What's The World's Most Powerful Passport?
Whether you seek to explore distant lands, or you just want to sit on a remote island beach with a margarita, your passport can be your biggest travel asset. The right document grants you visa-free access to over 150+ countries, and makes applying for entry to the other places a short and easy afterthought.
But, as Visual Cpitalist's Jeff Desjardins notes, a passport can also be your biggest liability. Having a passport from the wrong place means travel is extremely restricted to just a few countries – and these are generally not the places travelers want to go, anyways.
Even worse, passports on the lower end of the spectrum are also heavily scrutinized at entry-points around the world. If you have a document from Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Lebanon, or several other countries, there may be many hoops for you to jump through to get to your final destination.
Source: Visual Capitalist
THE MOST POWERFUL PASSPORT
According to the Passport Index, the distinction for the world’s most powerful passport actually ends up as a tie between Germany and Singapore. Both have unparalleled access to visa-free entries, each with a list of 159 countries that citizens can go to without any hassles.
Like Germany, most other Western European nations do similarly well in the visa-free department:
In Asia, however, things are quite different. After Singapore and a few other countries (Japan, South Korea, and Malaysia), things drop off faster.
Further down the list in Asia, citizens of certain countries find themselves in even a tougher place, especially if they reside in the Middle East. Countries like Afghanistan (22), Pakistan (25), Iraq (26), Syria (30), and Bangladesh (35) have some of the shortest lists of visa-free countries that citizens have access to.
NORTH AMERICA
In North America, the United States and Canada both have powerful passports with 157 and 155 visa-free options respectively.
However, they differ in a few key areas. Americans have visa-free access to Armenia, Equatorial Guinea, Palau, the Marshall Islands, and the Central African Republic, while Canadians have visa-free access to Bolivia, Venezuela, and Gambia.
DON’T OWN THESE PASSPORTS…
We alluded earlier to the fact that a passport can also be a traveler’s biggest liability.Here are some of the countries that you would likely not want to have a passport from:
Source : ZeroHedge
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Good post, Thanks for this info
This comment has received a 0.09 % upvote from @booster thanks to: @hamzaoui.
Nice statistics. Would have cost you some time for sure.
I love this post. I am a U.S. citizen currently traveling in Spain, but I have UK residency and live in the UK. My 5 month old baby son has a U.S. passport, a Spanish passport and in about 6 months he will be able to get a UK passport as well. I wonder how that stacks up against the German passport.
I posted these photos today of my trip to Spain. What do you think?
SPAIN IS BEAUTIFUL
Just don't declare them to the others then! You can not have Spanish and British duo nationality!
USA!
Waoow its nice to see that Germany & Singapore (Asia) top the list, i wish canda or usa will be on top
There are some countries that you wouldn't really expect high up there.
My passport says: "This document belongs to the Dutch government". So technically, I don't own a passport at all. But when I want a new one, the government makes me pay for it anyway😑
Where is good ol australia....found it...global rank #6 nice one straya!
Cool post & a lot of info! 👍 As an Aussie traveler I'm glad I haven't had to worry about visas much. Had to jump through a few hoops to get visas for China & Egypt, but no real hassles. I feel for the people with more restrictive passports... Maybe one day humanity will become a bit more equitable.. 😞
Finland has pretty good passport, wish I had more money so I could actually use it ! :D