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Japanese tourists on Pattaya beach in Thailand. Japanese passport holders have visa-free access to more countries than holders of any other passport. Photo: Alamy

Japan’s passport eclipses Singapore’s as most powerful in the world again

Passports from Japan confer the widest travel freedom, giving holders visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 190 countries; France rises a place on power index, but Germany, UK, US, China and Russia fall

Japan

Japan has overtaken Singapore to claim the top spot on the 2018 Henley Passport Index, having gained visa-free access to Myanmar this month. Japan now enjoys visa-free/visa-on-arrival access to 190 destinations, compared to Singapore’s total of 189.

The countries have been neck and neck since they both climbed to first place in February, pushing Germany down to second place for the first time since 2014.

Germany has now fallen further to third place, which it shares with South Korea and France. Their nationals enjoy visa-free access to 188 countries. France moved up a place last Friday when it gained visa-free access to Uzbekistan.

Iraq and Afghanistan continues to sit at the bottom (106th) of the Henley Passport Index – based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

An Afghan passport is the joint least useful of any on the Henley Passport Index. Photo: Alamy

The US and the UK, both with 186 destinations, have slid down yet another spot – from fourth to fifth place – with neither having gained access to any new jurisdictions since the start of 2018.

With stagnant outbound visa activity compared to Asian high performers, it seems unlikely they will regain the number one spot they jointly held in 2015 any time soon.

A British tourist in Norway. The UK passport is the joint fifth most valuable – though Brexit could change that. Photo: Alamy

The United Arab Emirates has made the most remarkable ascent on the Henley Passport Index, from 62nd place in 2006 to 21st place worldwide currently, and looking ahead, the most dramatic climb might come from Kosovo, which officially met all the criteria for visa liberalisation with the EU in July and is now in discussions with the European Council.

Chinese tourists visit Buddhist temples in the Inle lake region of Shan state in Myanmar. The Chinese passport fell two places on the Henley index to 71st place. Photo: Alamy

Russia received a boost in September when Taiwan announced a visa waiver, but the country has nonetheless fallen from 46th to 47th place due to movements higher up the ranking. The same is true of China: Chinese nationals obtained access to two new jurisdictions (St Lucia and Myanmar), but the Chinese passport fell two places, to 71st overall.

People wait at Moldova’s Chisinau airport to greet arriving passengers. The power of a Moldovan passport has risen steadily since 2008. Photo: Alamy

Christian Kälin, group chairman of Henley & Partners, says countries with citizenship-by-investment (CBI) programmes all fall within the top 50 of the Henley Passport Index. Newcomer Moldova, which is due to launch its CBI programme in November, has climbed 20 places since 2008.

“The travel freedom that comes with a second passport is significant, while the economic and societal value that CBI programmes generate for host countries can be transformative,” says Kälin.

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