United States passport: Difference between revisions
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The RFID chip used in the U.S. version of the [[biometric passport]] (sometimes referred to as an electronic passport) holds an image of the photograph of the passport holder, passport data, and personal data of the passport holder. However, the capacity of an RFID chip is 64 kilobytes, which is large enough to store biometric identifiers, such as fingerprints and retina scans, in addition to an image of a photograph, should the U.S. government decide to require other biometric identifiers. |
The RFID chip used in the U.S. version of the [[biometric passport]] (sometimes referred to as an electronic passport) holds an image of the photograph of the passport holder, passport data, and personal data of the passport holder. However, the capacity of an RFID chip is 64 kilobytes, which is large enough to store biometric identifiers, such as fingerprints and retina scans, in addition to an image of a photograph, should the U.S. government decide to require other biometric identifiers. |
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Chip data are scanable by readers, a capability which is intended to speed up immigration processing. A privacy concern is that there could be illicit reading of chip data, in that a chip does not have to plugged into a reader in order for data therein to be read. Like toll-road chips, passport chips can be read when they are proximate to readers. This make possible the surreptitious reading of a chip, e.g., by a government tracking a person's movements or by a criminal intending identity theft. |
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⚫ | The U.S. [[United States Department of State|Department of State]] began issuing biometric passports to diplomats and other officials in early 2006. The department began issuing regular biometric passports at its Colorado Passport Agency on August 14, 2006. [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/61538.htm] [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/70433.htm] [http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060815/ts_alt_afp/uspassportsecurity_060814232831] [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060811/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/electronic_passports_3] |
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Though passports have shielded covers which make it difficult to read chips when passport covers are closed, and though chips have access-control and encryption programmes, those features are ineffective when a passport is open, such as when a passport is presented at a hotel, a bank, or an Internet cafe |
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⚫ | In October, 2004, the production stage of biometric passports commenced as the [[U.S. Government Printing Office]] (GPO) issued awards to the lowest bidders in the biometric-passport programme. The awards totaled roughly $1,000,000 for startup, development and testing. The legal driving force of the programme is the U.S. Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002, which states that such [[smart card]] [[ID]]s may be used in lieu of [[visa (document)|visa]]s. That law also provides that foreigners who travel to the U.S., and want to enter the U.S. visa-free under the [[Visa Waiver Program]] (VWP), must bear machine-readable [[passport]]s which comply with international standards. If a foreign passport used under the VWP was issued on or after October 26, 2006, that passport must be a biometric passport. |
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Products available on the market allow a holder of a biometric passport to shield data stored in the RFID chip which is embedded in the passport. |
Products available on the market allow a holder of a biometric passport to shield data stored in the RFID chip which is embedded in the passport. |
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⚫ | The U.S. [[United States Department of State|Department of State]] began issuing biometric passports to diplomats and other officials in early 2006. The department began issuing regular biometric passports at its Colorado Passport Agency on August 14, 2006. [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/61538.htm] [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/70433.htm] [http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060815/ts_alt_afp/uspassportsecurity_060814232831] [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060811/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/electronic_passports_3] |
||
⚫ | In October, 2004, the production stage of biometric passports commenced as the [[U.S. Government Printing Office]] (GPO) issued awards to the lowest bidders in the biometric-passport programme. The awards totaled roughly $1,000,000 for startup, development and testing. The legal driving force of the programme is the U.S. Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002, which states that such [[smart card]] [[ID]]s may be used in lieu of [[visa (document)|visa]]s. That law also provides that foreigners who travel to the U.S., and want to enter the U.S. visa-free under the [[Visa Waiver Program]] (VWP), must bear machine-readable [[passport]]s which comply with international standards. If a foreign passport used under the VWP was issued on or after October 26, 2006, that passport must be a biometric passport. |
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==Visa-free access== |
==Visa-free access== |
Revision as of 01:42, 22 November 2007
It has been suggested that U.S. Passport Card be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since January 2007. |
United States passports are issued to citizens and to non-citizen nationals of the United States of America for the purpose of international travel. Every citizen is a national of the United States. Not every national is a citizen. There is a small class of American Samoans, born in American Samoa, including Swains Island, who are nationals but not citizens of the United States. Except in American Samoa, those American Samoans have no right to vote. They have the same right to enter, to live in and to work in the United States as do citizens.
