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When people discuss how the UAE passport is once again rising in the world rankings, there is a minor detail that is rarely brought up. When the Henley Passport Index was first released in 2006, an Emirati passport holder could only travel to 33 countries without first obtaining a visa. That figure is currently 184. That isn’t a small step forward. That’s a whole other world.
According to the most recent Henley Passport Index, which was published in January 2026, the UAE is ranked fifth in the world, comfortably ahead of New Zealand, Britain, Australia, Canada, and the United States, but behind Singapore, Japan, South Korea, and a group of EU states. The ranking seems almost unreal for a nation that didn’t exist until 1971 and that was still primarily developing its administrative infrastructure well into the 1990s. And yet, here it is.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | United Arab Emirates (UAE) |
| Current Henley Passport Index Rank | 5th globally (2026) |
| Visa-Free / Visa-on-Arrival Access | 184 destinations |
| Rank in 2006 | 62nd |
| Total Places Climbed | 57 (largest gain in index history) |
| Index Publisher | Henley & Partners |
| Data Source | International Air Transport Association (IATA) |
| Index Launch Year | 2006 |
| Top-Ranked Passport | Singapore (193 destinations) |
| UAE’s Arab World Ranking | 1st (most powerful Arab passport) |
| Countries Ranked Below UAE | New Zealand, UK, Australia, Canada, USA |
| Reference Website | Henley & Partners |
A portion of the story is revealed by the statistics underlying the UAE’s rise in passport rankings. The UAE has moved up 57 spots on the index since 2006, the biggest increase of any nation in the index’s two decades of existence. Dr. Christian Kaelin, the chairman of Henley, described the rise as “without parallel,” and it is difficult to disagree. The fact that the ascent wasn’t an accident adds to its striking quality. It was the outcome of careful, persistent diplomatic investment—quiet negotiations carried out over years, mostly out of the public eye.
A wave of reciprocal visa-waiver agreements forms the basis. The United Arab Emirates has signed agreements with the European Union, Russia, China, Israel, Mexico, and South Africa since 2015. Electronic travel authority agreements are reportedly being negotiated with Australia and a number of Latin American nations. Yes, each agreement increases the number of destinations, but it also indicates something more significant: the UAE has established itself as a nation that other governments want to travel to, conduct business with, and welcome through their airports without any problems.
Pausing on China is worthwhile. Beijing’s recent offer of visa-free travel to all GCC members is noteworthy not only because it increases the number of destinations but also because it raises questions about the UAE’s geopolitical position. Chinese transit passengers at Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International Airport, a rival to Dubai’s Hamad International Airport, have significantly increased. Not all visa waivers are being collected by the nation. It is integrating itself into the global mobility infrastructure.
You can physically understand what all of this means when you stand inside any of Dubai’s terminals on a busy afternoon. A nation that has made mobility its institutional identity is reflected in the variety of nationalities, the ease of transit, and the sheer number of connection flights. This has been openly framed by Emirati officials. The rise of the passport, according to His Excellency Omar Obaid Al Shamsi, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is proof of a “forward-looking vision and unwavering commitment to openness.” It is easy to read such language as diplomatic platitudes. However, the index numbers indicate that it isn’t.
This has a business component that doesn’t always receive the recognition it merits. The ranking translates into actual, quantifiable efficiencies for multinational corporations based in the United Arab Emirates. Mobility experts point out that about 90% of the UAE’s major trading partners are now covered by visa-free access, which shortens the lead time for business travel, eliminates the need to visit consulates, and lowers documentation costs. Having Emirati passports on your team makes a last-minute deal in Seoul or São Paulo easier logistically. This may have a subtle but significant impact on the UAE’s attractiveness as a regional headquarters site for multinational corporations.
However, beneath the encouraging narrative, the Henley data reveals something unsettling. The difference between the most and least powerful passports in the world has increased from 118 in 2006 to 168 destinations. Only 25 countries can be accessed with an Afghan passport, which is at the bottom of the index. It’s not a hassle when traveling. This is a systemic obstacle to economic engagement, education, and mobility that gets worse over time. Despite its remarkable rise, the UAE is part of a global mobility system that is becoming more, not less, unequal.
Once associated with passport privileges, the United States and the United Kingdom are now ranked seventh and tenth, respectively. Observing this develop over several years gives the impression that Western countries believed their passport strength was a legacy rather than something that needed ongoing upkeep. The UAE seems to have realized something that they did not: diplomatic credibility, reciprocal generosity, and the gradual accumulation of goodwill are the ways in which passport power is developed rather than inherited.
It’s really unclear if the UAE will keep rising. Major economies and sizable travel markets are examples of easy wins that have mostly been secured. What’s left are the more difficult negotiations, the smaller markets, and the areas where agreements are challenging due to political complexity. Whether agreements with Australia or the other Latin American holdouts will be reached anytime soon is still up in the air. However, it seems foolish to wager against them given the course of the past 20 years.










