Brazil Offers Visa-free Entry June 1 – Sept 15th 2016

Brazil normally requires a visa from citizens of most countries for which you apply online and have to send your passport to the consulate to have the visa attached.  But for one window of opportunity this summer, citizens of countries which have a strong Olympic history will be able to enter Brazil without a visa for maximum 90 days.  These countries include the United States, Canada, Australia and Japan.

Although this opportunity is basically intended to support the Olympics in Rio, you do not have to present Olympic tickets to take advantage.  So if you want to visit Brazil for eco-tourism & birding and HATE having to apply for visas, now’s your chance!  Honestly, I wish I had known about this in time or I would have planned Brazil for this year’s trip as well!

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Do You Know What Countries You Need A Visa For?

It’s so much easier to visit countries when you either don’t need a visa or you can get one on arrival.  Since I have a lot of trips coming up, I was checking around for Australian citizens and found that Wikipedia has some excellent maps.  The less grey you see, the better!

Find out where YOU can go without a visa!

Australians

Americans

New Zealanders

Canadians

Other countries

Where Australians can go without a visa

India May Extend Visa On Arrival To More Nationalities

After hastily throwing together a trip to India & Sri Lanka prompted by last week’s US Airways promo I have now turned my attention to the formalities.  Both countries require visas of Australians, Americans, Canadians and most Europeans.   A full list can be found on the new story.  HT:  The Wandering Aramean

I spent this morning filling out applications for me and my husband.  Sri Lanka was easy.  A short application that was approved less than 5 minutes after submitting it.  The approval went to my spam folder but I eventually found it.

India is more difficult.  This isn’t our first trip but the visas Australians get a visa valid for 6 months, double entry and there must be a gap of 2 months between entries.  Our last visa issued and used in 2011 was long expired.  I filled out the apps for both of us, uploaded passport photos and printed it out.  India wants to know EVERYTHING about us, our parents, religion, employment, what countries we’ve been in the last 10 years –  I ran out of room!  Thankfully there is an Indian visa centre in Brisbane so we don’t have to mail our passports off.

So my prediction of when this new visa on arrival will happen?  The day after I lodge our visa applications and pay the fee!

Do You Need A Visa?

I don’t mean the kind you carry in your wallet, I mean the kind that some countries stamp on your passport.  Birders travel to very exotic destinations and visa requirements vary widely from one country to another depending on your nationality.  Here’s a tool you can use to check if you need a visa.

Let’s check some random destinations for birders and eco-tourists.

1.  American traveling to Brazil

You can see the complete result of the query here, but this is it in a nutshell – yes Americans need a visa to travel to Brazil.

2.  Australian traveling to Indonesia

Yes, Australians DO need a visa but check this out – they can get it on arrival at most major airports.  The Brazlian query above didn’t have that so that means they need to get the visa at a consulate.

3.  British traveling to Costa Rica

This is where it really gets interesting!  UK citizens do not require a visa to enter Costa Rica for 9o days but they DO need a visa to transit the USA even if they are only making a flight connection without leaving the airport.  Fortunately, this is very easy to get online and it’s called an ESTA, but it does cost around $15.

 

If the British traveler finds a direct flight to Costa Rica without transiting the USA, they won’t need the ESTA, nor do they need a visa for Costa Rica in any case as long as the trip is less than 30 days.  Note that they also require you have sufficient funds to support yourself while in Costa Rica but they will accept credit cards as proof.  In real life, you are unlikely to be questioned unless you look really down and out, pretty hard for a birder to do with all the camera gear we carry!

 

OK, I need a visa, so where do I get one?

Best place to start is by Googling “Country name visa” in either the capital city of your country or the largest city near you.