A passport is, in its most reductive description, a travel document. In its fuller meaning, it is a certificate of inherited privilege: a legal instrument whose value is determined not by its holder but by the state that issued it and the network of bilateral agreements that state has accumulated over decades of diplomacy, economic leverage, and geopolitical alignment.

The Global Passport Index 2026 measures that value across 197 countries and territories, synthesising fourteen indicators across three weighted pillars: Enhanced Mobility, Investment, and Quality of Living. The result is a structural map of how the world sorts its population into the mobile and the immobile.
The edition lands at a moment of deliberate divergence in global border policy. The world’s wealthiest democracies have converged on digital pre-screening, the UK’s Electronic Travel Authorisation, the EU’s Entry/Exit System and forthcoming ETIAS, the long-established American ESTA, preserving the appearance of openness while deepening state control over who moves. Asia has moved the other way: China’s unilateral visa-free expansion reached near fifty countries by February 2026, deployed not as a gesture of universal openness but as a calculated instrument of economic diplomacy, with the United States pointedly excluded throughout. Brazil’s reciprocity reinstatement for American nationals in April 2025 signals a further shift, that middle-income partners are considering not extending unconditional access to states that do not reciprocate it. These are not administrative adjustments. They are political choices, and the 2026 index has been built to measure their consequences.
The findings are consistent and their direction is clear. Sweden retains the global summit at 96.05; Afghanistan remains last at 23.10. The 72.95-point gap between them has widened in every edition since 2021, confirming that the divergence between the world’s strongest and weakest travel documents is not a post-pandemic anomaly but a deepening structural condition. The nine-fold gap between the openness African passport-holders receive in Europe and the openness European passport-holders receive in Africa is the largest region-to-region inequality in the dataset. The United States, the world’s largest beneficiary of others’ openness by reciprocity balance, and simultaneously its tenth-most-restrictive destination by inbound score. is the sharpest single illustration of what this system looks like at its extreme.
What the 2026 Global Passport Index ultimately documents is a world in which the language of liberalisation has expanded while the underlying distribution of mobility privilege has changed very little: the instruments are newer, but the hierarchy is older, and it is widening.
The 2026 edition of the Global Passport Index documents a year shaped by the consolidation of digital border-management systems, a measured Asian liberalisation of borders, and the persistence of structural mobility inequality between the Global North and Global South.
Sweden retains the top position in the composite ranking with a score of 96.05 out of 100, followed by Switzerland, Finland, Germany, and the Netherlands. Afghanistan remains last at 23.10, with Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen, and Syria completing the bottom five.
The 2026 ranking covers 197 countries and territories across 14 underlying indicators.


Three macro-developments define the 2026 cycle.
- First, the mobility divide continued to harden: Sweden (96.05) now sits 72.95 points above Afghanistan (23.10), and the gap between the strongest and weakest passports has widened in every edition since 2021, the top of the ranking gaining incrementally while the bottom loses ground in absolute terms.
- Second, the bilateral analysis underlying the 2026 index reveals: reciprocity is not the rule on bilateral mobility agreements, and that the world’s most privileged passports are concentrated in the wealthy Anglosphere and Gulf sates.
- Third, the two halves of the global system moved in opposite directions: the Global North converged on digital pre-screening (the UK Electronic Travel Authorisation, the EU Entry/Exit System and forthcoming ETIAS, and the long-standing US ESTA), adding friction even to destinations the index scores as highly open, while Asia, led by China’s selective and time-limited visa-free expansion to roughly fifty countries with the United States pointedly excluded, moved the other way, a system liberalizing and tightening at once, along lines that track wealth and geopolitics rather than any global trend.
These developments describe a global mobility system that is opening and closing at the same time, and doing so unevenly. The passports that gained ground in 2026 did so through deliberate diplomacy or domestic reform rather than drift, while those that slipped were exposed to the reciprocity risk that even the strongest documents now carry.
For the holder of a restricted passport, the distance to the top tier is wider and more entrenched than at any point since the index began; for the holder of a strong one, its value rests increasingly on bilateral arrangements. The common thread is that position within the global mobility hierarchy is no longer a fixed inheritance but a variable that can be actively managed: which is precisely where the case for investment migration begins.

