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🇧🇷BRAZIL
🏳DKBR-DK

Do Brazil passport holders need a visa to visit DK?

No visa needed. Brazilian ordinary passport holders can enter Denmark and the rest of the Schengen Area visa-free for tourism for up to 90 days within any 180-day period. ETIAS is not yet in force (delayed to at least 2027), so for now only a valid passport is required. Brazil is listed in Annex II of EU Regulation (EU) 2018/1806, meaning Brazilian nationals are exempt from the Schengen short-stay visa requirement. Denmark is part of the Schengen Area, so a Brazilian ordinary passport holder can travel there for tourism, business, family visits, or transit without a visa for up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day period. The passport should be valid for at least three months beyond the intended departure date and issued within the previous 10 years. The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) - a roughly EUR 20 pre-travel authorisation that will eventually apply to visa-exempt travelers - is not operational. The EU confirmed in February 2026 that ETIAS will not launch before 2027 due to dependencies on the Entry/Exit System (EES). Until ETIAS goes live and any transition period ends, Brazilians need nothing beyond a valid passport, though at the border they may be asked to show proof of onward/return travel, accommodation, sufficient funds, and travel medical insurance. Border officers retain discretion to refuse entry; the 90-day allowance is a maximum, not a guarantee.
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.
/01 — The numbers

Key facts

Last verified 2026-05-30
Visa type
Visa-free short stay (Schengen Annex II exemption)
Maximum stay
Up to 90 days in any 180-day period
per entry
Entries
Multiple entries permitted within the 90/180 allowance
from issue date
Visa fee
0 (no visa fee; ETIAS not yet in force)
consular fee only
Processing time
None required before travel
standard track
Validity
Passport valid 3+ months beyond departure and issued within last 10 years
from issue date
/02 — The process

How to apply

/01
Confirm your passport meets Schengen validity rules
Ensure your Brazilian ordinary passport was issued within the last 10 years and will remain valid for at least 3 months after your planned departure from the Schengen Area.
· Passport· 3-month validity
/02
Verify you are within the 90/180 allowance
Count any days already spent in the Schengen Area in the previous 180 days. Your total stay across all Schengen countries must not exceed 90 days in any rolling 180-day window.
· 90/180 rule
/03
Prepare supporting documents for the border
Carry proof of onward or return travel, accommodation details (hotel booking or host address), evidence of sufficient funds, and travel medical insurance. Border officers may ask for these.
· Onward ticket· Accommodation· Funds
/04
Check ETIAS status before booking (future requirement)
ETIAS is not yet required (delayed to at least 2027). Re-check the official EU ETIAS site before travel; once live, you will need to apply online and pay a small fee before departure.
· ETIAS· Not yet active
/05
Travel to Denmark and clear passport control
Present your passport at the Schengen external border. Be ready to briefly explain your trip purpose and length. Entry remains at the discretion of the border officer.
· Passport control
/06
Track your days and depart on time
Keep count of your days in Schengen and leave before exceeding 90 days. Overstaying can lead to fines, deportation, and future entry bans.
· Track days· Avoid overstay
/03 — The paperwork

Required materials

8 items
Personalized checklist
0 / 8 complete
Brazilian ordinary passport valid 3+ months beyond departure
required
Passport issued within the last 10 years
required
Proof of onward or return travel
recommended
Proof of accommodation (hotel booking or host invitation)
recommended
Evidence of sufficient funds for the stay
recommended
Travel medical insurance (min. EUR 30,000 coverage advised)
recommended
Days counted to stay within 90/180 limit
required
ETIAS authorisation (only once system launches, expected 2027+)
optional
Track your progress · save & email a copy
/04 — The cost

Fee breakdown

All-in estimate
Line itemAmountSource
Schengen short-stay visa fee0Not applicable - Brazilians are visa-exempt for short stays
ETIAS authorisationEUR 20Not yet payable; ETIAS delayed to at least 2027 and not currently required
Travel medical insuranceVaries (approx. EUR 20-60)Not mandatory for visa-free entry but strongly recommended
Total estimate00incl. all
/05 — The wait

Processing time

/06 — The risks

Common refusal reasons

by frequency
/01
Tourism and sightseeing
Visiting Copenhagen, Danish landmarks, and traveling onward within Schengen for leisure.
High
/02
Visiting family or friends
Short personal visits to relatives or friends residing in Denmark.
Medium
/03
Business meetings and conferences
Attending short-term business meetings, trade fairs, or conferences within the 90-day limit.
Medium
/04
Transit to other Schengen or onward destinations
Passing through Copenhagen Airport en route to other European or international destinations.
Low
/07 — On arrival

After you land

/01
Immigration
Keep your passport, visa or exemption proof, return ticket, and accommodation details ready for border inspection.
/02
Customs
Review the destination's customs rules before travel and declare restricted goods or large cash amounts when required.
/03
Connectivity
Check whether airport SIMs, eSIMs, or roaming are the best option for your route before arrival.
/08 — The history

Policy changelog

since 2024
2026-05-30 · major
Brazil to Denmark route verified
Confirmed visa-free short-stay status under EU Regulation 2018/1806 (Annex II). Noted ETIAS delayed to at least 2027 per February 2026 EU announcement; not currently required.
/09 — The questions

Frequently asked

Do Brazilians need a visa to visit Denmark for tourism?
No. Brazilian ordinary passport holders are visa-exempt and can stay in Denmark and the wider Schengen Area for up to 90 days within any 180-day period without a visa.
How long can a Brazilian stay in Denmark without a visa?+
Is ETIAS required for Brazilians to enter Denmark now?+
What passport validity do I need?+
What documents might border officers ask for?+
Can I work in Denmark on visa-free entry?+
/11 — Passport tools

Tools for the Brazil passport

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