By acts of Congress, persons born in Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands are United States citizens by birth. Citizenship entitles them to passports. A citizen, wherever born, who lives in one of those territories may not vote for President, Vice President, United States Senator or United States Representative. That restriction is based on place of residence, not citizenship.
Whichever the country of issuance, a passport proves the nationality of the bearer. A passport is connected with the right of a national of the country which issued the passport to consular assistance from the issuing county while the national is abroad, and with the right of the national to enter the country of which is a national. However, the right to assistance does not arise from a passport, nor does the right to enter. Each of the rights arises from nationality.
It follows that a United States passport proves the United States nationality of the bearer, and, consequently, his right to assistance from United States consular officials overseas or his right to return to the United States, as the case may be. If a citizen does not have a passport (e.g., because it was stolen), and he can prove his United States nationality by another means (e.g., by providing information about himself), he will be entitled to consular assistance as a citizen or to enter the United States as a citizen, lack of a passport notwithstanding.
Responsibility for passport issuance lies with Passport Services, a unit of the Bureau of Consular Affairs of the U.S. Department of State. Passport Services has thirteen regional passport agencies and one Gateway City Agency in the United States, at which passport applications may be filed by citizens who intend to travel within two weeks of the application date, or who need to obtain visas before travelling. There are about 9,000 passport acceptance facilities in the United States, designated by Passport Services, at which routine passport applications may be filed. These facilities include United States courts, state courts, post offices, public libraries, county offices, and city offices. An application for a United States passport made abroad is forwarded by a U.S. embassy or consulate to Passport Services for processing in the United States. The resulting passport is sent to the embassy or consulate for issuance to the applicant. An emergency passport, valid for not more than one year, is issuable by the embassy or consulate.
History
American consular officials issued passports to some citizens of some of the thirteen states during the War for Independence (1775-1783). The Department of Foreign Affairs of the war period did so as well, and the department continued to issue passports while the Articles of Confederation were in effect. Passports were sheets of paper, printed on one side, included a description of the bearer, and were valid for three to six months. The minister to France, Benjamin Franklin, based the design of passports issued by his mission on that of the French passport (Lloyd, pp. 71-72).
In July, 1789, the Department of Foreign Affairs was carried over by the government established under the Constitution. In September of that year, the name of the department was changed to Department of State. The department handled foreign relations and issued passports, and, until the mid-nineteenth century, had various domestic duties.
From 1789 and for decades thereafter, passports were issued not only by the Department of State, but also by states and cities, and by notaries public. Passports issued by American authorities other than the Department of State breached propriety and caused confusion abroad. Some European countries refused to recognize passports not issued by the Department of State, unless United States consular officials endorsed them. The problems led the Congress in 1856 to give to the Department of State sole authority to issue passports (Lloyd, pp 80-81).
The League of Nations held conferences to standardise passports, but nothing came of them. The United Nations also tried to do so. Passport standardisation was accomplished in 1980 under the auspices of the International Civil Aviation Organization.
In 1926, the United States introduced the type III passport. This had a stiff red cover, with a window cutout through which the passport number was visible. That style of passport contained a total of 32 pages (Lloyd, p. 130).
Passports had green covers from 1941 until 1976, when the cover was changed to blue, as part of the U.S. bicentennial celebration.
Green covers were again issued from April, 1993, until March, 1994, and included a special one-page tribute to Benjamin Franklin in commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the United States Consular Service.
In 1981, the United States became the first country to introduce machine-readable passports (Lloyd, p. 155). In 2001, the Department of State started issuing passports with digital photos.
In fiscal year 2005, the Department of State issued 10,123,424 passports.[1]
On August 14, 2006, the Department of State began issuing electronic passports, which contain RFID (radio-frequency identification) chips. A chip holds an image of the photograph of the passport holder, passport data and personal data of the passport holder, and has capacity to store additional data.
