages | 1–2 recommended |
| Standard stay | Up to 45 days (single entry) |
| Visa fee (cash) | €30–€60 (approx $30–$65 USD) |
| Transit | Free 24-hour transit visa with onward proof |
Before you fly: set yourself up for a five-minute decision at the counter
Airlines often act as the first “gatekeeper” for entry rules. Even with a visa on arrival policy, carriers can deny boarding if they think you can’t meet arrival requirements.
Do these checks before leaving for the airport:
- Carry euros or crisp U.S. dollar bills. Travelers regularly report that worn bills and card payments don’t work.
- Keep proof of where you’ll sleep. A hotel booking or host address helps answer quick questions.
- Bring an onward or return ticket record. An e-ticket on your phone usually works, but a printed copy helps if your battery dies.
- Carry basic proof you can support yourself. Some guidance uses €50 per day as a practical benchmark.
- Families should pack relationship documents. A birth certificate and a consent letter help when a child travels with one parent.
💡 Before you fly, ensure you have€ or crisp USD cash, a confirmed onward ticket, and a local address. Having printed bookings and proof of funds helps speed the visa-on-arrival review at the airport.
Health rules also affect boarding. As of early 2026 guidance reflected in travel advisories, Comoros doesn’t list routine mandatory vaccines for all arrivals, but yellow fever proof is expected when arriving from certain endemic areas.
Important: airlines may refuse boarding if you cannot demonstrate required documents or payment. Treat the airline check-in as the first formal entry review.
What happens at Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport on arrival
At Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport, the visa on arrival process is designed to be fast, but it still follows a clear sequence that leaves little room for improvisation.
Step 1: Join the immigration line and ask for the arrival visa form (5–30 minutes)
After you disembark, follow signs to immigration. Waiting times rise in peak travel periods, including June to September and December to February.
You’ll receive a form at the airport. Fill it in carefully, because small errors slow down the officer’s review.
Step 2: Complete the form with your stay details (3–10 minutes)
Expect to provide basic facts: your identity, passport details, where you’re staying in Comoros, and how long you plan to remain.
Write a specific address, not only a neighborhood name. If you’re splitting time between islands or hotels, list your first stay location.
Step 3: Present documents and answer short questions (2–10 minutes)
Hand over your passport and the completed form. Officers commonly ask for:
- Onward or return ticket proof
- Accommodation details
- Basic funds support
- For business travelers, an employer letter or a local invitation
Most travelers who arrive prepared finish this stage with only a few questions and a quick review of the passport’s blank pages.
Step 4: Pay the fee in cash and receive the stamp (2–5 minutes)
Pay the visa fee in cash. The range commonly cited is €30–€60, and travelers report euros are preferred.
Once paid, the officer stamps your passport and marks your permitted stay. That stamp is the document you live by during the trip.
Key takeaway: Many visitors process in 5–15 minutes when paperwork and payment are ready. Delays usually come from searching for bookings, borrowing cash, or missing onward proof.
Managing timeframes and expectations: “quick” still means “document-ready”
- Most visitors are processed quickly when they present clear documentation.
- Delays occur when travelers need to search emails, borrow cash, or dispute requirements.
- For couples or families, allow extra time—children’s documents often trigger additional checks.
- For transit passengers, the 24-hour free transit visa requires proving you will leave within the day; keep the connecting booking easy to show.
Practical habits:
- Photograph your entry stamp and save it offline.
- Set calendar reminders at day 30 and day 40 of your stay.
- Keep printed or offline copies of bookings and medical records.
Business travel and longer-term visas
The airport visa on arrival is aimed at short stays, including brief business meetings. If your plans involve repeated entries, longer projects, or investment-related travel, Comoros issues longer visas through embassies.
Reported longer visa options for 2026:
- 1-year visa: €250
- 10-year multiple-entry visa: €500
Embassy processing is slower than the airport counter. Plan for 1–4 weeks for processing, and in some cases allow 4–6 weeks because Comoros has a limited global consular footprint.
Some consular offices also collect biometrics (fingerprints and photo) as part of broader checks expanded after 2025 migration pressures.
Extensions inside Comoros: treat the expiry date as a hard deadline
A 45-day stamp is not a suggestion. If you need more time, request an extension at the local immigration office about one week before your permission expires.
- Extensions are discretionary and typically require a clear reason (medical issues, safety concerns).
- Waiting until after expiry exposes you to penalties even if an extension might still be considered.
Practical tips to avoid last-day issues:
- Photograph your entry stamp and save it offline.
- Set reminders at day 30 and day 40.
- Keep copies of any medical records or travel disruption notices.
Overstays: the penalties are steep, and they follow you
Comoros treats overstays as more than a fee problem. Reported consequences include:
- Fines starting at €50 per day
- Potential detention
- For being 1–30 days overdue: labeled an “undesirable person” and facing a two-year entry ban
- For stays beyond 30 days overdue: possible deportation
These outcomes matter for travelers who move in the region for work, family visits, or immigration appointments. A ban can disrupt future plans, and a deportation record may affect visa applications elsewhere.
Safety, advisories, and what officials tend to ask about
Government travel advisories shape how travelers prepare and what questions are asked at borders.
- The U.S. State Department’s guidance for Comoros includes notes about crime and situational awareness and is a helpful reference: U.S. Department of State travel information portal for Comoros.
- Canada’s travel advice has flagged petty theft; practical arrival habits include keeping your passport secure, carrying only the cash needed for fees, and storing backup documents separately.
Comoros enforces customs expectations. Declarations and limits on carrying large sums of cash reflect anti-money laundering rules, and travelers with valuables should be ready to declare them.
For most visitors, the trip begins smoothly when they treat the airport visa desk like a formal appointment: correct cash, clear lodging details, and an onward or return plan that’s easy to show.
Comoros facilitates easy entry in 2026 via a universal visa on arrival system. Visitors typically receive a 45-day stay for a fee of €30–€60, payable in cash (Euros or USD). Essential requirements include six-month passport validity, proof of lodging, and a return ticket. To avoid severe penalties or entry bans, travelers must respect the 45-day limit and prepare documentation before arrival.