The 2026 mobility year unfolded against the consolidation of three durable trends: the digitisation of border management in the Global North; the recovery of inbound tourism in East Asia, accompanied by selective Chinese visa liberalisation; and the continued political-economic reordering of mobility relationships among middle powers.

The 2026 Global Passport Index synthesises three weighted pillars: Enhanced Mobility, Investment and Quality of Living.

Nine of the world’s ten strongest passports are European, and the continent claims the global number one spot. What’s remarkable isn’t just the scale of this dominance, but its character.

Kosovo climbs 18 points. Vanuatu crashes. The UAE hits its highest rank ever. Behind every passport rise or fall in 2026 lies a deliberate political choice — and the winners know exactly what game they’re playing.

Composite performance, dimensional trajectory, bilateral visa developments, and the geopolitical, economic, and social context behind the decline of the world’s former number-one passport.

The most consequential analytical contribution of the 2026 dataset is the bilateral pairs table, which records every directed passport-to-destination relationship — 38,616 in total.
In today’s increasingly globalized world, people are looking to invest beyond their borders and obtain second citizenship or residency abroad. But how to pick the right country?
To help answer this question, several global passport rankings have been developed over the years, enabling individuals to understand how easily a passport can facilitate travel abroad with little to no visa restrictions. Yet, besides facilitating travel, there are also other, just as important benefits to acquiring a second passport, which Global Citizen Solution’s Passport Index Project seeks to address.
The Global Passport Index 2026 resolves into a single coherent argument: passport power is not a measurement of national prestige but a quantified record of accumulated institutional choices, and those choices have produced a global mobility system that is simultaneously more sophisticated and more unequal than at any prior point in the index’s history.
Sweden’s retention of the summit, at 96.05, is less a story about Sweden than about the compounding logic of the system itself, a logic in which strong governance attracts bilateral agreements, which deepen mobility access, which reinforces the case for further bilateral agreements, creating a virtuous cycle at the top that has no structural counterpart at the bottom. Afghanistan’s 23.10 and the sustained 72.95-point gap between the two are not accidents of diplomacy; they are the measurable output of that same structures operating in reverse.
What the five-year trajectory adds to this picture is the demonstration that the hierarchy is not static but directional: the top gained incrementally in every edition since 2021, the bottom lost ground in absolute terms, and the spread has widened in each of the six cycles the index has recorded. The bilateral data presented in the index provides the mechanism behind that trend. From all bilateral relatioships analyzed, 61.5 per cent are asymmetric, and the direction of that asymmetry is not random: it tracks wealth and geopolitical alignment with a precision that the headline composite ranking, by design, does not show clearlry.
The nine-fold gap between the openness African passport-holders receive in Europe and the openness European passport-holders receive in Africa is revealing, and it has not narrowed materially across the five years under review. The reciprocity balance data, in which all twenty of the most privileged passports belong to OECD members or high-income economies and all twenty of the most generous belong to lower-income states, is not a coincidence but a structural feature of how the modern visa system was constructed.
Against this backdrop, the index’s individual stories: Kosovo’s eighteen-point gain, Kenya’s strategic opening, China’s selective liberalisation that encompasses fifty countries while pointedly excluding the United States, Brazil’s reciprocity reinstatement, are not isolated bilateral episodes but illustrations of a broader contest over who controls the terms of global movement.
The United States embodies that contest more vividly than any other country in the 2026 dataset: the world’s single largest beneficiary of others’ openness by reciprocity balance, and simultaneously its tenth-most-restrictive destination by inbound openness score, a contradiction that the composite ranking, by placing it twelfth globally, substantially flatters.
What the 2026 index ultimately documents is a world in which the vocabulary of liberalisation — visa-free zones, electronic travel authorisations, unilateral waivers, regional free-movement protocols — has expanded dramatically, while the underlying distribution of mobility privilege has changed very little.
The instruments are newer; the hierarchy is older. For the holder of a restricted passport, the distance to genuine global access is wider and more entrenched than when the index began; for the holder of a strong one, that strength increasingly depends on bilateral arrangements whose reciprocal obligations are only now being called in.