Yearly Archives: 2026

UK Graduate Route 2026: Make the Most of the 2-Year Window Before the January 2027 Cut

The UK Graduate Route 2026 remains one of the most generous post-study work visas in Europe — for now. International bachelors and masters graduates who hold a UK student visa can switch into the Graduate Route and stay for two years with no job offer and no minimum salary. From January 2027, the same route shortens to eighteen months for everyone except PhD holders. If you are an African graduate planning your move, the seven months between mid-2026 and early 2027 are the most valuable window the UK has offered post-study workers in years.

What the UK Graduate Route 2026 actually is

The Graduate Route is a non-sponsored post-study work permission. Launched in July 2021 to replace the old Tier 1 Post-Study Work visa, it lets a student visa holder who has completed an eligible UK course apply once for the right to stay and work without an employer sponsor. There is no salary floor, no shortage occupation list and no need for the job to match your field of study. You can work full-time, self-employed, freelance or alongside a Tier 4 dependant.

To qualify in 2026 you must hold an active Student visa on the day you apply, have successfully completed an eligible course at a registered sponsor (most universities and a small number of higher-education colleges), apply from inside the UK before your student visa expires, and pay the £822 application fee plus the £1,035 per year Immigration Health Surcharge for the duration of your grant. The Migration Advisory Committee, in its 2024 rapid review, recommended keeping the route as-is. The Home Office accepted the recommendation in principle but laid out tighter rules for institutions that fail compliance checks.

The 2-year window and the January 2027 cut

Here is the news that matters in 2026. Under the Restoring Control of the Immigration System white paper published in 2025, the Graduate Route will be reduced from two years to 18 months for bachelor and masters graduates applying on or after 1 January 2027. PhD holders keep their three-year grant. Anyone who applies before that date receives the full two-year permission and keeps it even if their visa runs past 2027 — UK Visas and Immigration does not retrospectively shorten an existing grant.

That cut-off is what makes 2026 a planning year. A Cameroonian masters student finishing a one-year programme in September 2026 is looking at applying in late September. They will get the full two years. The same student starting a two-year MSc in autumn 2026 will likely complete in summer 2028 — well after the cut — and qualify for only 18 months. The decision to delay or accelerate a course start date now has a six-month consequence later.

  • Apply before 1 January 2027 — get the full 2 years
  • Apply on or after 1 January 2027 — get 18 months
  • PhDs and doctorate holders — still 3 years either way
  • Existing Graduate Route holders — not affected, keep your grant

PhD graduates still keep three years on the UK Graduate Route 2026

The PhD carve-out is the part the headlines often miss. A Nigerian doctoral candidate finishing at the University of Manchester in 2026 will receive a three-year Graduate Route grant regardless of whether they switch before or after January 2027. The same applies to Doctor of Medicine, Doctor of Engineering and other recognised doctorate programmes. If your career plan involves a longer research career, applying for a UK PhD via Commonwealth Scholarship, CSC or a Doctoral Training Partnership is the smarter long-game move than rushing a one-year masters in 2026. We covered how to compare DAAD, Erasmus and Chevening for the masters track in a recent piece — the same logic guides PhD funding choices.

Timing your application: when to switch in 2026

UKVI rules require you to apply from inside the UK before your Student visa expires. That sounds straightforward, but the timing trap that catches African students every year is course-end confusion. Your student visa typically ends about four months after your last expected end date. Your Graduate Route application must be in before that expiry — not before your graduation ceremony.

  1. Confirm your course-completion date in writing with your university registrar.
  2. Wait for the university to report your successful completion to UKVI (most universities do this automatically within four weeks of your final result).
  3. Apply online for the Graduate Route within that window, ideally six to eight weeks after your final result is confirmed.
  4. Keep proof of your Student visa, BRP or eVisa, passport biometrics and IHS payment receipts during the wait.

A Kenyan masters graduate from the University of Edinburgh finishing in September 2026 should aim to lodge their Graduate Route application by mid-October 2026 to receive a decision before Christmas. That keeps the application comfortably inside the 2-year-grant window and avoids any year-end processing slowdown.

