These are the world’s most powerful passports in 2023

The latest Henley Passport Index rates the number of countries you can visit without a visa.

By David Flynn, January 12 2023
These are the world’s most powerful passports in 2023

Japan, Singapore and South Korea have the most powerful passports as the world continues to recover from Covid-19: but exactly what makes a passport powerful?

Immigration consultancy Henley & Partners, which produces the Henley Passport Index, measures a passport’s might by how many countries an ordinary citizen can enter without needing to apply for a full visa with the government beforehand.

This includes situations where no visa is required or where travellers can easily obtain a visa on arrival, a visitor’s permit or some form of electronic travel authority in the case of visa-waiver programs such as the USA’s ESTA.

Here are the ratings for the coveted top ten spots on the world’s most powerful passports for 2023.

1. Japan

2. Singapore, South Korea

3. Germany, Spain

4. Finland, Italy, Luxembourg

5. Austria, Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden

6. France, Ireland, Portugal, United Kingdom

7. Belgium, Czech Republic, New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland, United States

8. Australia, Canada, Greece, Malta

9. Hungary, Poland

10. Lithuania, Slovakia

Henley & Partners rate a Japanese passport as providing hassle-free entry to some 193 countries as of 2022, one more than those from Singapore and South Korea.

Germany and Span tied in third place with 190 counties offering visa-free entry, with the UK and Ireland ranking sixth (187 visa-free countries); New Zealand and the USA sit among the counties in seventh place, followed by Australia and Canada in the eight spot on the global leaderboard.

As recently as 2017, Asian countries barely featured among the world’s 10 most-accepted passports, according to the index. Europe’s domination has gradually eased and Germany now trails South Korea. The UK is sixth with access to 187 countries, while the US is seventh with a score of 186, the latest ranking shows.

The index, which uses 18 years of data, helps wealthy individuals and governments assess the value of citizenships around the world based on which passports offer the most prolific visa-free, or visa-on-arrival access.