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World's most and least powerful passports named in 2016 ranking


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Posted

German citizens possess the world's most powerful passport, according to a new study, with Britain and the US falling just short of the top spot. While Australia and New Zealand failed to rank in the top five, they secured eight and seventh spots, respectively, on the world's most powerful passport list.

The ranking by Henley & Partners, a citizenship and planning firm, takes into account how many countries can be visited without applying for a visa. German passport holders can travel to 177, out of a possible 218, while Australians can visit 169, Britons can visit 175 and US citizens 174.

The UK topped last year's rankings, alongside Germany, but ceded the top spot after several countries relaxed visa restrictions to the latter during 2015. It was also leapfrogged by Sweden and now shares third place with France, Italy, Spain and Finland.

 

Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands share fourth spot with the US.

The world's least powerful passport belongs to citizens of Afghanistan, who can visit just 25 countries without a visa.

"Generally, there was significant movement across the board with only 21 of the 199 countries listed remaining in the same rank," said Henley & Partners. "No country, however, dropped more than three positions, indicating that overall, visa-free access is improving around the world.

"Four countries in particular made huge gains; Tonga rising 16 spots, Palau by 20, Colombia by 25 and Timor-Leste being the highest climber with an increase of 33 ranks.

"Malta, the EU member country which runs the world's most successful citizenship-by-investment program has gained visa-free access to another two countries since 2015, making it the 8th most powerful passport in the world. The leading country in the Caribbean, Antigua and Barbuda, meanwhile ranked 30th and its passport-holders may now travel to 134 countries visa-free.

"Portugal, which holds the most attractive residence-by-investment program through its Golden Visa Program, has taken 6th position in the 2016 Index, gaining two countries to total 172 countries its citizens may travel to visa-free.The global progress in travel freedom looks set to continue for citizens of all countries."

The world's most powerful passports

  1. Germany, 177
  2. Sweden, 176
  3. Finland, France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, 175
  4. Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands, United States, 174
  5. Austria, Japan, Singapore, 173
  6. Canada, Ireland (Republic of), Korea (Republic of, South), Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Switzerland, 172
  7. Greece, New Zealand, 171
  8. Australia, 169
  9. Malta, 168
  10. Hungary, Czech Republic, Iceland, 167

The world's least powerful passports

  1. Afghanistan, 25
  2. Pakistan, 29
  3. Iraq, 30
  4. Somalia, 31
  5. Syria, 32
  6. Libya, 36
  7. Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iran, Nepal, Palestinian Territory, Sudan, 37
  8. Kosovo, South Sudan, Yemen, 38
  9. Bangladesh, Congo (Democratic Republic of), Lebanon, Sri Lanka, 39
  10. Burundi, Korea (Democratic People's Republic of, North), Myanmar, 42

The Telegraph, London



Read more: http://www.traveller.com.au/worlds-most-and-least-powerful-passports-named-in-2016-ranking-gn80jt#ixzz4W41R226i
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Posted
42 minutes ago, 007cableguy said:

Would be interested to know as a U.K. Passport holder where the 43 places I can't go?


Sent from my iPad using Thaivisa Connect

Probably garden spots like Saudi Arabia, Turkmenistan, North Korea, Chad, Russia, Somalia...LOL

Posted

Not an inventive answer but the all knowing WiKi will tell you.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visa_requirements_for_British_citizens

 

The grey side of the world :tongue:

By area and population it's bigger than the number of countries might sound like.

No wonder if China and Russia req. visa.

 

3 hours ago, craigt3365 said:

Probably garden spots like Saudi Arabia, Turkmenistan, North Korea, Chad, Russia, Somalia...LOL

South Sudan is a must see :shock1:

 

Click to see large pic:

Visa_requirements_for_British_citizens.p

 

 

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