Do Brazil passport holders need a visa to visit AO?
Brazilian ordinary passport holders can enter Angola visa-free for tourism for up to 30 days per entry (maximum 90 days within a calendar year), under Angola's 2023 visa-exemption policy. No visa or eVisa is required before travel. Since Angola's September 2023 visa liberalization (Presidential Decree, taking effect October 2023), Brazil is listed among roughly 98 "priority" nationalities exempt from tourist visas. A Brazilian citizen holding an ordinary passport may enter Angola without any visa for tourism for up to 30 days per stay, capped at 90 days within a 90-day/calendar-year window. There is no pre-arrival application, fee, or eVisa for this short-stay tourist channel. On arrival you simply present a passport valid at least six months with two blank pages, proof of onward/return travel, accommodation details, and proof of sufficient funds; a yellow fever vaccination certificate is required given Angola's status as an endemic country. The exemption is strictly for tourism (and, in practice, short business meetings at the border officer's discretion) and cannot be converted into a residence or work permit; anyone intending to work, study, or stay longer than 30 days must obtain the appropriate visa in advance. The arrangement is unilateral, and in February 2026 Brazil reciprocated by extending its visitor-visa validity for Angolan nationals to five years. Final admission always rests with the immigration officer at the port of entry.
VISA-FREETOURISMMULTIPLE ENTRYLast verified 2026-05-30
For guidance only — visa rules change with little notice. Always confirm directly with the destination's embassy or foreign ministry before booking non-refundable travel. Information here applies to ordinary (non-diplomatic) passports unless noted.