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Jan 14, 2026

Pakistan and UAE agree on ‘pre-immigration clearance’ to speed entry for Pakistani travellers

Pakistan and UAE agree on ‘pre-immigration clearance’ to speed entry for Pakistani travellers
Business and family travel between Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates is poised to become markedly smoother after the two governments agreed in principle to introduce a ‘pre-immigration clearance’ system for Pakistani passengers. Announced in Islamabad on 13 January 2026 after talks between Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi and a visiting UAE delegation led by Customs and Port Security chief Ahmed bin Lahij Al Falasi, the scheme would allow travellers to complete UAE entry formalities before they board their flights. (dawn.com)

Under the pilot phase, all biometric capture, visa verification and customs declarations will be handled at Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport; travellers who clear the checks will be treated as ‘domestic’ on arrival in Dubai or Abu Dhabi and can leave the airport without queuing at immigration counters. Similar models already operate on selected US–Canada and UK–Ireland routes, and mobility planners say the time savings—often 45-60 minutes at peak periods—could make UAE itineraries more attractive for Pakistani business teams and project workers. (dawn.com)

Pakistani travelers who want an extra layer of certainty ahead of boarding can turn to VisaHQ, an online visa-processing platform that helps applicants secure UAE entry permits, track their cases and store digital copies ready for presentation during Karachi pre-clearance. Companies and family visitors can start an application at https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/ and have VisaHQ’s team review documents before forwarding them to UAE authorities, reducing the risk of last-minute snags.

Pakistan and UAE agree on ‘pre-immigration clearance’ to speed entry for Pakistani travellers


For employers the biggest benefit is predictability. Pakistani assignees frequently face long arrival queues that eat into their duty hours, and airline schedule banks give little room for delay; the new regime should let companies book tighter connections onwards to Saudi Arabia or Europe. Travel-management firms also expect lower “missed-flight” costs and fewer visa re-validations caused by passengers being held up at immigration. (dawn.com)

Operational details are still being finalised. The two governments must agree how data will be shared in real-time with UAE border-control systems, whether private handling agents will run the clearance desks, and how to scale the model to Lahore and Islamabad once the Karachi trial is bedded in. A joint technical working group is due to report within 60 days; officials say a launch before this summer’s ‘Eid travel peak is “ambitious but achievable”. (dawn.com)

For mobility managers the immediate action point is communication: make sure Pakistani assignees know the new option will be voluntary at first and that standard visa-issuance rules—such as proof of accommodation and return tickets—still apply. Airlines are expected to flag eligible flights once the system goes live, and companies should update travel policies so staff can claim the small service fee that Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority is likely to levy for the fast-track. (dawn.com)
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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