![]() ![]() On 22 September 2023 Serbia and Guatemala signed an agreement on mutual visa exemption for ordinary passport holders, and is yet to come into force. Serbia and Venezuela signed an agreement on mutual visa exemption for ordinary passport holders on 14 July 2023, and is yet to come into force. Serbia and Antigua and Barbuda signed an agreement on mutual visa exemption for ordinary passport holders on 11 March 2023, and is yet to come into force. The agreement is yet to come into force as of October 2023. Serbia and Turkey signed an agreement on 10 June 2022, allowing their citizens to travel to each other's countries with an ID card. The new Open Balkan zone between the three countries has been fully implemented since 1 January 2023, allowing all citizens to enjoy complete freedom of movement like EU citizens practice in Schengen Area. Serbia, as one of the initiators and creators of the Open Balkan, had already implemented visa free movements for the truckers and agriculture workers between Serbia, Albania & North Macedonia since 1 January 2022. Although Serbia unilaterally abolished visas for Azerbaijan citizens in 2018, and since then Azerbaijan citizens can enter Serbia on visa-free regime. Serbia and Azerbaijan mutually abolished visas on 11 October 2021. Īrmenia lifted visa requirements for Serbian citizens on 30 January 2020. Suriname abolished visas for holders of Serbian passport in September 2019. īarbados abolished visas for Serbian citizens in May 2019. United Arab Emirates abolished visas for Serbian citizens on. Uzbekistan abolished visas for Serbia citizens on 21 January 2019. Serbia and Kyrgyzstan mutually abolished visas on 8 November 2018. Ĭolombia abolished visas for Serbian citizens in February 2018. In November 2017 Iran abolished visas for Serbian citizens but reversed its decision in October 2018. In January 2017, agreement on mutual visa free travel between China and Serbia entered into force. In April 2016 Indonesia abolished visas for Serbian citizens for a maximum stay of 30 days. In August 2015 agreement on visa-free travel with Moldova came into force. In July 2014 agreement on visa-free travel with Mongolia came into force. In August 2013 agreement on visa-free travel with Brazil came into force. Serbia and Albania mutually abolished visas in July 2011. Japan abolished visas for Serbia citizens in May 2011. Serbia and Ukraine mutually abolished visas in May 2011. Serbia signed an agreement on the abolishment of visas with Kazakhstan in August 2010. Serbia and Turkey mutually abolished visa regime in July 2010. ![]() The European Union Schengen area countries lifted visas for Serbia citizens in December 2009. Serbia signed a visa-free agreement with Israel in September 2009. ![]() Serbia and Russia signed visa-free travel agreement in February 2009. From the 2000s onward, the situation has been significantly and constantly improving. With the subsequent dissolution of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, the period of difficulties related to travel bureaucracy started for all successor states, including Serbia. Passport holders only required visas for six countries: the United States, West Germany, Greece, Israel, Albania and the People's Republic of China. Eventually this applied to most states of the world, promoting the Yugoslav passport to "one of the most convenient in the world, as it was one of the few with which a person could travel freely through both the East and West" during the Cold War. As part of its non-aligned policies, the Yugoslav government signed numerous mutual agreements on visa-free entry from the mid-1960s. Until the 1990s, the Yugoslav passport has been described as highly sought-after commodity. Inside of Serbian passport History īefore Serbia began issuing new biometric passports in 2008, its citizens travelled using old Federal Republic of Yugoslavia passport. Īs of May 2019, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brunei, Dominica, Grenada, Mauritius, Seychelles, Serbia and the United Arab Emirates are the only countries whose citizens may travel without a visa to China, Russia and the Schengen Area. The Serbian passport is still one of the 5 passports with the greatest improvement in rating since 2006, adding 103 countries to its visa-free list. As of 19 January 2023, Serbian citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 138 countries and territories, ranking the Serbian passport 34th overall in terms of travel freedom according to the Henley Passport Index. Visa requirements for Serbian citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of the Republic of Serbia. Main article: Serbian passport A Serbian passport ![]()
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