Need a second pair of eyes on your application? Travel Explore can review it — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Using the Graduate Route to bridge to Skilled Worker

The Graduate Route is not the destination. It is the bridge. Most successful applicants use it to find a Skilled Worker sponsor and switch into a long-term route while still in the UK. In 2026 the Skilled Worker minimum salary is £41,700 for new entrants, with shortage-occupation reductions and lower thresholds for new entrants under 26. A Graduate Route holder who lands a sponsored offer can switch in-country with no need to leave the UK or re-enter on a fresh visa.

The data consistently shows that graduates who secure a sponsored role within their first nine months on the Graduate Route are most likely to convert to Skilled Worker successfully. After the 18-month rule kicks in, that conversion window narrows sharply — which is exactly why government modelling expects the policy to push more graduates back home rather than into long-term Skilled Worker routes.

Frequently asked questions about UK Graduate Route 2026

Can I apply for the Graduate Route from outside the UK?

No. Graduate Route applications must be made from inside the UK while you still hold a valid Student visa. If you leave before applying you lose eligibility, even if your course is complete.

Will the January 2027 18-month change affect me if I apply in November 2026?

No. The cut applies to applications dated 1 January 2027 or later. An application submitted on 31 December 2026 still receives the full two years.

Can I bring my spouse and children on the Graduate Route?

Only dependants who were already on your Student visa can continue under the Graduate Route. You cannot add new dependants while on this route. Plan your family applications during the Student visa phase.

Does the Graduate Route count towards UK settlement?

No. Time on the Graduate Route does not count towards Indefinite Leave to Remain. Settlement time only starts accumulating once you switch into a qualifying route such as Skilled Worker, Global Talent or Innovator Founder.

What happens if my university loses its sponsor licence after I graduate?

Your Graduate Route eligibility is based on your status on your course-completion date. Subsequent sponsor licence revocations do not strip you of the right to apply, provided you completed before the revocation took effect.

Key takeaways

  • The UK Graduate Route 2026 still gives bachelors and masters graduates a full two years to live, work and job-search without sponsorship.
  • From 1 January 2027 the route shortens to 18 months for bachelors and masters; PhD graduates keep three years.
  • The best window to apply is between September 2026 and December 2026 — before the cut takes effect.
  • Apply from inside the UK before your Student visa expires; use the route to bridge into Skilled Worker or Global Talent.
  • A Ghanaian engineering masters graduate finishing in autumn 2026 has every reason to apply on time and use the two years strategically.

Ready to take the next step?

If you’d rather not navigate the Graduate Route alone, Travel Explore handles it end-to-end: https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

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  • The clock is ticking on the UK’s most generous post-study visa — here is why September 2026 matters.
  • Two years or eighteen months — the single calendar date that decides your UK post-study future.
  • PhD graduates still walk away with three years. Everyone else has until New Year’s Day 2027.

Fully Funded Master’s Scholarships Africans 2026: DAAD vs Erasmus Mundus vs Chevening Compared

If you are an African graduate eyeing a fully-funded European Master’s, three scholarship names dominate every conversation: DAAD EPOS (Germany), Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters (multi-country EU), and Chevening (United Kingdom). All three are real options for the September 2027 intake; all three open or close at different points across 2026. The right pick depends on country preference, field of study, competition profile, and how much your career plan is tied to one specific country versus a mobile European Master’s experience.

This side-by-side comparison covers the five things that actually matter when you are choosing where to apply: what is covered, who can apply, when the deadline falls, how competitive it is, and what the post-study commitments look like. Use it to shortlist before you spend the next four months building application packs.

What each one covers

DAAD EPOS funds Master’s programmes in Germany with full tuition, a monthly stipend (EUR 934/month for postgrads in 2026), travel allowance, study and research grants, and health insurance. Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters funds two-year mobility Master’s across at least two European universities with full tuition (around EUR 9,000 per year), EUR 1,400 monthly stipend, and travel. Chevening funds one-year UK Master’s with full tuition, monthly stipend (around GBP 1,400 outside London, GBP 1,750 in London), return flights, visa, and an arrival allowance.

Total package value over the duration of the Master’s: DAAD EPOS roughly EUR 35,000-45,000 across 12-24 months. Erasmus Mundus typically EUR 49,000 across 24 months. Chevening around GBP 35,000-40,000 across 12 months. Chevening compresses more value into one year; Erasmus spreads it across two years and two countries; DAAD sits in between.