Chip data are scanable by readers, a capability which is intended to speed up immigration processing. A privacy concern is that there could be illicit reading of chip data, in that a chip does not have to plugged into a reader in order for data therein to be read. Like toll-road chips, passport chips can be read when they are proximate to readers. This make possible the surreptitious reading of a chip, e.g., by a government tracking a person's movements or by a criminal intending identity theft.
Though passports have shielded covers which make it difficult to read chips when passport covers are closed, and though chips have access-control and encryption programmes, those features are ineffective when a passport is open, such as when a passport is presented at a hotel, a bank, or an Internet cafe.
The Department of State says that, by the end of 2006, all newly-issued regular passports will contain chips. Other sources expect it will be mid-2007 before all newly-issued passports will have chips. [2] [3] [4] [5] Non-electronic passports will remain valid until they expire, whether issued before or during the transition.
Types of passports
- Diplomatic (black cover)
- Issuable to American diplomats accredited overseas and their eligible dependants, and to citizens who reside in the United States but travel abroad for diplomatic work. Valid for a maximum of five years from the date of issue.
- Official (maroon cover)
- Issuable to citizen-employees of the United States assigned overseas, either permanently or temporarily, and their eligible dependants, and to members of Congress who travel on official business. Valid for a maximum of five years from the date of issue.
- Regular (blue cover)
- Issuable to all citizens and non-citizen nationals. For those age 16 or over, valid for ten years from the date of issue. For those 15 and younger, valid for five years from the date of issue. A variation is the no-fee passport issued to citizens in specified categories (22 C.F.R. sec. 51.52). A no-fee passport contains an endorsement which prohibits its use for personal travel. [6] No-fee passports are valid for a maximum of five years from the date of issue.
- Emergency
- Issuable to citizens while overseas, as a substitute for a lost or stolen passport. Valid for one year from the date of issue.
Passport in lieu of certificate of non-citizenship nationality
The State Department does not get many requests for the certificates of non-citizenship nationality allowed by law. Production of a limited number of certificates would be costly, and, if produced, certificates would have to meet security standards. Accordingly, the State Department chose not to issue certificates of non-citizen nationality. [7] Instead, a passport issued to a non-citizen national has an endorsement: "The bearer of this passport is a United States national and not a United States citizen." A passport with an endorsement serves the purpose of a certificate of non-citizenship nationality.
Second passport
It is a long-standing policy of the Department of State that no person is to hold more than one valid United States passport at any one time. Nonetheless, the department may issue a second passport under limited circumstances. One is a prolonged visa-processing delay. Another is safety or security, such as travel between Israel and countries which refuse to grant entry to persons with passports which indicate travel to Israel. Limited-circumstances passports are valid for two years from the date of issue. [8]
A holder of a diplomatic passport, an official passport or a no-fee passport may hold a regular passport as well. The holder of an emergency passport may exchange it for a full-term regular passport.
Appearance -- regular passport
The Great Seal of the United States is at the center of the front cover. "PASSPORT" (all capital letters) appears above the Great Seal, and "United States of America" (in script) appears below. An e-passport has the e-passport symbol at the bottom of the front cover. U.S. e-passport
An e-passport has 32 pages. 48-page passports for business travellers and other frequent travellers are no longer issued. However, extra visa pages may be added to a passport.[9]
Data page
A data page has a visual zone and a machine-readable zone. The visual zone has a digitized photograph of the passport holder, data about the passport, and data about the passport holder. In a U.S. passport, these are, in order of appearance:
- Photograph
- Type [of document, which is "P" for "paspsort"]
- Code [of the issuing country, which is "USA" for "United States of America"]
- Passport No.
- Surname
- Given Names
- Nationality
- Date of Birth
- Sex
- Place of Birth
- Date of Issue
- Authority
- Date of Expiration
- Amendments
At the bottom of a data page is the machine-readable zone, which can be read both visually and by an optical scanner. The machine-readable zone consists of two lines. There are no blank spaces in either line of the machine-readable zone. A space which does not contain a letter or a number is filled with "<" (which happens to be the mathematical symbol meaning "less than").
The first line of a machine-readable zone of a passport contains a letter to denote the type of travel document ("P" for passport), the code for the citizenship of the passport holder (e.g., "USA" for "United States of America"), and the name (surname first, then given name or names) of the passport holder.
