Singapore now has the most powerful passport in the world, with Japan bumped from first to third, the UK moving UP to fourth and the U.S slipping to eighth

Singapore now has the most powerful passport in the world, with Japan bumped from first to third, the UK moving UP to fourth and the U.S slipping to eighth

DAILY MAIL

For the first time in five years, Japan no longer has the world’s most powerful passport.

In a new global ranking, Singapore takes the top spot, with its citizens able to visit 192 countries out of 227 visa-free.

Germany, Italy and Spain move up into second place, with visa-free access to 190 destinations. Japan has been bumped into third place, a slot it occupies with six other nations – Austria, Finland, France, Luxembourg, South Korea, and Sweden. Citizens of these countries can all visit 189 destinations without a prior visa.

The UK, meanwhile, after sliding down the table over the previous six years, has jumped up two places to fourth place, a position it last held in 2017. Its citizens – along with those from Ireland, Denmark and the Netherlands – can visit 188 countries visa-free. 

The U.S, on the other hand, continues its now decade-long slide down the index, slipping a further two places to eighth, with access to 184 countries visa-free. The UK and the U.S jointly held first place on the index in 2014, but have been on a broadly downward trajectory ever since. 

Australia comes in at sixth, with visa-free access to 186 countries. 

The ranking has been produced by the Henley Passport Index, which is based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Association (Iata). It analyses how many countries a passport holder can enter without a prior visa. 

Afghanistan remains entrenched at the bottom of the index, with a visa-free access score of just 27, followed by Iraq (29), and Syria (30) – the three weakest passports in the world.

Of the countries sitting in the top 10, the U.S has seen the smallest increase in its score over the past decade, Henley Passport Index notes, securing visa-free access to just 12 additional destinations between 2013 and 2023. Singapore, by comparison, has increased its score by 25, pushing it five places up the ranking over the past 10 years to the number one spot.

Henley Passport Index also points out that while American passport holders can access 184 destinations visa-free, the U.S itself only allows 44 other nationalities to pass through its borders visa-free.

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