
Switzerland will once again require Georgian officials travelling on diplomatic, official or service passports to obtain a Schengen visa before entering the country. The Federal Council adopted the measure at its 1 April meeting after the European Union activated its visa-suspension mechanism against Georgia. Because Switzerland participates in the Schengen acquis, it is legally obliged to mirror Brussels’ decision. The suspension, which takes effect on 3 April 2026 and will run for an initial 12 months, is explicitly limited to holders of non-ordinary Georgian passports.
To navigate the new requirement efficiently, Georgian ministries and the Swiss organisations inviting them can turn to VisaHQ, whose Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) streamlines Schengen visa applications with digital document uploads, appointment scheduling and real-time status tracking, saving several days of back-and-forth with consulates.
Georgian citizens travelling on ordinary biometric passports retain their 90-day visa-free privilege for Switzerland and the wider Schengen area. However, EU officials have warned that wider sanctions—including a full suspension of visa-free travel—could follow if democratic back-sliding in Georgia worsens. For Swiss companies that host Georgian delegations—particularly in commodity trading, pharmaceuticals and multilateral diplomacy centred in Geneva—the change adds an administrative layer. Employers will have to factor in an extra 10–15 days for visa processing when inviting Georgian officials, and may need to issue formal invitations or arrange in-person biometric capture at Swiss missions abroad. Airlines have already updated their check-in systems to reflect the new document requirement, reducing the likelihood of passengers being denied boarding. The State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) has amended the Ordinance on Entry and the Granting of Visas accordingly. Georgian officials who already hold multiple-entry Schengen visas remain unaffected until those visas expire. The Federal Council will review the measure in early 2027; if the EU lifts its suspension earlier, Bern is expected to follow suit almost immediately. From a risk-management perspective, global mobility teams should alert senior executives who plan to meet Georgian counterparts in Switzerland, as last-minute travel may no longer be feasible. They should also monitor potential diplomatic repercussions that could spill over into trade or development-co-operation programmes between the two countries.
To navigate the new requirement efficiently, Georgian ministries and the Swiss organisations inviting them can turn to VisaHQ, whose Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) streamlines Schengen visa applications with digital document uploads, appointment scheduling and real-time status tracking, saving several days of back-and-forth with consulates.
Georgian citizens travelling on ordinary biometric passports retain their 90-day visa-free privilege for Switzerland and the wider Schengen area. However, EU officials have warned that wider sanctions—including a full suspension of visa-free travel—could follow if democratic back-sliding in Georgia worsens. For Swiss companies that host Georgian delegations—particularly in commodity trading, pharmaceuticals and multilateral diplomacy centred in Geneva—the change adds an administrative layer. Employers will have to factor in an extra 10–15 days for visa processing when inviting Georgian officials, and may need to issue formal invitations or arrange in-person biometric capture at Swiss missions abroad. Airlines have already updated their check-in systems to reflect the new document requirement, reducing the likelihood of passengers being denied boarding. The State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) has amended the Ordinance on Entry and the Granting of Visas accordingly. Georgian officials who already hold multiple-entry Schengen visas remain unaffected until those visas expire. The Federal Council will review the measure in early 2027; if the EU lifts its suspension earlier, Bern is expected to follow suit almost immediately. From a risk-management perspective, global mobility teams should alert senior executives who plan to meet Georgian counterparts in Switzerland, as last-minute travel may no longer be feasible. They should also monitor potential diplomatic repercussions that could spill over into trade or development-co-operation programmes between the two countries.