The second line of a machine-readable zone of a passport contains the passport number, supplemented by a check digit; the code of the issuing country (e.g., "USA" for "United States of America"); the date of birth of the passport holder, supplemented by a check digit; a notation of the sex of the passport holder ("M" or "F"); the date of expiration of the passport, supplemented by a check digit; and, at the end of the line, two overall check digits.
Passport message
Passports of all countries contain a message, nominally from the official who is in charge of passport issuance (e.g., secretary of state, minister of foreign affairs), addressed to authorities of other countries. The message identifies the bearer as a citizen of the issuing country, requests that he or she be allowed to enter and pass through the other country, and requests further that, when necessary, he or she be given help consistent with international norms. In United States passports, the message is in English, French and Spanish. The message is:
In English:
- The Secretary of State of the United States of America hereby requests all whom it may concern to permit the citizen/national of the United States named herein to pass without delay or hindrance and in case of need to give all lawful aid and protection.
in French:
- Le Secrétaire d'Etat des Etats-Unis d'Amérique prie par les présentes toutes autorités compétentes de laisser passer le citoyen ou ressortissant des Etats-Unis titulaire du présent passeport, sans délai ni difficulté et, en cas de besoin, de lui accorder toute aide et protection légitimes.
and in Spanish:
- El Secretario de Estado de los Estados Unidos de América por el presente solicita a las autoridades competentes permitir el paso del ciudadano o nacional de los Estados Unidos aqui nombrados, sin demora ni dificultades, y en caso de necesidad, prestarle toda la ayuda y protección licitas.
The term "citizen/national" is used in the message, because some people born in American Samoa, including Swains Island, are nationals but not citizens of the United States.
The French and the Spanish passport messages inadvertently identify Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of State (January 26, 2005 - present), as a man. For Secretary Rice, the Spanish message, for example, should be "La Secretaria de Estado" (the [female] Secretary of State) rather than "El Secretario de Estado" (the [male] Secretary of State).
Languages
The field names on the data page, the passport message, the warning on the second page that the bearer is responsible for obtaining visas, the entries and departures designators on the visa pages, and the designations of the amendments-and-endorsements pages, are printed in English, French and Spanish. Formerly, the field names, the passport message, and so on were printed only English and French.
English, the de facto national language of the United States, has always been used in passports. At an international conference on passports, held in 1920 under the auspices of the League of Nations, a recommendation was that passports be written in French (historically, the language of diplomacy) and one other language. Subsequently, English and French were used in passports. Spanish was added during the second Clinton administration, in recognition of Spanish-speaking Puerto Rico. The addition indirectly recognises Spanish-speaking U.S. citizens whose origins are Spanish-speaking countries.
Biometric passport
The RFID chip used in the U.S. version of the biometric passport (sometimes referred to as an electronic passport) holds an image of the photograph of the passport holder, passport data, and personal data of the passport holder. However, the capacity of an RFID chip is 64 kilobytes, which is large enough to store biometric identifiers, such as fingerprints and retina scans, in addition to an image of a photograph, should the U.S. government decide to require other biometric identifiers.
Chip data are scanable by readers, a capability which is intended to speed up immigration processing. A privacy concern is that there could be illicit reading of chip data, in that a chip does not have to plugged into a reader in order for data therein to be read. Like toll-road chips, passport chips can be read when they are proximate to readers. This make possible the surreptitious reading of a chip, e.g., by a government tracking a person's movements or by a criminal intending identity theft.
Though passports have shielded covers which make it difficult to read chips when passport covers are closed, and though chips have access-control and encryption programmes, those features are ineffective when a passport is open, such as when a passport is presented at a hotel, a bank, or an Internet cafe
Products available on the market allow a holder of a biometric passport to shield data stored in the RFID chip which is embedded in the passport.
The U.S. Department of State began issuing biometric passports to diplomats and other officials in early 2006. The department began issuing regular biometric passports at its Colorado Passport Agency on August 14, 2006. [10] [11] [12] [13]
In October, 2004, the production stage of biometric passports commenced as the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO) issued awards to the lowest bidders in the biometric-passport programme. The awards totaled roughly $1,000,000 for startup, development and testing. The legal driving force of the programme is the U.S. Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002, which states that such smart card IDs may be used in lieu of visas. That law also provides that foreigners who travel to the U.S., and want to enter the U.S. visa-free under the Visa Waiver Program (VWP), must bear machine-readable passports which comply with international standards. If a foreign passport used under the VWP was issued on or after October 26, 2006, that passport must be a biometric passport.
