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  7. Ireland Adds Mexico to Expanded 62-Country Visa-Free List, Bolstering Tourism and Business Travel

Ireland Adds Mexico to Expanded 62-Country Visa-Free List, Bolstering Tourism and Business Travel

Apr 11, 2026
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Ireland Adds Mexico to Expanded 62-Country Visa-Free List, Bolstering Tourism and Business Travel
Ireland quietly rewrote part of its visitor-entry playbook this week, confirming that nationals of Mexico—and formally restating South Korea, Brazil, Japan and Colombia—now join a 62-strong roster of countries whose citizens can spend up to 90 days in the Republic without first applying for a short-stay visa. The change, which took legal effect on 6 April 2026 and was announced publicly on 10 April, comes after months of lobbying by airlines, tour operators and the technology and pharmaceutical sectors, all of whom argued that Ireland’s post-pandemic recovery was being slowed by patchy market access.

Ireland Adds Mexico to Expanded 62-Country Visa-Free List, Bolstering Tourism and Business Travel


For travellers unsure whether they fall under the new exemption or still need documentation for onward legs into the Schengen zone, VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers a fast eligibility checker, real-time visa guidance and end-to-end processing for those who still require permits. Its team can also arrange passport renewals, courier pickups and future ETIAS pre-registration, streamlining the paperwork so visitors can focus on planning their Irish itinerary.

Mexico was the largest economy still subject to a visa for short trips; its removal is expected to unlock pent-up demand from both leisure and MICE segments and to open a new Latin-American corridor for exporters heading to Dublin’s burgeoning fintech scene. Under the updated rules, travellers from the 62 visa-exempt nations may enter Ireland for tourism, conferences, site visits or other business activities provided they carry a passport valid for at least six months and can show evidence of onward travel and sufficient funds. Crucially, Ireland remains outside the EU Schengen Area, so the waiver applies only to the Republic; onward travel to mainland Europe will still trigger normal Schengen visa (or future ETIAS) requirements. Irish hoteliers and regional airports were quick to react. Cork Airport said it is in talks with Aeroméxico and LATAM about seasonal charters, while Fáilte Ireland confirmed new Spanish-language marketing campaigns targeting Mexico City and Guadalajara. Tech multinationals meanwhile welcomed the simplified path for Latin-American engineers attending short-term projects at Dublin’s Silicon Docks. Industry analysts predict an additional 120,000 arrivals in the first year, worth up to €95 million in direct visitor spend—timely support as the sector wrestles with cost-of-living protests and rising fuel prices.

Irish Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

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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