Fully Funded Master’s Scholarships Africans 2026: who can apply

  • DAAD EPOS — nationals of developing countries (most African countries qualify) with at least two years of professional experience in a development-relevant field. Postgraduate first degree required.
  • Erasmus Mundus — open to applicants worldwide, no country restrictions. Programme-specific eligibility (relevant Bachelor’s, English proficiency, sometimes work experience).
  • Chevening — nationals of Chevening-eligible countries (most African countries qualify) with at least two years of work experience, an upper second-class Bachelor’s degree, and a return-home commitment.

The work-experience gate is the practical differentiator. Erasmus Mundus is the only one of the three that accepts fresh graduates without work experience. For a 24-year-old Rwandan engineering graduate without two years of work, Erasmus Mundus is the only realistic fit. For a 28-year-old Senegalese policy analyst with four years of work, all three are open.

Deadlines for the 2026-2027 cycle

  • DAAD EPOS — per-programme deadlines, mostly between July and October 2026 for September 2027 entry. Some programmes accept earlier.
  • Erasmus Mundus — per-programme deadlines, most fall between November 2026 and February 2027 for September 2027 entry.
  • Chevening — the 2027 cycle opens 6 August 2026 and closes early November 2026 for September 2027 entry.

If you want optionality, build a parallel application schedule: apply to one DAAD EPOS programme by September 2026, prepare the Chevening application during August-October 2026, then layer two Erasmus Mundus consortium applications between November 2026 and February 2027. The same evidence pack (CV, two referee letters, personal statement, transcripts) reuses with minor edits across all three.

Need a second pair of eyes on your application? Travel Explore can review it — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Competition profile and odds

Chevening is the most competitive on paper — roughly 75,000 applications worldwide for around 1,800 scholarships annually, a 2.4% conversion rate. African applicants do disproportionately well: Sub-Saharan Africa accounted for about 25% of awards in 2025. Erasmus Mundus is less concentrated — each Joint Master’s programme runs its own admissions, with 20-30 scholarships per programme and several thousand applicants per consortium. DAAD EPOS conversion sits between the two and varies sharply by host programme.

The single biggest predictor of selection across all three is the strength of the link between your past work, your proposed Master’s, and your stated post-study plan. Selection panels read for coherence first and credentials second. The official Chevening site, the Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters portal and the DAAD scholarship database each publish detailed selection criteria worth studying before you draft.

Post-study commitments

Chevening requires you to return home for at least two years after the Master’s. Erasmus Mundus has no return commitment — you can stay in Europe and pursue work or further study. DAAD EPOS has an explicit expectation of return to a development-relevant career in your home country, though it is not strictly enforced.

For a Kenyan civil servant whose government job is waiting on return, Chevening fits the plan. For a Ghanaian software engineer who wants to use the Master’s to break into the German tech market via the Opportunity Card, DAAD EPOS or Erasmus Mundus (with German university components) is the better fit because both allow staying.

Frequently asked questions about Fully Funded Master’s Scholarships Africans 2026

Can I apply to DAAD, Erasmus Mundus and Chevening at the same time?

Yes. There is no rule against parallel applications, and many successful applicants do exactly this to maximise odds. You can only accept one award.

Which of the three is easiest to win?

Erasmus Mundus has the best per-programme odds because each Joint Master’s runs its own admissions. DAAD EPOS varies sharply by programme; Chevening is the toughest in raw numbers but African applicants are over-represented in the winning cohort.

Do I need German for DAAD?

For Germany-based programmes, language requirements vary. Most postgraduate EPOS programmes are taught in English with IELTS or TOEFL.

Does Erasmus Mundus require me to study in multiple countries?

Yes. Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters are built around mobility — you typically study at two or three European universities across the two-year programme.

Is the Chevening return-home requirement enforced?

Yes. Chevening requires return to your home country for at least two years after the Master’s. The British High Commission tracks compliance.

Which Fully Funded Master’s Scholarships Africans 2026 cycle opens first?

DAAD EPOS programmes open on rolling per-programme dates from July 2026. Chevening opens 6 August 2026. Erasmus Mundus consortia open from October 2026 onward.

