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Peru Visa and Entry Requirements (2026)

Peru Visa and Entry Requirements (2026)

Home Peru Practical InfoPeru Visa and Entry Requirements (2026)
Gate8 Global Team

There's no single answer — it depends on your passport. Most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU, Australia, NZ) enter Peru visa-free for 90-183 days, with the exact number set at the immigration officer's discretion and stamped in your passport. India, China, and Gulf-state nationals generally need a visa in advance, unless they hold a valid US, Canada, UK, Schengen, or Australia visa, in which case Peru typically waives its own visa requirement. South Africa is visa-exempt.

Peru has a genuinely useful shortcut buried in its visa rules that most guides skip: if you already hold a valid visa from the US, Canada, UK, Schengen area, or Australia, Peru will often let you in visa-free even if your own passport would normally require one. Here's the real breakdown by nationality.

Visa-free entry by nationality (as of mid-2026)

Passport / nationality groupRequirementNotes
United States, CanadaVisa-freeTypically up to 183 days within a 365-day period, though the number stamped is at the officer's discretion — some travelers get 90 days initially, extendable at Migraciones. Check your entry stamp.
United KingdomVisa-freeUp to 90 days, extendable once for a fee at a Migraciones office, up to a combined 183 days within 365 days.
EU / Schengen countriesVisa-freeSame terms as the UK — up to 90 days, extendable; confirm your specific country is on Peru's current exemption list.
Australia, New ZealandVisa-freeSame terms as the UK/EU — up to 90 days, extendable.
IndiaVisa required in advanceException: Indian citizens holding a valid US, Canada, UK, Schengen, or Australia visa can generally enter Peru visa-free instead, using that visa.
China (mainland)Visa required in advanceSame exception as India — a valid US, Canada, UK, Schengen, or Australia visa/residency generally allows visa-free entry instead.
Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar)Visa required in advance for mostSame US/UK/Schengen/Canada/Australia-visa exception generally applies; UAE nationals should confirm current status directly, as exemption rules shift.
South AfricaVisa-freeTypically up to 90 days, similar terms to the UK/EU.
Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, and other Andean Community / Mercosur-associated countriesVisa-free, often ID-card entryCitizens of several South American countries can enter using just a national ID card instead of a passport under regional agreements, typically for up to 183 days — a genuinely useful shortcut if you qualify.
Other nationalities not listed aboveCheck Peru's current exemption listRules shift periodically — confirm your specific passport against Peru's Migraciones/consulate list before booking, and check the US/Canada/UK/Schengen/Australia visa exception either way.
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This table is a starting point, not a substitute for checking your exact passport against Peru's current official Migraciones list — exemption rules and day allowances do shift. If your nationality normally needs a Peruvian visa, check whether you already hold a valid US, Canada, UK, Schengen, or Australia visa first; it very often lets you skip the Peru visa application entirely.

Other entry basics

  • Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months from your date of entry.
  • Officers may ask for proof of onward or return travel and sometimes proof of funds — have a return ticket ready to show if asked.
  • Keep track of the exact number of days stamped in your passport on arrival — it isn't always the maximum allowed for your nationality, and overstaying results in a fine paid on departure.

Extending your stay

Visa-exempt entries can generally be extended once at a Migraciones office (in Lima, Cusco, or other major cities) for a fee, up to the maximum allowed for your nationality. Bring your passport, entry stamp, and a completed extension form; processing can take a few business days, so don't leave it until your last day.

Crossing to Bolivia from Lake Titicaca

If your itinerary continues from Puno into Bolivia, check Bolivia's separate visa rules well ahead — several nationalities that enter Peru visa-free (including US citizens) require an advance visa for Bolivia, which has different requirements entirely.

Questions people actually ask

Do US citizens need a visa for Peru?
No — US passport holders enter visa-free, typically for up to 183 days within a 365-day period, though the exact number is set at the immigration officer's discretion and stamped in your passport at entry.
Do Indian citizens need a visa for Peru?
Generally yes, a visa is required in advance — unless you already hold a valid US, Canada, UK, Schengen, or Australia visa, in which case you can typically enter Peru visa-free using that visa instead.
How long can I stay in Peru without a visa?
Most visa-exempt Western nationalities get 90 days (UK, EU, Australia, NZ, South Africa) or up to 183 days (US, Canada), though the number is set by the immigration officer and stamped in your passport — check it on arrival rather than assuming the maximum.
Do I need a visa to visit Bolivia from Lake Titicaca?
Check separately — Bolivia has its own visa rules, and several nationalities that enter Peru visa-free (including US citizens) need an advance visa for Bolivia. Don't assume Peru's rules carry over.

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