
Cypriot passport-holders bound for Turkey will need to rethink last-minute travel plans. Ankara has formally ended its decades-old ‘sticker’ visa facility at airports and seaports for citizens of the Republic of Cyprus. As of 2 January 2026, travellers must secure an electronic visa in advance or apply at a Turkish consulate.
Roughly 80,000 Cypriots visited Turkey in 2025, many tied to the island’s sizable maritime, construction and retail interests in Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara. The new online process costs US $60 and typically takes 24–48 hours—time that offshore-crew rotations and emergency engineering call-outs often do not have. Airlines have already warned they will deny boarding to passengers without the mandatory barcode.
For travellers pressed for time or companies coordinating frequent trips, VisaHQ offers a streamlined workaround. Through its Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), users can complete Turkey’s e-visa forms, upload supporting documents and track approvals in real time, with many applications cleared within a single business day. The platform can also batch-process crew lists and feed confirmed visa data back into corporate travel systems, reducing the risk of last-minute gate rejections.
Corporate travel departments are scrambling to update intranet portals and traveller-tracking tools. Firms that depend on rapid deployment—surveyors checking cargoes in Turkish shipyards, for example—are weighing the option of holding standby staff in EU hubs. Immigration advisers note that a multiple-entry consular visa can take two weeks, making outsourcing bulk e-visa filings to a specialist service a cost-effective interim fix.
Turkish officials frame the change as part of a broader border-digitisation effort rather than political retaliation against Cyprus’ EU presidency in 2026. Nevertheless, the rule aligns Cyprus with most other non-EU visitors and reflects a regional trend toward pre-travel screening.
Practical checklist: (1) build at least a two-day lead time into itineraries, (2) ensure passports are valid six months beyond entry, and (3) store e-visa PDFs in cloud storage in case phone batteries die at immigration.
Roughly 80,000 Cypriots visited Turkey in 2025, many tied to the island’s sizable maritime, construction and retail interests in Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara. The new online process costs US $60 and typically takes 24–48 hours—time that offshore-crew rotations and emergency engineering call-outs often do not have. Airlines have already warned they will deny boarding to passengers without the mandatory barcode.
For travellers pressed for time or companies coordinating frequent trips, VisaHQ offers a streamlined workaround. Through its Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), users can complete Turkey’s e-visa forms, upload supporting documents and track approvals in real time, with many applications cleared within a single business day. The platform can also batch-process crew lists and feed confirmed visa data back into corporate travel systems, reducing the risk of last-minute gate rejections.
Corporate travel departments are scrambling to update intranet portals and traveller-tracking tools. Firms that depend on rapid deployment—surveyors checking cargoes in Turkish shipyards, for example—are weighing the option of holding standby staff in EU hubs. Immigration advisers note that a multiple-entry consular visa can take two weeks, making outsourcing bulk e-visa filings to a specialist service a cost-effective interim fix.
Turkish officials frame the change as part of a broader border-digitisation effort rather than political retaliation against Cyprus’ EU presidency in 2026. Nevertheless, the rule aligns Cyprus with most other non-EU visitors and reflects a regional trend toward pre-travel screening.
Practical checklist: (1) build at least a two-day lead time into itineraries, (2) ensure passports are valid six months beyond entry, and (3) store e-visa PDFs in cloud storage in case phone batteries die at immigration.










