
Germany Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
There's no single answer — it depends on your passport. Germany is a Schengen Area member, so most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand) currently enter visa-free for up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, counted across the entire Schengen Area, not per country. From roughly Q4 2026, the same visa-exempt travelers will also need to apply online for ETIAS (a low-cost, multi-year travel authorization) before flying — plan for this new step if you're booking a trip for late 2026 or beyond.
Visa questions are the one place where a generic answer can cost you real money or get you turned away at check-in. Here's the real breakdown by nationality, plus the new online step arriving in late 2026 that a lot of travelers don't know about yet.
Visa-free stay by nationality (Schengen rule)
| Passport | Current visa-free stay | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States, Canada | Up to 90 days in any 180-day period | Counted across the whole Schengen Area combined, not per country — time in France or Italy counts against your German allowance too. |
| United Kingdom | Up to 90 days in any 180-day period | Same Schengen-wide rule as US/Canada since Brexit ended UK free movement. |
| Australia, New Zealand | Up to 90 days in any 180-day period | Same terms as above. |
| EU / other Schengen countries | No limit | Free movement — no visa or day-limit applies for EU/Schengen citizens. |
| India | No — Schengen visa required in advance | Apply at a German consulate or visa center (VFS Global) before you travel; budget several weeks for processing and a €90 fee. Not ETIAS-eligible — this is a full visa, not the online authorization. |
| China | No — Schengen visa required in advance | Same process as India — apply well ahead through a German visa center; multi-entry visas are increasingly issued to travelers with a clean prior Schengen travel history. |
| Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman) | Up to 90 days in any 180-day period | All are visa-exempt for short stays, same Schengen rule as US/UK/Australia — and all will need ETIAS once it's mandatory, same as those nationalities. |
| South Africa | No — Schengen visa required in advance | South African passport holders need a Schengen visa for Germany; apply at a German consulate or visa center well before your trip. |
| Brazil, most of Latin America | Up to 90 days in any 180-day period | Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and most South and Central American countries are visa-exempt for tourism — ETIAS will apply to these nationalities once it launches. A few exceptions (Colombia's status has shifted before) — double-check your specific passport. |
| Southeast Asia (Malaysia visa-free; Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam need a visa) | Mixed | Malaysia is visa-exempt (90/180 rule, ETIAS later). Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam passport holders need a Schengen visa arranged in advance — there's no single answer for the region. |
| Other nationalities | Varies — some visa-free, some need a Schengen visa in advance | Check Germany's current visa-exemption list for your specific passport before booking. |

The 90/180-day rule is cumulative across the entire Schengen Area, not reset by country. If you spent two weeks in France earlier in the same 180-day window, that counts against your 90 days in Germany too. Use an online Schengen calculator to check your exact remaining days if you've traveled in Europe recently.
ETIAS — the new step arriving in late 2026
The EU's new European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) is currently expected to launch around Q4 2026 (likely October or November), with a roughly six-month transition period before it becomes strictly mandatory. Once required, visa-exempt travelers (the same nationalities in the table above) will need to apply online before flying — a short form, a small fee, and approval that's typically near-instant but can take up to several days in rare cases. ETIAS authorization is valid for up to 3 years or until your passport expires, whichever comes first, so it's a one-time step per passport, not a per-trip hassle.
Other entry basics
- Your passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from the Schengen Area, and generally issued within the last 10 years.
- Border officers occasionally ask for proof of onward travel or accommodation and sufficient funds for your stay — have a hotel confirmation or return ticket accessible.
- If you overstay the 90-day limit, you risk fines, entry bans on future Schengen visits, or worse depending on how long the overstay runs — track your days carefully if you're doing a longer multi-country Europe trip.
Staying longer than 90 days
If you want to stay in Germany beyond the visa-exempt window — for work, study, or an extended stay — you'll need a German national (D) visa, applied for in advance through a German embassy or consulate in your home country. This is a separate, longer process than the visa-free tourist allowance and should be started months ahead.
Travel insurance — worth double-checking
Schengen entry rules don't currently require proof of travel insurance for short tourist stays from most visa-exempt nationalities, but it's still worth carrying a policy that covers medical costs — German healthcare is excellent but not free for visitors, and an ER visit or hospital stay without insurance can run into the thousands of dollars.
Quick summary by travel plan
| Your situation | What you need |
|---|---|
| Tourist trip under 90 days, US/UK/CA/AU/NZ passport | No visa; ETIAS required once mandatory (~Q4 2026) |
| Tourist trip under 90 days, EU/Schengen passport | Nothing — free movement |
| Trip over 90 days, or work/study | German national (D) visa, applied for in advance |
| Multi-country Europe trip | Track cumulative Schengen days across all countries visited |












































