๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡บ Luxembourg visa for Canada citizens

Canada passport holders can enter Luxembourg visa-free for up to 90 days. No application, no fee, just a passport valid for at least six months.

The verdict

Visa-freeup to 90 days

Schengen 90/180 rule

Luxembourg is in the Schengen Area. Any visa-free time counts toward the 90 days in any 180 shared across all Schengen countries, not per country.

Track it with the Schengen calculator

For Canada passport holders specifically

Canada passport holders get 90 days visa-free in Luxembourg, part of the wider Schengen Area. You don't apply for anything beforehand. Entry is granted at the border based on your passport alone. Just be ready to show proof of onward travel or sufficient funds if asked.

Most Canadians get turned away not because of the visa rule, but for forgetting the 90/180 day limit within the entire Schengen zone. This means you can't spend 90 days in Luxembourg and then another 90 in France immediately after. Keep track of your days across all Schengen countries. No specific fee applies for this visa-free entry, and there's no processing time as it's automatic.

Luxembourg visa, the full picture

If you're from the EU or Switzerland, you can stay and work in Luxembourg indefinitely. For most other developed nations, it's a simple 90-day visa-free Schengen entry. That's the headline. The devil, as always, is in the details, especially if you plan to work remotely.

Who can walk into Luxembourg visa-free?

Luxembourg is part of the Schengen Area. This means most travellers from the EU, Switzerland, the UK, the US, Canada, and Australia get 90 days of entry within any 180-day period without needing a visa. You'll get a stamp on entry, and another on exit. Just carry your passport. Simple.

Travellers from certain other countries, like Japan, South Korea, or Taiwan, also enjoy visa-free access for short stays, typically up to 90 days. Check the official Schengen visa list if your country isn't mentioned. If your passport isn't on any visa-waiver list, you'll need to apply for a Schengen visa before you travel. This process usually involves proving your travel purpose, financial means, and accommodation. It's not a quick turnaround, so plan ahead.

How long can you actually stay and what happens if you mess up?

The standard Schengen allowance is 90 days within a 180-day period. This isn't 90 days per country; it's for the entire Schengen zone. Overstaying this limit is where things get tricky. While Luxembourg might not aggressively stamp passports on every exit, Schengen authorities do track entries and exits. An overstay can lead to a ban from the Schengen area for 1 to 5 years. Fines are also possible, though often discretionary and not always enforced at the point of exit for minor infractions. The key is to respect the 90/180 rule. Don't assume you can wing it.

There's also the question of double-entry Schengen visas. If you have one, it means you can enter the zone twice within the validity period. If you have a single-entry visa, leaving the Schengen area (even for a day trip to a non-Schengen country like the UK) means you can't re-enter without a new visa. Most short-stay tourists from visa-waiver countries don't worry about this, as their entry is usually treated as "multiple-entry" within the 90/180 day rule.

Can you work remotely on a tourist stamp in Luxembourg?

This is the big grey area. Officially, working for a company outside Luxembourg while on a tourist visa is generally not permitted. The tourist visa is for leisure or short business meetings, not for employment. However, enforcement varies wildly. Many digital nomads work on their tourist stamps for short periods. Luxembourg authorities are more focused on people taking local jobs or establishing long-term residency without proper permits.

If you're doing light email checking and occasional calls, you're unlikely to raise eyebrows. If you're running a full-time operation from a co-working space or a cafe for months, it's riskier. Luxembourg doesn't have a specific digital nomad visa like some other European countries. Your best bet for longer stays is to investigate other Schengen countries that offer specific remote work visas, or to explore Luxembourg's own highly skilled worker or self-employed permits if your situation qualifies.

Whatโ€™s new for travellers to Luxembourg?

The Schengen visa application process has seen some digital improvements. Many countries are rolling out or expanding eVisa systems, which can streamline the application for those who need a visa. Luxembourg, as part of the wider Schengen framework, benefits from these changes, though the core rules remain. Fees for Schengen visas typically hover around โ‚ฌ80 for adults, with potential changes announced by the EU commission.

There haven't been major suspensions or expansions specific to Luxembourg's tourist entry rules in the last 12-18 months, beyond the general Schengen updates. The focus remains on harmonizing entry requirements and improving border security. For remote workers, the lack of a dedicated digital nomad visa means the legal landscape hasn't fundamentally shifted; the advice remains the same: be cautious about working on a tourist permit for extended periods.

How other passports enter Luxembourg

The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.

PassportRuleDays
United StatesVisa-free90View
United KingdomVisa-free90View
EU citizenFree movementโ€”View
AustraliaVisa-free90View
JapanVisa-free90View
IndiaConsulateโ€”View
BrazilVisa-free90View