Passports issued by the27 member states of theEuropean Union follow a common design and confer the rights of EU citizenship on their holders. The EU itself does not issueordinary passports.[1]
The design includes a burgundy cover (recommended by the EU;[1] all member states exceptCroatia follow this recommendation). The front is stamped in the official language(s) of the issuing country, and sometimes also in English and French, with the title "European Union". This is followed by the name of the member state, the state'scoat of arms, the word "PASSPORT", and thebiometric passport symbol at the bottom centre of the cover.[2]
Somemember states also issue non-EU passports to people who hold a nationality that does not grant EU citizenship, such asDanish nationals resident in the Faroe Islands.
Separately, theEuropean Commission issues theEuropean Union Laissez-Passer to members and certain officials of its institutions.[3]

With a valid passport, EU citizens are entitled to exercise theright of free movement (meaning they do not need avisa, a certain amount of money, or a certain reason to travel freely and no residence permit for settling) in theEuropean Economic Area (European Union,Iceland,Liechtenstein, andNorway),Switzerland and, before 31 December 2020 in theUnited Kingdom.[4]
The passports of EU citizens are notstamped when entering and leaving theSchengen Area.[5][6]
When going through border controls to enter an aforementioned country, citizens possessing validbiometric passports are sometimes able to useautomated gates instead of immigration counters. For example, when entering the United Kingdom, at major airports, holders of EU biometric passports who are twelve years of age or older can useePassport gates, whilst all other EU citizens (such as those using a national identity card or a non-biometric passport) and some non-EEA citizens must use an immigration counter. Anyone travelling with children under the age of 12 must also use an immigration counter.[7]
As an alternative to holding a passport, EU citizens can also use a validnational identity card to exercise their right of free movement within the EEA, Switzerland and the United Kingdom (until 1 October 2021 for visitors from the EU).[8] Strictly speaking, it is not necessary for an EU citizen to possess a valid passport ornational identity card to enter the EEA or Switzerland. In theory, if an EU citizen outside of both the EEA and Switzerland can prove their nationality by any other means (e.g. by presenting an expired passport or national identity card, or a citizenship certificate), they must be permitted to enter the EEA or Switzerland. An EU citizen who is unable to demonstrate their nationality satisfactorily must nonetheless be given 'every reasonable opportunity' to obtain the necessary documents or to have them delivered within a reasonable period of time.[9][10][11][12]
EU member states have harmonized passport designs since the 1980s.[1] Most ordinary passports use a common layout: a burgundy cover with the words "European Union" and the name of the issuing state.[13] Variants such as passport cards, diplomatic, service, and emergency passports are not standardized. Ireland is the only state to issue apassport card.
Since 28 February 2008, passports must contain fingerprint data. Croatia, which joined the EU in 2013, retained a dark blue cover when it updated its passport on 3 August 2015, making it the only member state not to use burgundy.[14]
Council resolutions and EU regulations have guided the process:
Under Regulation 2252/2004, all EU passports must include a facial image and two fingerprints, except for children under 12 and people unable to provide them.[15] Denmark and Ireland are exempt from the fingerprint rule, though Irish passports include other biometric data.[16]
Passports follow theISO 216 B7 format (ID-3, 88 × 125 mm). Most contain 32 pages; Finland issues 42 and Italy 48.[17][18]
The cover normally shows, in order: "EUROPEAN UNION" (before 1997: "EUROPEAN COMMUNITY"), the name of the issuing state, the word "PASSPORT", theBiometric Passport symbol, and the state emblem. Placement of the emblem varies: above the text in some states, centred in others.
The identification page presents information in the issuing state’s official language(s), plus English and usually French. Each field is numbered and explained in an index elsewhere in the booklet. The page includes the passport type ("P"), issuing country (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3) code, and passport number. The left side carries the main photo. Some passports also give height and a secondary security photo.
Irish passports show the county of birth for people born on theisland of Ireland, and a three-letter country code for citizens born abroad.
