EuroNews (English)

World’s most powerful passport: Spain knocked off top spot by Asian nation

- Saskia O'Donoghue

Singapore has risen to the top of a ranking of the world’s strongest passports, knocking Spain off the top spot.

Despite that blow for the country, European nations - in cluding Spain, now relegated to second place - make up the rest of the top five.

VisaGuide.World’s ranking is seen as one of the most reliable within the travel industry, along with the Henley Passport Index.

The company evaluates 199 countries and territorie­s globally and bases its results on factors including visa-free access, eVisas, and global mobility.

It then uses its own Destinatio­n Significan­ce Score (DSS) to assign a unique value to each passport, although the DSS is not revealed in the ranking.

With this system, VisaGuide.World has found that the Singaporea­n passport is officially the strongest passport in the entire world - with a score of 91.27 out of a possible 100 as of September 2024.

Spain in second place, with a score of 90.60 is closely followed by France, whose score is 90.53.

Next up are the Italian and Hungarian passports, which come in with scores of 90.31 and 90.28 respective­ly.

It’s good news for Europe overall, with only one other country not on the continent, Japan, in the top 20. Japan takes 15th place, the same position as last year.

Germany, Austria, the Netherland­s, Switzerlan­d and Austria round out the top 10 ranking.

How does VisaGuide.World rank passports?

Released four times a year, VisaGuide.World’s passport ranking examines the number of destinatio­ns passport holders can access without a visa. Henley, usually thought of as the authority, takes a similar approach but has yet to release its ranking for this quarter.

VisaGuide.World takes other factors into considerat­ion, creating its DSS for each travel destinatio­n. That score factors in the type of entry policy each country enforces on an individual passport. That encompasse­s visa-free entry, Electronic Travel Authorisat­ion (ETA), visa on arrival, e-Visas embassy approved visas, passportfr­ee travel or banned entry.

This means the next ranking could look very different as Schengen countries introduce the Entry/Exit System (ETS) and ETIAS visa waiver for some non-EU countries and the UK rolls out its ETA.

The DSS also assigns points for the country’s GDP, global power and tourism developmen­t.

Not all of its criteria are considered equal, though. Visa-free access to a country with a high DSS earns a passport more points in the index than entry to a country with a low score.

The fact that VisaGuide.World does not specify the DSS of each country means that other factors may also affect the outcome of the index.

Related ETIAS: The new visa waiver Brits need to enter the EU in 2025, what it costs and who gets it free Long queues and scams: Will the new EU entry system cause border chaos? Why did Spain fall to second place in the ranking?

In VisaGuide.World’s last ranking, Spanish passport holders could travel visa-free to 160 countries and territorie­s. In September’s results, that number has fallen to just 107.

It appears to be a dr op across the board, though. Singaporea­n passport holders could previously visit 164 places without a visa but today, that only applies to 160. While the ranking doesn’t explicitly say why this is the case, it is a regularly-changing figure due to

shifting diplomatic ties, mutual visa policies, and the political and economic stability of countries and territorie­s globally.

Spain, though, and all the European countries in the top 20 do have a ben efit that Singapore doesn’t. Passport holders of these nations can travel to more than 30 countries without using their passports at all, thanks to the existence of the European Union and the Schengen zone.

For these citizens, travelling with just an ID card is possible, making freedom of movement simple. With that in mind, perhaps the drop from top spot in this ranking won’t make too many Spanish citizens unhappy after all.

 ?? ?? Johnny Marr poses for photograph­ers upon arrival at Brit Awards 2020 in London, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2020
Johnny Marr poses for photograph­ers upon arrival at Brit Awards 2020 in London, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2020
 ?? ?? Europe still has the vast majority of the top 20 passports
Europe still has the vast majority of the top 20 passports
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