A majority of countries are open for tourism. Some entry restrictions may be in place, such as requiring a PCR test or proof of vaccination.
Africa •
Benin: Benin has resumed most transportation options (including airport operations) and business operations (including day cares and schools), although land borders remain closed to most travelers. •
Botswana: As of 1 December 2020, citizens from all countries are welcome in Botswana under regular visa laws, all passengers must have a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours before arrival. •
Cape Verde: As of 12 October 2020, Cape Verde is officially open for tourism. All travelers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of arrival. •
Democratic Republic of the Congo: As of 15 August 2020, The Democratic Republic of the Congo has resumed commercial flights. All travelers need to present a negative COVID-19 test. •
Djibouti: As of 18 July 2020, Djiboutian air, sea and land borders have reopened. •
Egypt: As of 1 July 2020, Egypt is officially open for tourism. As of 15 August, all passengers must have a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours before arrival. •
Ethiopia: Ethiopia has reopened its airports for international arrivals. Passengers will need to bring a negative PCR test taken within 5 days of arrival. They are also required to self-isolate at home for 14 days. •
Ghana: As of 1 September 2020, Ghana is officially open for tourism, all new arrivals must take a coronavirus test 72 hours prior to arrival. •
Kenya: As of 1 August 2020, Kenya has opened its international airports to regular air traffic. All arriving passengers on international flights whose body temperature is NOT above 37.5 °C (99.5 °F); do NOT have a persistent cough, difficulty in breathing or other flu-like symptoms; have negative PCR based COVID–19 test carried out within 96 hours before travel and are from countries considered low to medium risk COVID–19 transmission areas would be exempt from quarantine. •
Liberia: As of 29 June 2020, Liberia has opened its international airport to regular air traffic. •
Mauritius: On 15 July 2021, Mauritius reopened its borders for vaccinated travellers after 16 months of closure. Travelers must present proof of a negative PCR COVID-19 test taken no longer than 72 hours before departure. •
Namibia: As of 1 September 2020, Namibia has reopened its international airport to regular air traffic. •
Nigeria: As of 5 September 2020, Nigeria has reopened its international airports to regular air traffic. All countries can once again enter Nigeria under normal visa rules. •
Republic of the Congo: As of 24 August, The Republic of Congo reopened its international airports and international passenger flights have resumed. Travelers entering the Republic of Congo must present a negative COVID-19 test from within 72 hours of departure upon arrival. •
Rwanda: As of 1 August 2020, Rwanda has opened its international airport to regular air traffic. •
Seychelles: On 25 March 2021, the Seychelles have reopened to tourists from all countries. All travelers need to present a negative COVID-19 test. •
Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone reopened for tourism on 22 July 2020. •
South Africa: As of 1 October 2020, South Africa is officially open for tourism, all new arrivals not in possession of a negative PCR test taken within 72 hours will be required to test on arrival. •
Tanzania: Tanzania has not implemented any entry restrictions. •
Togo: As of 1 August 2020, Togo reopened its international airport and international passenger flights have resumed. Travelers entering Togo must present a negative COVID-19 test. •
Tunisia: As of 16 November 2020, all countries are welcome in Tunisia under regular visa laws, all passengers must have a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours before arrival. •
Uganda: Uganda reopened for tourism on 1 October 2020. •
Zambia: As of 26 June 2020, Zambia has opened its international airports to regular air traffic. Non-residents entering Zambia must show a negative COVID-19 test result from within the past 14 days. •
Zimbabwe: As of 1 October 2020, Zimbabwe is officially open for tourism. All arrivals, regardless if they are nationals returning home or foreign tourists, will need to bring a negative PCR test with them, taken no longer than 48 hours before the time of flight departure.
