
Switzerland has aligned itself with the European Union’s tougher visa-suspension mechanism by restoring visa requirements for holders of Georgian diplomatic, official and service passports. At its 1 April Federal Council meeting, Bern approved an amendment to the Ordinance on Entry and the Granting of Visas that took effect on 3 April 2026 and will run for an initial 12-month period. Ordinary Georgian biometric-passport holders keep their 90-day visa-free privilege, but ministers stressed that the option could be withdrawn if Tbilisi’s democratic back-sliding continues. Background: Brussels triggered its revised visa-waiver safeguard clause after the Georgian parliament adopted legislation that critics say weakens judicial independence and media freedom. As an associated Schengen member, Switzerland must transpose such decisions into national law. This is the first time the EU has activated the clause; officials in Bern note that it sets an important precedent for future foreign-policy coordination with the bloc. Practical impact: Swiss-based commodity traders, pharma multinationals and Geneva-based international organisations that routinely invite Georgian delegations now face longer lead times. HR and global-mobility teams should budget 10-15 days for processing and ensure invitation letters include diplomatic passport numbers and purpose-of-visit details. Airlines have already updated their DCS systems to avoid last-minute boarding denials.
For organisations or individuals needing help to navigate the new Swiss entry rules, VisaHQ offers an end-to-end visa facilitation service. Its dedicated Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) breaks down current document requirements, publishes live processing times and lets mobility managers pre-populate forms and schedule consular appointments, streamlining compliance for both corporate and diplomatic travellers.
Looking ahead, corporate lobby groups warn that a full suspension of Georgia’s visa-waiver—if adopted—would also hit ordinary business travellers and tourists, potentially complicating staffing on Caucasus infrastructure projects managed from Swiss headquarters. For now, however, the measure is narrowly targeted and provides companies with a window to adjust compliance workflows.
For organisations or individuals needing help to navigate the new Swiss entry rules, VisaHQ offers an end-to-end visa facilitation service. Its dedicated Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) breaks down current document requirements, publishes live processing times and lets mobility managers pre-populate forms and schedule consular appointments, streamlining compliance for both corporate and diplomatic travellers.
Looking ahead, corporate lobby groups warn that a full suspension of Georgia’s visa-waiver—if adopted—would also hit ordinary business travellers and tourists, potentially complicating staffing on Caucasus infrastructure projects managed from Swiss headquarters. For now, however, the measure is narrowly targeted and provides companies with a window to adjust compliance workflows.