All biometric passports contain a machine-readable zone (MRZ) that repeats the main data in a restricted format of A–Z letters, digits, and the symbol "<". Non-Latin characters are transliterated using International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) rules. Examples include ü →UE, ö →OE, and ß →SS.
Different transliterations can create multiple spellings of the same name (e.g. Müller / Mueller / Muller). Some states add the alternative spelling elsewhere in the passport. It is generally recommended[by whom?] to use the MRZ spelling for visas and airline tickets. The MRZ allows up to 39 characters.[citation needed]
Other pages may record residence, height, eye colour, passport extensions, or a birth name. Family passports can include details and photos of a spouse or children. Further pages are reserved for official notes, translations of field numbers, visas, and entry or exit stamps. The inside back cover may contain notes from the issuing state.
| Member state | Passport cover | Biodata page | Cost | Validity | Issuing authority | Latest version |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Municipal offices; Austrian embassies and consulates | 1 December 2023 | |||
|
| Communes; Belgian embassies and consulates | 7 February 2022 | |||
| image |
|
| Ministry of Interior | 29 March 2010 | ||
|
| Ministry of the Interior | 3 August 2015 | |||
| image |
|
| Civil Registry and Migration Department; Embassies and High Commissions | 13 December 2010 | ||
|
| Town halls; Consulates | 1 September 2006 | |||
| image |
|
| Municipalities | 1 October 2021 | ||
|
| Police and Border Guard Board | 1 January 2021 | |||
|
| Police of Finland | 13 March 2023 | |||
| Police of Åland | 13 March 2023 | ||||
| image |
|
| Town halls; French consulates | 13 April 2019 | ||
|
| Municipal offices; Embassies and consulates | 2 May 2024 | |||
| image |
|
| National Passport Centre | 18 December 2023 | ||
|
| Registration Office | 1 March 2012 | |||
|
| Passport Service, Department of Foreign Affairs | 3 October 2013 | |||
| image |
|
| Italian State Police; Poste Italiane; Consulates/embassies | 27 September 2023 | ||
| image |
|
| Office of Citizenship and Migration Affairs | 12 February 2024 | ||
| image |
|
| Migration Department, Ministry of the Interior | 20 May 2019 | ||
|
| Bureau des passeports | 16 February 2015 | |||
| image | image |
|
| Identity Malta; Embassies/High Commissions | 15 November 2019 | |
|
| Municipalities; Ministry of Foreign Affairs | 30 August 2021 | |||
|
| Provincial governors; Consuls | 5 November 2018 | |||
| image |
|
| Portuguese consulates | 10 July 2017 | ||
|
| Ministry of Internal Affairs | 4 September 2024 | |||
| image |
|
| Ministry of Interior | 17 September 2024 | ||
| image |
|
| Ministry of the Interior | 12 December 2016 | ||
| image | image |
|
| National Police Corps of Spain | 2 January 2015 | |
|
| Swedish Police Authority; Embassies and consulates | 1 January 2022 |
Followingthe UK's withdrawal from the European Union in January 2020, the UK and Gibraltar ceased to issue EU passports. British passports have now returned to their previous navy blue design, which first appeared in 1921. Non EU navy blue passports were first issued in March 2020, unlike previous designs the biodata page is now made of polycarbonate.
While in the transition period, UK and Gibraltar passport were consideredde facto EU passports, conferring their holders the rights of EU citizens. After the end of the transition period on 1 January 2021, all UK passports now have lost this status.
