
Ireland Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
Ireland is an EU member but opted out of the Schengen Area entirely, so it runs its own visa system, separate from the rest of the EU. As of 2026, around 62 nationalities — including the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and (newly added in April 2026) Japan, South Korea, and Mexico — get up to 90 days visa-free. UK citizens have a special Common Travel Area arrangement with no passport control at all. India, China, and South Africa (removed from the visa-exempt list in July 2024) all need an Irish visa specifically — a Schengen visa or Schengen residency does not substitute for it.
This is the one Ireland-specific detail that catches more travelers off guard than anything else on this site: Ireland is in the EU, but not in Schengen, and definitely not covered by a Schengen visa. Here's the real breakdown by passport.
Visa-free stay by nationality (as of mid-2026)
| Passport | Do you need a visa? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States, Canada | No — visa-free up to 90 days | No advance application needed; an immigration officer stamps you in on arrival. |
| United Kingdom | No visa, no passport check at all | Covered by the Common Travel Area (CTA) — Irish and British citizens move freely between the two countries with no border control, and it applies to short visitor trips both ways too. |
| EU / EEA / Switzerland | No — full freedom of movement | No stay-length limit; this is separate from and unrelated to the Schengen visa system. |
| Australia, New Zealand | No — visa-free up to 90 days | Same terms as US/Canada. |
| Japan, South Korea, Mexico | No — visa-free up to 90 days | Newly added to Ireland's visa-exempt list as of April 2026's expansion to 62 countries — worth double-checking if you last researched this before that date. |
| India, China | Yes — an Irish visa is required | Not covered by the visa-exempt list, and critically, a Schengen visa (even a multi-entry one) does not work for Ireland. Apply online via the AVATS system well ahead of your trip. |
| Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar) | Check current status — mixed | Rules vary by specific Gulf nationality and have shifted in recent years; verify on Ireland's official visa-exempt list for your exact passport before booking, rather than assuming Schengen or UK rules carry over. |
| South Africa | Yes — a visa is now required | South Africa was removed from Ireland's visa-exempt list on 10 July 2024. If you're working from an older guide or a friend's outdated experience, this is the fact most likely to have changed. |
| Southeast Asia (Malaysia, Singapore vs. Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam) | Mixed | Malaysia and Singapore are generally visa-exempt; Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam passport holders typically need an Irish visa arranged in advance. Confirm your specific nationality on the current list, since this region has more exceptions than most. |
| Other nationalities | Varies | Check Ireland's official visa-exempt country list (irishimmigration.ie) for your specific passport — as of the April 2026 update it covers 62 countries, with occasional additions and removals throughout the year. |
The mistake we see constantly: assuming a Schengen visa, Schengen residency permit, or even a UK visa covers Ireland. None of them do. Ireland is an EU member state that chose to stay outside the Schengen Area, so it has always run its own separate immigration system — a valid Schengen visa gets you into 29 other European countries, not this one. If your passport needs an Irish visa, apply for it specifically, and budget real processing time (often several weeks).
The Common Travel Area with the UK — genuinely unusual
Ireland and the UK maintain the Common Travel Area, a reciprocal arrangement older than either country's EU/EU-adjacent membership, which survived Brexit intact. British and Irish citizens can live, work, and travel freely between the two countries, and — the part that surprises visitors doing a Dublin-to-Belfast day trip — there's no border checkpoint or passport control anywhere on the island of Ireland, even though Northern Ireland is legally part of the UK and the Republic is not.
Does Ireland count toward my Schengen 90/180 days?
No. Time spent in Ireland is entirely separate from the Schengen 90/180-day calculation, since Ireland was never part of that system. If you're combining an Ireland trip with a longer Schengen-area tour (France, Italy, Spain, etc.), your Irish days don't eat into your Schengen allowance, and vice versa — genuinely useful for travelers trying to maximize time across multiple European countries.
Other entry basics
- Your passport should be valid for the duration of your intended stay; a 6-month-beyond-travel buffer isn't a strict published Irish requirement the way it is for some countries, but it's still sensible practice for any international trip.
- Immigration officers can ask for proof of onward travel and sufficient funds on arrival, even for visa-exempt visitors — have a return ticket and a rough budget plan ready.
- Ireland has no ETA (Electronic Travel Authorisation) system of its own as of mid-2026, unlike the UK's ETA or the EU Schengen area's upcoming ETIAS — visa-exempt entry to Ireland currently requires no advance online application at all.
Staying longer than 90 days
Non-EEA nationals who want to stay beyond their visa-exempt 90 days — for study, work, or a longer personal stay — need to register with the immigration authorities and typically arrange the right permission before the 90 days runs out, not after. This isn't something to wing at the airport; start the paperwork well ahead if a longer stay is even a possibility.












