Worth remembering

  • Fully Funded Master’s Scholarships Africans 2026 splits into three main streams: DAAD EPOS (Germany), Erasmus Mundus (multi-country EU), Chevening (UK).
  • Erasmus Mundus is the only one of the three that accepts fresh graduates without work experience.
  • Chevening 2027 opens 6 August 2026 and closes early November 2026; the others run on rolling per-programme deadlines.
  • Chevening requires return home for two years; Erasmus Mundus has no return commitment; DAAD EPOS expects but does not strictly enforce return.
  • Same evidence pack reuses across all three with minor edits — build one strong pack and submit in parallel.

Choose your Master’s scholarship with confidence

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  • DAAD vs Erasmus Mundus vs Chevening: side-by-side for African Master’s applicants in 2026.
  • Same pack, three applications. The smart move for African graduates this year.
  • Chevening conversion is 2.4% globally. Africans win disproportionately.

5 Proof of Funds Mistakes That Sink UK Student Visa Applications from Africa in 2026

The single biggest reason UK Student Visa applications from Africa come back refused in 2026 is not the personal statement. It is not the English test. It is the proof of funds. UK Student Visa Proof of Funds 2026 rules look simple on paper — show enough money in the right kind of account for 28 consecutive days — but the case-officer training documents released earlier this year list nine distinct ways a financial evidence bundle can fail. Five of those nine account for almost every African refusal we see.

This guide walks through the five mistakes, each with the fix the case officer would have accepted. If you are sitting on a UCL or Manchester offer for September 2026, work through this before you book the visa appointment. A Tanzanian Master’s applicant we walked through this checklist last month caught two of the five errors in her draft bundle and avoided a refusal that would have cost her the deposit.

Mistake one: showing the wrong amount

The maintenance figures for 2026 are GBP 1,529 per month for courses inside London and GBP 1,171 per month for courses outside London, capped at nine months. Add the full first-year tuition (or first-year tuition minus any paid deposit if you have a Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies that shows the deposit). For a one-year Master’s in London, the maintenance line alone is GBP 13,761. A common failure is showing nine months at outside-London rates for a London course, or forgetting to add the dependants’ maintenance figure if you are bringing a partner.

The fix is to print the CAS, identify which campus the course is at (some London-branded universities have non-London campuses), and run the maintenance calculator on the gov.uk Student visa money page to confirm the exact figure required. Then add a margin of 10% in case the exchange rate moves on the day of application.

Mistake two: breaking the 28-day rule

The funds must sit in a qualifying account for 28 consecutive days, ending no more than 31 days before the application date. African applicants regularly break this in three ways: they receive a lump-sum transfer from family three weeks before applying (only 21 days of seasoning — not enough), the balance dips below the required amount for one day inside the 28-day window (often due to a card payment the applicant forgot about), or they swap between accounts inside the window (the clock restarts on the new account).

The fix is to lock the qualifying balance in one account 35 days before you plan to apply, do not touch it, and pull a closing-balance statement on day 28. If the balance dips even by GBP 1, the clock resets — rebuild and wait another 28 days.

Mistake three: using the wrong type of account

UKVI does not accept overdraft balances, cryptocurrency holdings, stocks and shares, retirement funds or pension savings as proof of funds. Investment accounts at brokerages, even cash-settled ones, are typically refused. Mobile-money wallets in Kenya, Tanzania or Nigeria are not accepted — the money has to be in a regulated bank account in your name or a parent’s name with an accompanying sponsor letter.

Acceptable: current accounts, savings accounts at regulated banks, official building society passbooks (UK only), recognised certificates of deposit. The bank statement must show the account holder name, account number, bank logo, and the full 28-day balance history.

Worried about a refusal letter? Have Travel Explore audit your bundle first — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Mistake four: weak translation or currency conversion

If your bank statement is in French (Cameroon, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire), Arabic (Egypt, Morocco), Portuguese (Angola, Mozambique) or any language other than English, you need a certified translation by a translator the UKVI recognises. A typed translation by the applicant is refused on sight. The currency conversion is done at the OANDA rate on the application date — not the date of the statement — so a balance that clears in March can fail in May if the naira, cedi or shilling has moved against the pound.

The fix: book the certified translator at least two weeks before application, and re-run the currency calculation on the morning of application using the OANDA conversion rate published on the gov.uk site.

