Visa policy of Saint Lucia
Visitors to Saint Lucia must obtain a visa unless they come from one of the visa exempt countries or countries that can obtain a visa on arrival.
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Saint Lucia |
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Administrative divisions (Quarters) |
Cruise ship passengers visiting Saint Lucia for one day are exempted from obtaining visas.
Saint Lucia signed a mutual visa-waiver agreement with the European Union on 28 May 2015 with immediate effect on provisional basis and which was ratified on 15 December 2015.[1][2] This agreement allows all citizens of states that are contracting parties to the Schengen Agreement to stay without a visa for a maximum period of 90 days in any 180-day period.[3]
Nationals of OECS countries and France can enter with a national ID card instead of a passport.
Visa policy map
Visa exemption
Citizens of the following countries and territories can visit Saint Lucia without a visa:[4][5]
Freedom of movement[6]
90 within any 180-day period
60 days 6 weeks (42 days) 15 days |
National ID cards from OECS countries and France are accepted instead of passports.
Visa on arrival
Citizens of the following 50 countries and territories can obtain a visa on arrival valid for 6 weeks:[7]
References
- EU signs visa waiver agreements with 7 ACP countries
- Agreement between the European Union and Saint Lucia on the short-stay visa waiver
- Saint Lucia visa requirements
- EU signs visa waiver agreements with 7 ACP countries
- http://www.refworld.org/docid/5a840de54.html
- "Country information (visa section)". Timatic. International Air Transport Association (IATA) through Olympic Air. Retrieved 1 April 2017.