
Belgium’s diplomatic footprint in the South Caucasus is set for an upgrade. Speaking to the Armenian news agency Armenpress on 12 February 2026, Belgian MP Michel De Maegd confirmed that a dedicated consular section will soon be added to the Belgian Embassy in Yerevan. The move follows a unanimous resolution adopted by Belgium’s Chamber of Representatives last year that urged the government to strengthen bilateral ties with Armenia.(armenpress.am)
Until now, Armenian citizens applying for Belgian (and often Benelux) visas have had to travel to Tbilisi or Moscow, or rely on commercial visa-outsourcing centres. A locally based consulate will allow short- and long-stay visa applications—including business, student and family-reunion categories—to be filed and biometrics captured in Yerevan itself. Belgian officials say this will shorten processing times, reduce costs for applicants and provide consular assistance to the growing community of Belgian business travellers, NGOs and tourists in Armenia.(armenpress.am)
Travellers who would like extra help navigating these changes can turn to VisaHQ, whose online platform (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/) streamlines Belgian visa requests, document checks and appointment scheduling. Whether you are applying for a short-stay Schengen visa or a long-term permit, VisaHQ’s specialists can guide you through the requirements now and once the Yerevan consular section is fully operational.
For Belgian companies, the opening dovetails with the EU’s wider efforts to deepen trade with the South Caucasus and with Armenia’s push for visa-liberalisation talks with the Schengen area. Employers relocating staff to Yerevan—or hiring Armenian talent for assignments in Belgium—will gain a clearer channel for document legalisation, work-permit endorsements and emergency services. The Embassy also expects a rise in requests for cultural-exchange and startup visas as Belgian investors look eastwards.
Practically, the new section will offer passport renewals, notarial acts and citizen services for the roughly 250 Belgians resident in Armenia, while serving the sizeable Armenian diaspora in Belgium (estimated at 30,000) that frequently shuttles between the two countries. The Foreign Ministries in Brussels and Yerevan are finalising staffing and IT links, with an inauguration date expected “within months,” according to Armenia’s Ambassador to Belgium, Tigran Balayan.(armenpress.am)
Corporate mobility teams should update employee travel policies to reflect the more convenient visa-application point and monitor forthcoming appointment-system details. Companies sending staff to Armenia should also note Belgium’s intention to expand commercial-and-cultural cooperation programmes, which may generate new assignment opportunities.
Until now, Armenian citizens applying for Belgian (and often Benelux) visas have had to travel to Tbilisi or Moscow, or rely on commercial visa-outsourcing centres. A locally based consulate will allow short- and long-stay visa applications—including business, student and family-reunion categories—to be filed and biometrics captured in Yerevan itself. Belgian officials say this will shorten processing times, reduce costs for applicants and provide consular assistance to the growing community of Belgian business travellers, NGOs and tourists in Armenia.(armenpress.am)
Travellers who would like extra help navigating these changes can turn to VisaHQ, whose online platform (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/) streamlines Belgian visa requests, document checks and appointment scheduling. Whether you are applying for a short-stay Schengen visa or a long-term permit, VisaHQ’s specialists can guide you through the requirements now and once the Yerevan consular section is fully operational.
For Belgian companies, the opening dovetails with the EU’s wider efforts to deepen trade with the South Caucasus and with Armenia’s push for visa-liberalisation talks with the Schengen area. Employers relocating staff to Yerevan—or hiring Armenian talent for assignments in Belgium—will gain a clearer channel for document legalisation, work-permit endorsements and emergency services. The Embassy also expects a rise in requests for cultural-exchange and startup visas as Belgian investors look eastwards.
Practically, the new section will offer passport renewals, notarial acts and citizen services for the roughly 250 Belgians resident in Armenia, while serving the sizeable Armenian diaspora in Belgium (estimated at 30,000) that frequently shuttles between the two countries. The Foreign Ministries in Brussels and Yerevan are finalising staffing and IT links, with an inauguration date expected “within months,” according to Armenia’s Ambassador to Belgium, Tigran Balayan.(armenpress.am)
Corporate mobility teams should update employee travel policies to reflect the more convenient visa-application point and monitor forthcoming appointment-system details. Companies sending staff to Armenia should also note Belgium’s intention to expand commercial-and-cultural cooperation programmes, which may generate new assignment opportunities.











