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🇨🇦CANADA
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Do Canada passport holders need a visa to visit KP?

Canadian passport holders need a visa to enter North Korea (DPRK), and there is no visa-free, eVisa, or visa-on-arrival option. As of May 2026, North Korea remains effectively closed to general tourism: only Russian passport holders are being admitted as tourists. Canada also maintains its highest-level "Avoid all travel" advisory due to the risk of arbitrary detention. A Canada ordinary passport holder cannot travel visa-free to North Korea. A visa is mandatory and must be arranged before travel through a North Korean state-authorized tour operator (such as Korea International Travel Company, KITC) working with partner agencies abroad; you cannot apply independently or arrive without an organized, guided tour. The visa is issued as a separate tourist card rather than a passport stamp, and approval requires authorization from Pyongyang, making the process slow and uncertain. Critically, as of 2026 North Korea is not issuing tourist visas to Canadians or other Western nationals: after a brief, limited reopening of the Rason Special Economic Zone in February 2025 (suspended on 5 March 2025), only Russian citizens are currently permitted to visit as tourists. The Pyongyang Marathon, which had briefly admitted some foreign runners in April 2025, was cancelled in March 2026. Independent of visa availability, the Government of Canada advises against all travel to North Korea because of the risk of arbitrary arrest and detention and the uncertain security situation. Canada has no embassy in Pyongyang; Sweden acts as Canada's protecting power and provides extremely limited consular assistance. Travelers should treat the route as visa-required and, in practice, currently inaccessible.
VISA REQUIREDTOURISMSINGLE 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.
Canada (PR)Living in Canada as a permanent resident? See PR-specific guidance
/01 — The numbers

Key facts

Last verified 2026-05-30
Visa type
Tourist visa (issued as a tourist card via an authorized DPRK tour operator) — no visa-free, eVisa, eTA, or visa-on-arrival channel exists
Maximum stay
Duration set by the approved tour itinerary, typically a few days to about 2 weeks; not a fixed statutory limit
per entry
Entries
Single entry (typically)
from issue date
Visa fee
Approximately EUR 30-80 / USD 30-90 for the visa, paid through the tour operator; total tour packages cost far more
consular fee only
Processing time
Several weeks; requires approval from Pyongyang and is described by Canada as 'extremely slow and arduous'
standard track
Validity
Issued for the specific approved travel dates of the booked tour
from issue date
/02 — The process

How to apply

/01
Confirm whether travel is currently possible
As of May 2026 North Korea is not issuing tourist visas to Canadian/Western nationals (only Russian tourists are admitted). Verify current status before any planning; do not assume the route is open.
· Check Koryo Tours / Young Pioneer Tours updates· Read travel.gc.ca advisory
/02
Heed the Government of Canada advisory
Canada advises 'Avoid all travel' due to the risk of arbitrary detention. Understand that consular help is extremely limited (provided via Sweden's embassy).
· Avoid all travel· No Canadian embassy in Pyongyang
/03
Book through an authorized tour operator
Independent travel is not allowed. You must book a guided tour with a registered DPRK-approved operator that coordinates with Korea International Travel Company (KITC).
· Guided tour mandatory· No solo entry
/04
Submit visa application via the operator
Provide passport details, photos, occupation and itinerary. The operator forwards the application for approval from Pyongyang and arranges issuance through a North Korean embassy or as a tourist card.
· Passport valid 6+ months· Journalists need special permission
/05
Receive the tourist card / visa approval
The visa is issued on a separate tourist card, not stamped in your passport. Collect it as instructed (e.g., at a designated embassy or on the way in via the operator).
· Tourist card, not a passport stamp· Carry approval documents
/06
Enter only by approved route with your guides
Entry is by air or train (commonly via Beijing); you cannot cross from South Korea. You must remain with your assigned North Korean guides at all times.
· Entry via air or train· Guides accompany you throughout
/03 — The paperwork

Required materials

10 items
Personalized checklist
0 / 10 complete
Canadian passport valid at least 6 months beyond planned departure
required
Confirmed booking with a DPRK-authorized tour operator (guided tour)
required
Approved tourist card / visa arranged before travel
required
Completed visa application with photos, occupation and full itinerary
required
Proof of payment for the tour package and visa fee
required
Travel route via approved third country (e.g., China by air or train)
required
Comprehensive travel and medical insurance
recommended
Registration with Embassy of Canada in Seoul and Sweden's embassy in Pyongyang
recommended
Awareness of DPRK rules on cameras, phones, media and behavior
recommended
Verification that tourism is currently open to Canadians (closed as of 2026)
required
Track your progress · save & email a copy
/04 — The cost

Fee breakdown

All-in estimate
Line itemAmountSource
Tourist visa / tourist card feeEUR 30-80 (approx. USD 30-90)Paid via the authorized tour operator; varies by issuing mission
Express/processing surchargeEUR 20-40Optional faster handling charged by some operators or embassies
Mandatory guided tour packageFrom approx. EUR 700+ (USD 800+)Not a government fee but unavoidable; covers guides, transport, lodging
Total estimateEUR 30 (visa only)EUR 120 (visa plus processing surcharge)incl. all
/05 — The wait

Processing time

Expedited processing
1-2 weeks
Some operators offer faster handling for an additional fee, but Pyongyang approval still governs timing.
/06 — The risks

Common refusal reasons

by frequency
/01
No visa-waiver or visa-on-arrival agreement
Canada and North Korea have no visa-exemption arrangement; all foreign tourists require a pre-arranged visa.
High
/02
Mandatory guided tour and state authorization
DPRK requires tourists to travel on an organized tour through a state-authorized operator; independent travel and self-applied visas are not permitted.
High
/03
Tourism currently closed to Canadians
As of 2026 only Russian passport holders are admitted as tourists; visas are not being issued to Western nationals.
High
/04
Canadian government 'Avoid all travel' advisory
Risk of arbitrary detention and an uncertain security situation make the route strongly discouraged regardless of visa status.
Medium
/05
No diplomatic relations channel for consular help
Canada has no embassy in Pyongyang; assistance is limited and routed through Sweden.
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
Canada to North Korea route verified
Confirmed against the Government of Canada travel advisory, North Korea visa policy, and current tourism status: visa required via authorized tour operator; no visa-free/eVisa/VOA option; tourism effectively closed to Canadians (Russian tourists only) as of 2026.
/09 — The questions

Frequently asked

Can a Canadian visit North Korea visa-free?
No. North Korea has no visa-free, eVisa, eTA, or visa-on-arrival arrangement with Canada. A visa, arranged in advance through an authorized tour operator, is mandatory.
Can I currently get a North Korea tourist visa as a Canadian in 2026?+
Do I get a stamp in my passport?+
Can I travel to North Korea on my own?+
Can I enter North Korea from South Korea?+
Does the Canadian government recommend traveling there?+
/11 — 护照工具

加拿大 (Canada) 护照工具

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