Visa-free access
According to a study done by Henley & Partners, the United States has a Henley Visa Restrictions Index of 130, which means that U.S. citizens enjoy visa-free access to 130 countries and territories. The U.S. is ranked 1st in the study in terms of international travel freedom, together with Finland and Denmark. [14]
It is estimated that 187 countries and territories grant visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to holders of regular U.S. passport. 151 countries and territories are visa-free accessible. (visa on arrival for free counted) Visa prior to arrival or pre-arrangement required for countries or territories not mentioned below. [15]
Africa
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Botswana | 90 days [16] |
British Indian Ocean Territory | visa-free access |
Comoros | visa issued upon arrival [17] |
Côte d'Ivoire | 90 days [18] |
Djibouti | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for DJF5,000 [19] |
Egypt | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$15 [20] |
Equatorial Guinea | visa-free access [21] |
Ethiopia | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for US$40 [22][23] |
Kenya | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [24][25] |
Lesotho | 14 days [26][27] |
Madagascar | 90-day visa issued upon arrival for MGA28,000 [28] |
Malawi | 90 days [29] |
Mauritius | 6 months per year (tourist), 90 days per year (business) [30][31] |
Mayotte | 1 month [32] |
Morocco | 3 months [33][34] |
Mozambique | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$25 [35] |
Namibia | 90 days [36] |
Niger | 1-month issued upon arrival for XOF20,000 [37] |
Réunion | 3 months [38] |
Rwanda | 90 days [39] |
Saint Helena | visa-free access |
São Tomé and Príncipe | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [40] |
Senegal | 3 months [41] |
Seychelles | 1 month [42] |
South Africa | 90 days [43] |
Swaziland | 60 days [44] |
Tanzania | visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [45][46] |
Togo | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for XOF10,000 ~ XOF35,000 [47] |
Tunisia | 4 months [48] |
Uganda | 6-month visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [49][50] |
Zambia | visa issued upon arrival for US$25 (single), US$80 (multiple) [51][52] |
Zimbabwe | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for US$30 ~ 55 [53] |
Americas
Asia
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Armenia | 21-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [118] |
Azerbaijan | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$100 [119] |
Bahrain | 14-day visa issued upon arrival for BHD5 [120][121] |
Bangladesh | 15-day visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [122][123] |
Brunei Darussalam | 90 days [124] |
Cambodia | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$20 (tourist), US$25 (business) [125] |
Republic of China (Taiwan) | 30 days [126] |
Georgia | 90 days [127] |
Hong Kong | 90 days [128] |
Indonesia | 30-day visa issued upon arrival [129] |
Iraq | visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [130] |
Israel | 3 months [131] |
Japan | 90 days [132] |
Jordan | visa issued upon arrival for JOD10 [133][134] |
South Korea | 90 days [135][136] |
Kuwait | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for KWD5 [137][138] |
Kyrgyzstan | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for US$36 ~ 70 (business),US$35 (single tourist),US$55 (multiple tourist) [139][140] |
Laos | 15-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [141] |
Lebanon | 1-month visa issued upon arrival(free of charge) [142][143] |
Macau | 30 days [144] |
Malaysia | 3 months [145] |
Maldives | 30 days [146] |
Mongolia | 90 days [147] |
Nepal | 60-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [148] |
Oman | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for OMR6 [149] |
Philippines | 21 days [150] |
Qatar | 21-day visa issued upon arrival for QAR55 [151][152] |
Singapore | 90 days (VWP) [153] |
Sri Lanka | 30 days [154] |
Thailand | 30 days [155] |
Timor-Leste | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [156] |
Turkey | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for US$20, €15 [157] |
