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Feb 17, 2026

Nicaragua scraps visas on arrival for 120 nationalities—U.S. citizens remain exempt

Nicaragua scraps visas on arrival for 120 nationalities—U.S. citizens remain exempt
Nicaragua’s Ministry of the Interior published Decree 002-2026 on 16 February, abolishing its long-standing visa-on-arrival scheme and moving more than 120 countries—ranging from India and Colombia to Thailand and Zimbabwe—into a category that requires a pre-approved “consulted visa.” At the same time, the decree confirms that nationals from the United States, European Union, Canada, the U.K., Japan and Australia continue to enjoy visa-free entry.

Managua framed the overhaul as a reciprocity measure, but regional observers tie the move to U.S. pressure over irregular migration flows. Since 2021, thousands of Cuban, Haitian, African and Asian migrants have flown legally into Nicaragua before heading north through Central America toward the U.S.–Mexico border. By forcing most of those travellers to secure visas in advance, Nicaragua hopes to throttle the charter-flight pipeline that Washington says fuels people-smuggling networks.

Nicaragua scraps visas on arrival for 120 nationalities—U.S. citizens remain exempt


For U.S. corporates, the headline is “business as usual” for employee travel, yet duty-of-care teams should note that the consulted-visa process can take 15–30 days. Multinationals with mixed-nationality project teams entering Nicaragua—for example for mining, apparel or agritech assignments—must now budget extra lead-time and legal fees for non-U.S. staff. Airlines operating to Managua also face higher no-show risk if passengers are denied boarding for lacking pre-approval.

Companies and individual travelers trying to navigate the new consulted-visa requirement can streamline the process by using VisaHQ, an online platform that coordinates visa applications for U.S. residents worldwide. Through its Nicaragua services—accessible at https://www.visahq.com/united-states/—applicants receive real-time checklists, document reviews and courier support, reducing back-and-forth with consulates and helping them avoid last-minute travel disruptions.

The policy may shift migration dynamics rather than stop them: analysts expect some nationalities to pivot to El Salvador or Panama as alternative entry points, which could alter overland security considerations for U.S. logistics providers moving goods northbound. Meanwhile, Washington is likely to point to the decree as proof its diplomatic squeeze on Managua is working, even though the text pointedly omits any reference to U.S. complaints.
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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