
Hungary Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
Hungary is a full Schengen Area member. Most Western passport holders (US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and dozens more) get visa-free entry for up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, shared across all Schengen countries combined, not reset per country. As of mid-2026, two new EU systems affect entry: EES (a biometric fingerprint and photo registration) is fully live since April 2026, and ETIAS (a pre-travel authorization, similar to the US ESTA) is expected to launch in Q4 2026.
Hungary's visa situation is simpler than most countries on this site, because it comes down to one rule shared across 29 European countries. The part that actually needs explaining in 2026 is the two new EU-wide systems layering on top of it — here's what each one means for your specific trip.
The Schengen 90/180 rule, by nationality
| Passport | Entry requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States, Canada | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | No advance application currently required; ETIAS will add a pre-travel step once it launches, expected Q4 2026. |
| United Kingdom | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | Same terms as the US and Canada since Brexit — the UK is treated as a non-EU country for Schengen purposes. |
| Australia, New Zealand | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | Same terms as above. |
| EU/EEA/Swiss citizens | No limit — freedom of movement | No passport stamps, no day-counting, no ETIAS needed. |
| India | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | India isn't on the Schengen visa-exemption list, so this one isn't optional — apply through a Hungarian consulate (or another Schengen country's, depending on your route) well before you book flights. |
| China | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | Same situation as India — not on the exemption list, so budget real time for the visa application before travel. |
| UAE | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | The UAE is one of the few Gulf states on the Schengen exemption list — same 90/180 rule as US/UK travelers, plus EES fingerprinting now and ETIAS once it launches. |
| Saudi Arabia | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | Unlike the UAE, Saudi Arabia is not Schengen-exempt — a visa is mandatory regardless of trip length, though first-time applicants are often issued a 5-year multiple-entry visa. |
| South Africa | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | Not on the exemption list — apply in advance the same as India or China. |
| Brazil | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | Brazil is Schengen-exempt (confirmed under the EU-Brazil visa-waiver agreement that took effect in March 2026) — same 90/180 rule, plus EES and eventually ETIAS. Several other major Latin American passports (Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Colombia) are also exempt, but this varies by country — always check your specific passport rather than assuming the region is uniform. |
| Philippines | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | Not on the exemption list. |
| Malaysia | Visa-free, up to 90 days per 180-day period | Malaysia is Schengen-exempt — same 90/180 rule as the UAE and Brazil above, plus EES/ETIAS like any other exempt nationality. |
| Indonesia | Schengen (Type C) visa required in advance | Not on the exemption list, unlike its neighbor Malaysia — a genuinely easy mix-up worth double-checking before you book. |
| Other nationalities not listed above | Check the current Schengen visa-exemption list for your specific passport | The rule is always the same one — visa-free 90/180 if your passport is on the EU's exemption list, a Schengen visa in advance if it isn't — but the list itself is long and does shift occasionally, so verify your specific passport rather than assuming. |
The 90 days is shared across the entire Schengen Area, not reset when you cross from, say, Austria into Hungary. If you've already spent time in France, Italy, or Greece earlier in the same 180-day window, those days count against your Hungary trip too. Track your cumulative Schengen days carefully if you're combining multiple European countries in one visit.
EES — the new biometric border system (live since April 2026)
The EU's Entry/Exit System became fully operational across all Schengen external borders on April 10, 2026. On your first entry after that date, expect a border agent or automated kiosk to take four fingerprints and a facial photo, linked digitally to your passport — this replaces manual passport stamping and automatically tracks your 90-day allowance. Expect longer processing times at busy border crossings and airports, especially in the first months after rollout, as the extra biometric step adds time per traveler.
ETIAS — expected Q4 2026, not yet mandatory

ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is a pre-travel authorization for visa-exempt, non-EU nationalities — conceptually similar to the US's ESTA. As of mid-2026 it has not yet launched; the current expected window is Q4 2026 (October-December), with a roughly six-month transition period after that before it becomes strictly mandatory. Once live, it will cost €20, apply mainly to visa-exempt travelers from countries like the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK, and require applying online before your flight. Check the official EU travel website close to your departure date, since this timeline has already shifted more than once.
Other entry basics
- Your passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from the Schengen Area, and issued within the last 10 years.
- Border officers can ask for proof of onward travel, accommodation bookings, or sufficient funds, though this is inconsistently enforced for tourists from low-risk nationalities.
- If you overstay the 90-day Schengen limit, you risk fines, entry bans on future Schengen trips, or both — the EES system now tracks this automatically and precisely, so miscounting is riskier than it used to be.
Crossing into non-Schengen neighbors
Hungary borders two countries outside the Schengen Area: Ukraine and Serbia. If a day trip or onward route takes you across either border, expect a normal passport check and stamp on both sides — those crossings do count as leaving and re-entering Schengen, which matters if you're tracking your 90-day allowance closely.
If your nationality isn't visa-exempt
Travelers from nationalities without a Schengen exemption need a Schengen visa arranged in advance through a Hungarian consulate or embassy (or another Schengen country's consulate, depending on your itinerary) — budget several weeks for processing, and check the exact requirements for your passport well before booking flights, since a visa application can take longer than the flexible-sounding 90-day rule suggests.












































