January 3, 2026
- Updated title to ‘Djibouti Visa Guide 2026’ and emphasized eVisa focus for 2026
- Added specific visa fees and lengths: Tourist $23 (up to 90 days), Business $30–40 (90 days), Transit $12 (14 days)
- Added processing times and timelines: standard ~72 hours, rush 48/24 hours, apply 10–14 days before travel
- Included entry rules and penalties: passport 6 months + two blank pages, overstays fined up to $50 per day
- Clarified eVisa limits: valid only at Ambouli Airport; land/sea entries require embassy visas
(DJIBOUTI) Djibouti is steering most visitors toward online visas in 2026, and for many travelers the safest plan is to secure approval before flying. The government’s eVisa system now covers most tourism and business trips, while visa on arrival is limited and less predictable.

That shift matters because eVisas are valid only at Djibouti-Ambouli International Airport. If you plan to enter by land or sea, you’ll need an embassy or consular visa instead, and you should start earlier.
Airport refusals: key entry rules that trigger problems
Immigration officers check basics first. Your passport must have at least 6 months of validity on the day you arrive and two blank pages for stamps.
Overstaying is costly. Djibouti’s rules allow fines up to $50 per day, and repeat problems can result in removal and difficulties re-entering on a later trip.
Tourism has grown to over 100,000 visitors annually in the years leading up to 2026, and officials have pushed digital filing to cut airport lines and improve checks.
For most eligible nationalities, applications run through the government’s eVisa portal on the Djibouti eVisa platform, which collects your form, uploads, and card payment in one place.
Important: eVisas are accepted only at Ambouli Airport. Land and sea entry require an embassy-issued visa.
Picking the right visa type for your trip
Djibouti issues several visas, but three options cover most short stays. Choosing the wrong category, or the wrong entry point, can lead to delays or refusal at the counter.
Common choices in 2026 include:
- Tourist eVisa
- Single entry
- Up to 90 days of stay
- Fee: $23 USD
- Note: eVisa is issued with a short window to enter — don’t apply months early and then change plans.
- Business eVisa
- Single entry for meetings or investment visits
- Up to 90 days
- Fee: $30–40 USD
- Requirement: Invitation letter from a Djibouti-registered company
- Transit eVisa
- For short stopovers
- Up to 14 days
- Fee: $12 USD
- Requirement: Proof of onward travel
- Multiple-entry options
- For frequent travelers
- Validity up to 6 months
- Fees: ~$40–50 USD
- Requires longer itinerary and stronger supporting documents
Visa on arrival still exists for a limited set of nationalities, but the 2026 pattern is clear: officers expect pre-clearance. If you qualify for both, the eVisa route usually saves time and stress.
Applying through the eVisa portal — four practical steps
Most travelers should apply 10–14 days before departure, even though standard processing averages 72 hours. Peak season (October–March) produces backlogs; about 10% of applications were delayed in 2025.
Follow these steps:
- Create your account and start the form
– Enter your name exactly as in your passport, plus passport number, expiry date, and planned hotel or host address in Djibouti.
2. Upload documents in the required format
– Clear scans under 1 MB, usually JPG, PNG, or PDF.
– The system rejects dark photos or cropped passport pages.
3. Choose processing speed and pay
– Standard: ~72 hours
– Faster options: 48 hours and 24 hours
– Fees are non-refundable once paid by card.
4. Track, receive, and print your eVisa
– Approval arrives by email; print a copy for airline check-in and immigration inspection.
According to VisaVerge.com analysis, the most common fixable mistakes are simple data-entry errors (typos in surnames, swapped passport digits), not missing eligibility.
Document checklist to avoid rejections
Incomplete uploads drove rejection rates to about 15% in 2025. Treat the document stage like a boarding pass check: airlines may refuse you if the paperwork looks wrong.
Have these ready before you open the application:
- Passport biodata page scan, showing all corners and the machine-readable lines.
- Recent passport photo with a plain background.
- Return or onward ticket, matching the dates entered in the form.
- Hotel booking confirmation, or a host invitation with the host’s identification.
- Proof you can cover expenses — often shown as $50 per day in cash access or a bank statement if requested.
Additional notes:
– Travel insurance is recommended (not a strict visa requirement) given the cost of medical evacuation from remote sites.
– If traveling with children, submit a separate application for each child.
What to expect at Ambouli Airport on arrival
On arrival, present your printed eVisa, passport, and supporting documents. Officers may take fingerprints or ask brief questions about your stay.
- Typical immigration wait: 30–60 minutes
- Tourist extensions: available inside Djibouti for up to 30 extra days at $20
- Business extensions: handled case by case
- Overstays: fines remain up to $50 per day
When you must use an embassy instead of the eVisa
Use an embassy-issued visa if:
- You plan to enter by land border or seaport (eVisas are invalid for these entry points)
- You need work or study permits (these still require embassy approval)
Embassy processing details:
– Slower than online — often 3–7 days
– Applicants generally submit originals and copies in person
– Fees vary by visa type, commonly $23 to $50 in published guidance
Visa on arrival — backup plan and cautions
Some travelers still attempt visa on arrival. The risks include long queues, extra questioning, or requests to show supporting documents you may have left at home.
If your nationality allows visa on arrival, carry the same folder you would use for an eVisa:
– Printed hotel proof
– Onward ticket
– Evidence of funds
Families and groups usually move faster when each traveler’s papers are organized.
Timeframes to plan around
Typical processing times and a safe timeline:
- Standard online processing: ~72 hours
- Paid rush options: 48 hours or 24 hours
- Allow extra days for weekends, email delays, or re-uploads
Suggested timeline:
– Day 1: Submit the form and pay
– Days 2–4: Watch for approval email (standard service)
– Week before travel: Print the eVisa and re-check passport validity
– Travel day: Present documents at airline check-in and at Djibouti immigration
Practical notes for business visitors and investors
- Budget time to secure the invitation letter — it’s a required upload for the business eVisa.
- If meetings are in free trade zones, keep contact details handy in case officers ask for host verification.
- Multiple-entry visas cost more up front but reduce repeat filings for frequent regional travel.
- Transit eVisa remains a low-cost option at $12 USD for those transiting to another country.
Final checks before you board
Before departure, match every detail across your passport, ticket, and eVisa printout. Carry paper copies, not just phone screenshots — batteries die and airport Wi‑Fi can fail.
Keep your application email and payment receipt in the same folder. If you applied close to departure, arrive early for check-in: airlines sometimes verify visas carefully.
Travelers who follow the portal rules report smooth entry and more time for the salt flats of Lake Assal or diving in the Gulf of Tadjoura.
If you must rely on visa on arrival, bring the same documents and expect longer waits at Ambouli Airport at times.
Djibouti’s 2026 immigration policy emphasizes the eVisa system for airport arrivals, offering tourist, business, and transit options. Travelers must apply 10-14 days in advance via the official portal, providing digital documents and fees ranging from $12 to $50. The eVisa is exclusive to air travel; land and sea entries still require embassy-issued visas. Strict compliance with passport validity and documentation is essential to avoid fines.