Americas •
Antigua and Barbuda: Antigua and Barbuda officially reopened to international visitors on 4 June 2020. A negative COVID-19 test is not required in order to enter Antigua and Barbuda, testing will be done upon arrival to all incoming passengers. There is no quarantine required upon arrival. •
Argentina: As of 1 November 2021, Argentina is officially open for tourism. •
Bahamas: As of 1 July 2020, the Bahamas are officially open for tourism. All travelers must present proof of a negative COVID-19 PCR test. The test result can not be older than 7 days prior to the date of arrival. •
Barbados: Barbados does not have any entry restrictions. On arrival in Barbados, travelers are required to present evidence of a negative result of a PCR COVID-19 test. If an arriving passenger, does not have a negative test within 72 hours, they will need to get a test at the airport, and then quarantine for up to two days at their own expense until test results come in. If a passenger tests positive they will be put into isolation. •
Belize: As of 1 October 2020, Belize is officially open for tourism. All passengers, of all nationalities, who meet immigration rules are permitted entry to Belize. •
Bermuda: As of 1 July 2020, Bermuda has opened its international airport to regular air traffic. All tourists are charged a fee of $75 USD to cover COVID-19 tests on arrival. •
Bolivia: As of 12 October 2020, Bolivia has reopened its borders to all countries for tourism. Travelers are required to present a negative PCR test result. •
Brazil: As of 29 July 2020, Brazil is officially open for tourism. •
British Virgin Islands: British Virgin Islands officially reopened to international tourism in December 2020. All arriving visitors are required to quarantine for four days at their hotel, resort, villa or docked vessel. •
Canada: Effective 1 October 2022, Canada reverted to pre-COVID restrictions on entry, no longer requiring vaccination or a pre-departure test or form. •
Chile: As of 23 November 2020, Chile is officially open for tourism. Incoming passengers are required to show a negative PCR coronavirus test no more than three days old. •
Colombia: As of 19 September 2020, Colombia has opened its international airports to regular air traffic. Travelers are required to present a negative PCR test result issued within 96 hours prior to departure. •
Costa Rica: As of 1 November 2020, visitors from all nations are welcome under 'normal/pre-covid' visa requirements and PCR testing is no longer required for tourists entering the country. •
Cuba: As of 15 November 2020, travelers from all countries are permitted to visit Cuba under regular visa requirements. Tourists arriving into Cuba are tested for COVID-19 at the airport and must wait up to 24 hours in a hotel for a negative result. •
Dominica: As of 7 August 2020, Dominica is officially open for tourism, but all new arrivals must take a coronavirus test 24–72 hours prior to arrival hours before they travel. •
Dominican Republic: As of 8 July 2020, Dominican Republic is officially open for tourism. •
Ecuador: As of 1 June 2020, Ecuador has opened its international airport to regular air traffic. •
El Salvador: As of 19 September 2020, El Salvador's airports resumed commercial flights. Incoming passengers are required to show a negative PCR coronavirus test no more than three days old. •
Grenada: As of 1 August 2020, Grenada is officially open for tourism. •
Guatemala: As of 18 September 2020, Guatemala reopened its domestic and international airports to regular air traffic, as well as official border crossings. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test no more than three days old, except Guatemalan citizens, foreign residents and diplomats at land border crossings. •
Guyana: As of 12 October 2020, Guyana is officially open for tourism. •
Haiti: On 1 July 2020, Haiti reopened its two international airports in Port-au-Prince and Cape Haitian, as well as four official border crossings. •
Honduras: On 17 August 2020, Honduras reopened its domestic and international airports to regular air traffic. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test. •
Jamaica: As of 15 June 2020, Jamaica is officially open for tourism. •
Martinique: Martinique does not have any entry restrictions, but all arriving passengers, must quarantine for 14 days. •
Mexico: Mexico does not have any entry restrictions. •
Nicaragua: Nicaragua has not implemented any entry restrictions. •
Panama: As of 12 October 2020, Panama is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 48 hours of arrival. •
Paraguay: In December 2020, Paraguay re-opened its borders to tourists. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of arrival. •
Puerto Rico: Puerto Rico has not implemented any entry restrictions, but all new arrivals must take a coronavirus test 72 hours before they travel. •
Saint Lucia: As of 4 June 2020, Saint Lucia is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 48 hours of arrival. •
