🇲🇺 Mauritius visa for EU citizens
EU citizen passport holders can get a visa on arrival in Mauritius, paid for at a desk before immigration, usually for 30 days.
The verdict
For EU citizen passport holders specifically
Mauritius gives EU passport holders 30 days on arrival, no questions asked. Don't overthink it. You won't apply online or queue at a consulate beforehand. Just head to the immigration desk with your passport.
The only real snag for EU citizens is proving you're not planning to stay permanently. Have a return or onward ticket ready. They might glance at it. Banks in Europe usually mean funds are assumed, but carrying a few hundred Euros in cash or having a credit card visible doesn't hurt. The biggest mistake people make is looking like they're moving, not visiting. Keep it simple.
Mauritius visa, the full picture
Most Western passports get you 60 days visa-free. Some others get 30. Don't expect to work legally on arrival.
Who Walks In Visa-Free?
Here’s the quick rundown for Mauritius. If you hold a passport from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, or any EU country, you get 60 days on arrival, no questions asked. This is the largest bloc and covers most digital nomads.
Then there’s a decent chunk of countries that get 30 days visa-free. This includes places like South Africa, India, and many Asian nations. If you’re from somewhere else entirely, you’ll likely need to apply for a visa before you arrive. Check the official Mauritius immigration website for your specific nationality; it’s the only reliable source. Don't trust random forums.
How Long Can You Actually Stay?
Officially, the visa-free period for most nationalities is 60 days. For others, it's 30 days. What trips people up is the "re-entry" rule. If you leave Mauritius and want to come back, you might only get another short stay, or worse, be denied re-entry if immigration suspects you're living there. They want to see you have a genuine exit plan. This means a confirmed flight ticket out of the country.
Overstaying is where it gets expensive. While the exact fine can fluctuate, expect to pay around MUR 1,000 (about $25 USD) per day you’re illegally in the country. More importantly, overstaying can lead to immediate deportation and a ban from re-entering Mauritius for a set period. It’s not worth the risk for a few extra days.
Working Remotely: Legal or Not?
This is the grey area. The official stance is that you cannot work on an arrival stamp, even remotely for a company outside Mauritius. Your visa-free entry is for tourism, not employment. However, enforcement is… patchy. Many digital nomads do work from cafes and co-working spaces using their tourist visa.
The key is how you conduct your work. If you’re quietly typing away on your laptop, making occasional video calls, nobody will likely bat an eyelid. If you’re setting up a formal office, meeting clients face-to-face, or receiving significant business mail, you’re pushing your luck. Authorities are more focused on people trying to get local employment, not those just tapping on a keyboard. It's a risk, and if flagged, you'll be told to leave.
What's New in Mauritius?
Mauritius has been steadily upgrading its immigration processes. The big development in the last 18 months has been the expansion and refinement of the eVisa system for various categories of travellers and longer-term stays, though this is more for specific work or residency permits rather than simple tourist visits. For the standard tourist, the visa-free rules for most major nationalities remain the benchmark.
Fees for visa applications, where required, can change, so always verify the current cost on the official immigration portal before making any plans. There haven't been major suspensions or expansions of the standard visa-free entry periods recently; the focus has been on streamlining applications for those needing specific permits. The core rule of thumb for short-term visitors hasn't drastically shifted.
How other passports enter Mauritius
The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.