Mistake five: missing or weak sponsor letter

If the money is in a parent’s account, you need a sponsor letter signed by the account holder confirming the funds are available for your study and living costs, plus a copy of the sponsor’s bank statement, plus an official document linking you to the sponsor (birth certificate, family book, court-stamped affidavit). For a Tanzanian Master’s applicant whose mother holds the qualifying balance in a Tanzanian shilling account, the bundle is: certified-translated bank statement, signed sponsor letter, certified birth certificate copy, and her own ID page. Missing any one of those four is enough for a refusal.

The single most common error here is the sponsor letter that simply says “I confirm I will support my child’s studies.” Case officers want explicit language: “I confirm the funds in account [number] are available to support [applicant name] for her studies and living costs in the United Kingdom.” Use the explicit language.

Frequently asked questions about UK Student Visa Proof of Funds 2026

How much money do I need to show for the UK Student Visa Proof of Funds 2026?

First-year tuition (minus paid deposit) plus GBP 1,529 per month (London) or GBP 1,171 per month (outside London) for up to nine months. Add dependants’ maintenance if applicable.

Does the money need to be in my own account?

No, it can be in a parent’s account with a sponsor letter, a certified translation if not in English, and an official document linking you to the parent.

Can I use mobile money (M-Pesa, MoMo) for proof of funds?

No. Mobile money wallets are not accepted. Funds must sit in a regulated bank account.

What if my balance dips for one day inside the 28-day window?

The clock resets. You need to rebuild the balance and wait another 28 days from the new low point.

Which countries are exempt from showing financial evidence?

Nationals on the UKVI differential evidence list (which changes periodically) do not need to submit financial evidence with the application but must still hold the funds and be able to produce them on request.

How current does my bank statement need to be?

The closing balance date must be within 31 days of the application date. Older statements are rejected even if the balance is correct.

Before you go

  • UK Student Visa Proof of Funds 2026 is the single biggest reason African student visa applications get refused; five mistakes account for most of those refusals.
  • 2026 maintenance figures are GBP 1,529/month London and GBP 1,171/month outside London, capped at nine months, on top of first-year tuition.
  • The 28-day rule is unforgiving; a single one-day balance dip resets the clock.
  • Mobile money, cryptocurrency, investments and overdrafts are not accepted — only regulated bank accounts.
  • Non-English statements need certified translation; sponsor letters need explicit language confirming funds available for study and living.

Avoid the proof-of-funds trap

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  • Five small errors that turn a UK study offer into a refusal letter.
  • UKVI rejects mobile money. Use a bank.
  • The 28-day rule resets on a one-pound dip. Lock the balance and forget the card.

ETIAS 2026 Launches Q4: What Visa-Exempt African Travellers Must Know Before Booking

ETIAS 2026 — the European Travel Information and Authorisation System — goes live across the Schengen area in Q4 of this year. It is not a visa; it is a pre-travel screening check for citizens of visa-exempt countries entering the 30 Schengen states for short stays. For African travellers, the rule splits the continent neatly: passport holders from countries already visa-exempt for Europe (Kenya, Mauritius, Seychelles, and a small handful of others) will need ETIAS, while passport holders from countries that already require a Schengen visa (Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Egypt, South Africa and most of the continent) keep filing for a Schengen visa as before.

This brief separates the noise from the practical detail. If you are flying into Paris, Amsterdam, Frankfurt or Madrid on a Kenyan passport for a business trip in November 2026, ETIAS is the new thing on your checklist. If you are flying on a Nigerian or South African passport, the Schengen visa process is unchanged.

What ETIAS is — and is not

ETIAS is a digital authorisation linked to your passport. You apply online, pay a small fee, answer a set of security and immigration-history questions, and receive a decision within minutes in most cases (up to 30 days in complex cases). Once approved, the authorisation is valid for three years or until the passport expires, whichever comes first. It allows multiple short stays of up to 90 days in any 180-day rolling period across the Schengen area.

What ETIAS is not: it is not a visa. It does not guarantee entry — the final entry decision rests with the border officer at the Schengen external border, exactly as it does today. It does not extend the 90/180 short-stay rule. And it does not replace residence permits, study visas or work permits, which continue under their existing rules.

