
Planning a multi-country Gulf itinerary could soon resemble a Schengen-style hop rather than a patchwork of individual permits. An update posted in April on GCCTouristVisa.com confirms that the long-anticipated Gulf Cooperation Council Unified Tourist Visa—now branded the “GCC Grand Tours Visa”—will enter pilot phase in Q4 2026. The testbed will link Dubai International Airport with Bahrain International, allowing eligible travellers to clear immigration once and move freely between the two states using QR-code validation at smart gates. Real-time data-sharing between the UAE’s ICP platform and Bahrain’s Nationality, Passports & Residence Affairs system will underpin the trial. If successful, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait will join the scheme in early 2027. Provisional fee guidance suggests a single-country entry could cost about USD $100, while a multi-country “Grand Tour” permit valid for 60–90 days may price in at roughly USD $120–130.
Travellers keen to stay ahead of the curve can lean on VisaHQ’s concierge platform—see https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/ for the UAE component—which already handles standard Gulf visas and will alert registered users as soon as the Grand Tours scheme goes live, walking them through digital forms, insurance proofs and payment in a single dashboard.
Final tariffs will be set by GCC interior ministers later this year. The visa is expected to support both leisure and short-term business visits, a boon for conferences that rotate among Gulf capitals. For UAE-based destination-management companies the unified visa promises a larger addressable market: travellers flying into Dubai could add side-trips to Doha’s museums or Riyadh’s heritage sites without duplicating paperwork. Airlines, meanwhile, are revisiting interline agreements to capture the anticipated surge in open-jaw itineraries. Policy analysts note that the GCC scheme mirrors ASEAN’s stalled common-visa concept and positions the Gulf bloc as a competitive connected tourism zone ahead of the 2030 World Expo in Riyadh. Robust biometric infrastructure—Dubai alone operates 122 smart gates—gives the region a technological head-start, but data-protection harmonisation remains a hurdle.
Travellers keen to stay ahead of the curve can lean on VisaHQ’s concierge platform—see https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/ for the UAE component—which already handles standard Gulf visas and will alert registered users as soon as the Grand Tours scheme goes live, walking them through digital forms, insurance proofs and payment in a single dashboard.
Final tariffs will be set by GCC interior ministers later this year. The visa is expected to support both leisure and short-term business visits, a boon for conferences that rotate among Gulf capitals. For UAE-based destination-management companies the unified visa promises a larger addressable market: travellers flying into Dubai could add side-trips to Doha’s museums or Riyadh’s heritage sites without duplicating paperwork. Airlines, meanwhile, are revisiting interline agreements to capture the anticipated surge in open-jaw itineraries. Policy analysts note that the GCC scheme mirrors ASEAN’s stalled common-visa concept and positions the Gulf bloc as a competitive connected tourism zone ahead of the 2030 World Expo in Riyadh. Robust biometric infrastructure—Dubai alone operates 122 smart gates—gives the region a technological head-start, but data-protection harmonisation remains a hurdle.