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: As of 1 July 2020, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers will be tested upon arrival and must wait 24 hours in hotel for the results. •
Sint Maarten: As of 1 August 2020, Sint Maarten is officially open for tourism. •
Turks and Caicos Islands: As of 22 July 2020, Turks And Caicos is officially open for tourism. •
United States: From the beginning of the pandemic and into 2021, the northern and southern borders were closed to non-essential travel by people who were neither U.S. citizens nor permanent residents. Following the declaration of a
public health emergency on 31 January 2020, people other than U.S. citizens, permanent residents, and their immediate family were prohibited from entering the U.S. within 14 days of being in China. On 2 February, all inbound passengers who had been to
Hubei in the previous 14 days were placed under quarantine for up to 14 days. American citizens who had traveled to the rest of mainland China were allowed to continue their transit home if they were asymptomatic, but would be monitored by local health departments. On 13 March, incoming travel from the
Schengen area in Europe was suspended. A proclamation issued days earlier stated that this restriction applied only to foreign nationals who had been to a country within the Schengen area in the past 14 days. The ban did not apply to, for example, legal permanent residents and most immediate family members of U.S. citizens. On 14 March, the Trump administration extended the ban to include the United Kingdom and Ireland for 30 days, although the proclamation more vaguely said they would "remain in effect until terminated by the President". On 6 August, the
U.S. Department of State lifted a Level 4 global health travel advisory issued on 19 March which advised American citizens to avoid all international travel. As of 26 January 2021, all air passengers ages two and older must show proof of a negative COVID-19 test to enter the United States and travel restrictions were reinstated for people who visited the Schengen Area, the Federative Republic of Brazil, the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and South Africa, 14 days before their attempted entry into the US. A rule change scheduled to take effect in November 2021 would require a narrower testing window for unvaccinated travelers: a test within one day of entry to the US for those who are unvaccinated, compared to three days allowed for fully vaccinated travelers. Unvaccinated travelers will also have to test a second time after they land in the US. On 8 November 2021, after nearly 20 months of travel ban, vaccinated international tourists were allowed to travel to the USA. •
United States Virgin Islands: As of 1 June 2020, United States Virgin Islands are officially open for tourism. Tourists must undergo temperature checks and health screenings upon entry.
Asia •
Afghanistan: As of 24 June 2020, Afghanistan has resumed international air travel. •
Armenia: As of 12 August 2020, Armenia has reopened its borders to air passenger tourists from all nations. •
Bahrain: Effective from 4 September 2020, Bahrain has reopened its borders to tourists and non-residents from 182 countries. Passengers must undergo a PCR test at their own expense after landing. Those staying in the country for longer than 10 days must take a follow-up test on the 10th day of their visit. •
Georgia: As of 1 February 2021, Georgia is officially open for tourism. Travelers have 2 choices: They can enter restrictions-free if they are vaccinated, or if not, they can undergo a double testing procedure. Georgia has lifted all restrictions for foreign travellers, who are arriving by air and are able to show proof of being twice vaccinated for COVID-19. •
Iraq: As of 23 July 2020, Iraq has resumed international air travel. All travelers arriving from abroad will be requested to quarantine for 14 days and may be requested to provide proof of reservation in a hotel for the duration of the quarantine period. •
Jordan: As of December 2020, all nations can enter Jordan as long as they fulfill all covid-related entry requirements and visa requirements. All passengers entering Jordan for tourism will need to perform multiple PCR tests: pre-flight PCR test with results issued no more than 72 hours before arrival, PCR Test on arrival, and a PCR test on the 7th day of quarantine. •
Kyrgyzstan: As of 4 December 2020, visitors from all countries may visit Kyrgyzstan under normal visa regulations. Travelers must present proof of a negative PCR COVID-19 test taken no longer than 72 hours before departure. •
Lebanon: As of 1 October 2020, Lebanon has resumed international air travel. Travelers arriving from countries that do not provide PCR tests ahead of boarding will be tested upon arrival in Lebanon at the airline's expense. •
Maldives: As of 15 July 2020, the Maldives is allowing visitors to travel to the country under normal 'pre-Covid' regulations. That includes no isolation period for arriving tourists. Effective 10 September 2020, arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of arrival. •