Which African passports need ETIAS

ETIAS applies only to nationals of countries on the EU visa-exempt list. From Africa, that means primarily Kenya, Mauritius, Seychelles, and a few others — check the official ETIAS portal for the complete list at launch. Passports from countries that require a Schengen visa today (Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, Egypt, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe and most of the continent) continue under the Schengen visa process. For those passport holders, ETIAS has no effect — you keep applying for a Schengen short-stay visa at the consulate of your main destination.

A common confusion: South African passport holders sometimes assume ETIAS will replace the Schengen visa for them. It will not. South Africa is not on the visa-exempt list and is therefore not eligible to use ETIAS at all. The full visa-exempt list is published on the EU Travel-Europe ETIAS FAQ.

ETIAS 2026 fees, timing and validity

  • Fee — EUR 20 per applicant (free for under-18s and over-70s).
  • Validity — three years from issue, or passport expiry if sooner.
  • Coverage — all 30 Schengen states (no separate authorisation needed per country).
  • Stay length — 90 days in any rolling 180 days, unchanged.
  • Decision time — minutes for most clean applications, up to 30 days for cases that need manual review.
  • Transitional period — six months after launch during which the requirement is advisory; after that, ETIAS becomes mandatory.

For a Kenyan business traveller making three trips a year to European clients, EUR 20 once every three years is a marginal cost compared to the time saved at the border under the linked Entry/Exit System.

Not sure which route fits your case? Talk to Travel Explore — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

How to apply once it goes live

The application takes around 10 minutes. You will need your passport (machine-readable), an active email address, and a payment card. The form asks for biographic details, travel history (countries visited in the last decade), employment information, and a small set of security-screening questions (criminal history, prior immigration refusals, war-zone travel). Most clean applications return an approval within minutes. Manual review can take up to 30 days, and in rare cases an interview at a consulate is requested.

Apply at least 96 hours before travel as a buffer. Apply only via the official Travel Europe ETIAS portal — third-party sites charging higher fees are not authorised and offer no advantage. The authorisation is digitally linked to your passport number; there is no sticker or document to carry.

What it changes on the ground

For travellers in the visa-exempt category, ETIAS adds a five-minute online step weeks before travel and removes most of the friction at the border. The Entry/Exit System (EES), launched in late 2025, has already replaced passport stamps with biometric self-service kiosks at most major Schengen airports. Together, EES and ETIAS turn the Schengen border into a near-automated process for visa-exempt travellers.

For travellers needing a Schengen visa, the process is unchanged in 2026 — consulate appointment, biometrics, document bundle, fee. We cover the country-by-country Schengen visa process in our EU travel guides.

Frequently asked questions about ETIAS 2026

Does ETIAS 2026 replace the Schengen visa for Nigerians and South Africans?

No. ETIAS applies only to visa-exempt nationals. Nigerian, South African, Ghanaian, Egyptian and most other African passport holders continue under the Schengen visa process unchanged.

How much does ETIAS 2026 cost?

EUR 20 per applicant. Applicants under 18 and over 70 are exempt from the fee.

How long is ETIAS valid?

Three years from approval, or until the passport expires, whichever comes first.

Can I work or study on ETIAS?

No. ETIAS authorises short visits only — tourism, business meetings, family visits. Work, study and long-stay activities require the relevant national visa.

What is the difference between ETIAS and EES?

EES is the Entry/Exit System — the biometric border check that replaced passport stamps. ETIAS is the pre-travel authorisation. The two systems work together but are separate.

What happens if my ETIAS is refused?

You will receive a written explanation and can either appeal or apply for a standard Schengen visa, which the consulate will assess under the usual rules.

The short version

  • ETIAS 2026 launches in Q4 across the Schengen area, with a six-month transitional period after launch.
  • It is a pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt nationals — not a visa, and not a replacement for the Schengen visa process.
  • African nationals who need a Schengen visa today (Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Egypt, South Africa and others) continue under the existing visa process; ETIAS does not apply to them.
  • Kenyan, Mauritian, Seychellois and other visa-exempt African travellers will need ETIAS, valid three years for EUR 20.
  • Apply only via the official Travel Europe ETIAS portal, at least 96 hours before travel.

Plan your ETIAS travel right

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  • ETIAS is coming in Q4. Here is who actually needs it.
  • EUR 20, three years, 30 countries: the new Schengen pre-screen for visa-exempt travellers.
  • Kenyan passport? You need ETIAS. South African passport? You still need a Schengen visa.