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Romania Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)

Romania Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)

Home Romania Practical InfoRomania Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
Gate8 Global Team

Romania is a full Schengen member (since January 1, 2025), so entry rules follow standard Schengen policy: US, Canada, UK, EU, Australia, NZ, Brazil, Malaysia, and UAE passport holders get a visa-free 90-day-in-180 stay; China, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, the Philippines, and Indonesia need a Schengen visa in advance. ETIAS is expected to add a €20 pre-travel form for visa-exempt visitors by late 2026/early 2027.

Romania's visa situation genuinely changed in the last two years, which means a lot of older travel content is now wrong. Here's the current, correct picture — including the one detail (the 90 days being shared across all of Schengen, not just Romania) that trips up more travelers than anything else on this page.

Romania is now a full Schengen member

Romania (along with Bulgaria) joined the Schengen Area for air and sea travel on March 31, 2024, and completed full membership — including land borders — on January 1, 2025. In practice, this means passport checks at Romania's borders with other Schengen countries have been lifted, and Romania now counts as ordinary Schengen territory for visa purposes, not a separate visa regime the way it briefly was.

Romania Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)

Entry requirements by nationality (as of mid-2026)

Passport / nationalityEntry requirementNotes
United States, CanadaVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodCounted across the entire Schengen Area combined, not per-country — time in France or Italy counts against the same 90 days.
United KingdomVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodSame Schengen-wide rule as other visa-exempt nationalities.
EU / EEA / Swiss citizensNo time limitFree movement rights apply — no visa, no 90-day cap.
Australia, New ZealandVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodSame terms as US/UK travelers.
ChinaSchengen visa requiredChina is not on the Schengen exemption list — apply for a short-stay Schengen visa at a consulate or visa center before you travel.
United Arab EmiratesVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodUAE passport holders are visa-exempt for short Schengen stays, same terms as US/UK travelers.
Saudi ArabiaSchengen visa requiredUnlike UAE nationals, Saudi passport holders need a short-stay Schengen visa arranged before arrival.
South AfricaSchengen visa requiredNo visa-free entry — apply for a Schengen visa in advance through a consulate or visa center.
Brazil and most Latin American passportsVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodCovers Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and most South American passports; always confirm your specific country against the current list, since it's not universal across the region.
MalaysiaVisa-free — up to 90 days in any 180-day periodOne of the few Southeast Asian passports on the Schengen exemption list.
Philippines, IndonesiaSchengen visa requiredUnlike Malaysia, these passports need a short-stay Schengen visa arranged before travel.
Other nationalitiesVaries by passportRules differ significantly by country and change over time — check the current Schengen visa-exemption list or your nearest embassy/consulate before booking.
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ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is on track to launch in Q4 2026, with mandatory enforcement for visa-exempt nationalities — including US, UK, Brazilian, Malaysian, and UAE passport holders — expected roughly six months later, around April 2027. It's a simple online pre-travel form, not a visa — cost roughly €20, valid up to 3 years, covers multiple entries to Romania and every other Schengen state. As of mid-2026 it was not yet open for applications; check the current status close to your travel date, since the timeline has shifted before.

What this means if you're combining Romania with other Schengen countries

Your 90 days are shared, not doubled. Spending two weeks in Italy, then a week in Romania, then two weeks in Greece all draws from the same 90-day, 180-day-rolling allowance — a common and avoidable planning mistake for longer multi-country European trips.

Other entry basics

  • Your passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure date from the Schengen Area (6 months is the safer, commonly recommended buffer).
  • Border officers occasionally ask for proof of onward travel or accommodation bookings — have a digital copy ready.
  • There is no Romania-specific arrival form for short tourist visits under the current Schengen rules — the process is the same as entering any other Schengen country.

If you need to stay longer than 90 days

Longer stays require a national visa or residence permit applied for through a Romanian embassy or consulate before travel — this is not something arranged at the border, and requirements vary by purpose (work, study, family) and nationality.

Questions people actually ask

Do US citizens need a visa for Romania?
No — as a full Schengen member since January 2025, Romania follows the standard Schengen rule: US passport holders get a visa-free stay of up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, shared with the rest of the Schengen Area.
Is Romania in the Schengen Area now?
Yes, fully, since January 1, 2025 (air and sea borders joined earlier, in March 2024). Border checks with other Schengen countries have been lifted, and Romania's visa rules now match the rest of the Schengen Area rather than a separate national system.
Do Chinese, Brazilian, Gulf, or Southeast Asian citizens need a visa for Romania?
It depends on the passport, not the region — Brazil, Malaysia, and the UAE are visa-exempt for the same 90-day Schengen stay as US or UK travelers, while China, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, the Philippines, and Indonesia need a Schengen visa arranged in advance. There's no separate Romanian visa; a Schengen visa from any Schengen country's consulate covers entry to Romania too.
What is ETIAS and do I need it for Romania?
ETIAS is a simple, €20 online pre-travel authorization (not a visa) for visa-exempt travelers entering any Schengen country, including Romania. It's on track to launch in Q4 2026 and become mandatory around six months after that, roughly April 2027 — check the current status before you fly, since the timeline has shifted before and it wasn't yet open for applications as of mid-2026.

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