Nepal: As of December 2020, Nepal is officially open for tourism. Travelers must present proof of a negative PCR COVID-19 test taken no longer than 72 hours before departure. All travelers must quarantine for 14 days upon arrival at a hotel. •
Oman: As of 29 December 2020, Oman is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of arrival. •
Pakistan: As of 5 October 2020, Pakistan is officially open for tourism. Travelers are required to present a negative PCR test result issued within 96 hours prior to departure. •
Qatar: As of 12 July 2021, Qatar has reopened to fully vaccinated travellers. Visitors from all countries may enter Qatar under normal visa regulations. •
Saudi Arabia: As of 17 May 2021, visitors from all countries may visit Saudi Arabia under normal visa regulations. •
South Korea: Effective 1 October 2022, all travellers regardless of vaccination or infection status can immediately enter the country upon arrival without any Covid tests or quarantine requirement. South Korea has reopened visa-free tourist entries through
electronic travel authorization, including many countries in the
Americas,
Asia-Pacific and
Europe. •
Sri Lanka: As of 21 January 2021, Sri Lanka is officially open for tourism. Everyone coming into the country must show proof of a negative coronavirus test taken within 96 hours of travel and fill out an online health declaration form. Guests will be tested again at their own expense on the fifth and seventh days after arriving and people staying longer than seven days will have to take a third test the following week. •
United Arab Emirates (Abu Dhabi): As of 24 December 2020,
Emirate of Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 96 hours of arrival. Any visitors travelling from countries, regions and territories on the 'green' list is exempt from quarantine requirements. For flights from all other destinations, travelers are required to quarantine for up to 10 days. •
United Arab Emirates (Dubai): As of 7 July 2020,
Emirate of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates is officially open for tourism. Arriving passengers must provide the results of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 96 hours of arrival or undergo a mandatory PCR test at the Dubai airports.
Europe •
Albania: Albania officially reopened its borders for tourism on 1 July 2020 allowing tourists from all countries and nations to enter without restrictions. All normal 'pre-covid' entry requirements apply. •
Belarus: Belarus has not implemented any entry restrictions. •
Bosnia and Herzegovina: As of 16 July 2020, Bosnia and Herzegovina has reopened its borders for citizens of European Union with a negative test for coronavirus not older than 48 hours. As of 12 September 2020, the country has reopen borders for all foreign tourists who have a negative PCR test for coronavirus. •
Guernsey: Guernsey has not implemented any entry restrictions, but imposed a requirement on all persons arriving in the
Bailiwick from anywhere in the world (including
Jersey and the UK) to self-isolate for 14 days on arrival. This is a legal requirement, and failure to comply is a criminal offence. •
Jersey: Jersey has not implemented any entry restrictions. From Friday 20 March, all travellers arriving in Jersey must now self-isolate for 14 days. This includes the UK, Guernsey, Europe and the rest of the world. •
Kosovo: As of 28 June 2020, Kosovo is officially open for tourism with no restrictions. •
North Macedonia: North Macedonia reopened its land borders on 26 June and its airports on 1 July for commercial traffic. Those entering the country will not be obliged to observe home quarantine for two weeks. •
Serbia: As of 22 May 2020, Serbia is allowing visitors to travel to the country under normal 'pre-Covid' regulations. That includes no mandatory testing and no isolation period for arriving tourists. •
Turkey: All passengers, of all nationalities, who meet Turkish immigration rules are permitted entry into Turkey from 12 June. •
Ukraine: As of 28 September 2020, Ukraine is officially open for tourism. •
European Union/
Schengen Area: •
Republic of Ireland: Ireland is not currently implementing any entry restrictions, but any person entering Ireland from abroad, including Irish citizens and residents of Ireland, must self-isolate for 14 days upon arrival. This includes Great Britain but not Northern Ireland. A green list of 15 countries was published by the
Government of Ireland on 21 July 2020 from which people could travel without having to quarantine for 14 days upon arriving in Ireland. People who arrived in Ireland from countries not on the green list would still have to restrict their movements. As of July 2021, Ireland started to implement the
EU Digital COVID Certificate, like the rest of Europe, allowing those with proof of being fully vaccinated to not be required to go into quarantine. ==See also==