United Arab Emirates | 60 days [158] |
Yemen | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for YER10,500 [159] |
Europe
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
European Union |
|
Austria | 3 months in a half year [160][161] |
Belgium | 3 months in a half year [162][163] |
Bulgaria | 3 months in a half year [164][165] |
Cyprus | 3 months in a half year [166][167] |
Czech Republic | 3 months in a half year [168][169] |
Denmark | 3 months in a half year [170][171] |
Estonia | 3 months in a half year [172][173] |
Finland | 3 months in a half year [174][175] |
France | 3 months in a half year [176][177] |
Germany | 3 months in a half year [178][179] |
Greece | 3 months in a half year [180][181] |
Hungary | 3 months in a half year [182][183] |
Republic of Ireland | 3 months in a half year [184][185] |
Italy | 3 months in a half year [186][187] |
Latvia | 3 months in a half year [188][189] |
Lithuania | 3 months in a half year [190][191] |
Luxembourg | 3 months in a half year [192][193] |
Malta | 3 months in a half year [194][195] |
Netherlands | 3 months in a half year [196][197] |
Poland | 3 months in a half year [198][199] |
Portugal | 3 months in a half year [200][201] |
Romania | 3 months in a half year [202][203] |
Slovakia | 3 months in a half year [204][205] |
Slovenia | 3 months in a half year [206][207] |
Spain | 3 months in a half year [208][209] |
Sweden | 3 months in a half year [210][211] |
United Kingdom | 6 months [212] |
Non-EU |
|
Åland Islands | 3 months |
Albania | 1 month with entry tax : €10 [213][214] |
Andorra | 3 months (same as France and Spain) [215] |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 90 days [216] |
Croatia | 90 days [217][218] |
Faroe Islands | 3 months (same as Denmark) [219] |
Gibraltar | visa-free access [220] |
Guernsey | visa-free access [221] |
Iceland | 3 months in a half year [222] |
Isle of Man | visa-free access[223] |
Jersey | 6 months [224] |
Liechtenstein | 3 months in half a year (same as Switzerland) [225] |
Macedonia | 3 months [226] |
Moldova | 90 days [227] |
Monaco | 3 months (same as France and Spain) [228] |
Montenegro | 90 days [229] |
Norway | 3 months in half a year [230] |
San Marino | 90 days (same as Italy) [231] |
Serbia | 90 days [232][233] |
Switzerland | 3 months in half a year [234] |
Ukraine | [235][236] |
Vatican City | 3 months in half a year (same as Italy) [237] |
Oceania
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
American Samoa | visa-free access [238] |
British Antarctic Territory | visa-free access |
Cook Islands | 31 days [239] |
Fiji | 4 months [240] |
Guam | unlimited access [241] |
Marshall Islands | visa-free access [242] |
Federated States of Micronesia | 30 days[243][244] |
New Caledonia | 3 months [245] |
New Zealand | 3 months [246] |
Niue | 30 days [247] |
Northern Mariana Islands | unlimited access [248] |
Palau | 1 year [249][250] |
Papua New Guinea | 60-day visa issued upon arrival for PGK100 (tourist), PGK500 (business) [251] |
Pitcairn Islands | visa-free access |
French Polynesia | 1 month [252] |
Samoa | 60 days [253] |
Solomon Islands | 3-month visitor permit issued upon arrival [254] |
French Southern and Antarctic Lands | 3 months [255] |
Tokelau | free cruising permit can be obtain in Apia, Samoa [256] |
Tonga | 31-day visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [257] |
Tuvalu | 1 month [258] |
Vanuatu | 30 days [259][260] |
Wallis and Futuna | 3 months [261] |
Australia | pre-arrival Electronic Travel Authority required [262] |
Norfolk Island | same as Australia [263] |
Note that travel involving diplomatic and official passports normally requires the issuance of a visa, even if the destination country grants visa-free travel to holders of personal (blue) passports.
References
- Krueger, Stephen. Krueger on United States Passport Law (Hong Kong: Crossbow Corporation, 1999 and supplements) (2nd ed.).
- Lloyd, Martin. The Passport: The History of Man’s Most Travelled Document (England: Sutton Press, 2003). ISBN 0-7509-2964-2
- Passport information from Bureau of Consular Affairs website
- The U.S. Passport - Department of State (PDF)
- The U.S. Electronic Passport