Prior to the introduction of the blue UK passport in March 2020, the British passports conformed to the EU standard design. Between March 2019 and March 2020, passports were issued without the 'EUROPEAN UNION' header.
| Former Member state or territory | Date of EU withdrawal | Passport cover | Biodata page | Validity | Issuing authority | Latest version |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 January 2020 | Current non-EU British passport. |
| HM Passport Office | March 2020 | ||
Previous EU passport design. | Link to image | July 2019 | ||||
Current design. | Gibraltar Civil Status and Registration Office | March 2020 | ||||
Previous EU design. | July 2019 |

As of April 2023, theHenley Passport Index ranked passports by the number of countries and territories their holders could enter without a visa or with visa on arrival. In the European Union, Germany, Italy, and Spain were tied for the highest ranking, while Japan held the top global position.[19]
| Country | Destinations (visa-free or visa on arrival) |
|---|---|
| Austria | 192 |
| Belgium | 191 |
| Bulgaria | 179 |
| Croatia | 184 |
| Cyprus | 181 |
| Czech Republic | 189 |
| Denmark | 192 |
| Estonia | 187 |
| Finland | 193 |
| France | 194 |
| Germany | 194 |
| Greece | 190 |
| Hungary | 188 |
| Ireland[a] | 192 |
| Italy | 194 |
| Latvia | 186 |
| Lithuania | 188 |
| Luxembourg | 192 |
| Malta | 190 |
| Netherlands | 193 |
| Poland | 189 |
| Portugal | 191 |
| Romania | 179 |
| Slovakia | 186 |
| Slovenia | 186 |
| Spain | 194 |
| Sweden | 193 |
| Country | Destinations (visa-free or visa on arrival) |
|---|---|
| Japan | 194 |
| Norway | 191 |
| Switzerland | 190 |
| United Kingdom | 192 |
| United States | 189 |
| Iceland | 185 |
| Liechtenstein | 182 |
Some EU countries, such as Germany, France, Ireland and Malta, allow their citizens to have several passports at once to circumvent certain travel restrictions.[citation needed] This can be useful if wanting to travel while a passport remains at a consulate while a visa application is processed, or wanting to apply for further visas while already in a foreign country. It can also be needed to circumvent the fact that visitors whose passports show evidence of a visit toIsrael are not allowed toenter some Arab League nations
Each EU member state can make its own citizenship laws, so some countries allow dual or multiple citizenship without any restrictions (e.g. France, Ireland, Italy, Sweden, Czech Republic, Denmark), some allow multiple citizenships but ignore existence of other citizenships within their borders (e.g. Poland), some regulate/restrict it (e.g. Austria, the Netherlands), and others allow it only in exceptional cases (e.g. Lithuania) or only for citizens by descent (e.g. Croatia, Estonia, Slovenia, Spain).
Decision 96/409/CSFP of theRepresentatives of the Governments of the Member States meeting within the Council of 25 June 1996 on the establishment of an emergency travel document[20] decided that there would be a standard emergency travel document (ETD).
ETDs are issued to European Union citizens for a single journey back to the EU country of which they are a national, to their country of permanent residence or, in exceptional cases, to another destination (inside or outside the Union). The decision does not apply to expired national passports; it is specifically restricted to cases where valid and unexpired passports have been lost, stolen, destroyed, or are temporarily unavailable (i.e. left somewhere else by accident).
Embassies and consulates of EU countries different to the applicant may issue emergency travel documents if
As a consequence ofcitizenship of the European Union, when in a non-EU country, EU citizens whose country maintains no diplomatic mission there have the right to consular protection and assistance from a diplomatic mission of any other EU country present in the non-EU country.
Like passports issued by EU member states, passports of other EEA states –Iceland,Liechtenstein, andNorway – as well as ofSwitzerland, can also be used to exercise theright of free movement within theEuropean Economic Area andSwitzerland.[4]
As part of the Schengen agreement, passports and travel documents issued by member states shall comply with minimum security standards, and passports must incorporate a storage medium (a chip) that contains the holder's facial image and fingerprints. This obligation does not apply to identity cards or to temporary passports and travel documents with a validity of one year or less. Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein are bound by the rules (whereas Ireland is not), as Regulation (EC) No 2252/2004 constitutes a development of provisions of the Schengen acquis within the meaning of the Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and Iceland and Norway, the agreement concluded by the European Union, the European Community and the Swiss Confederation, and the Protocol signed between the European Union, the European Community, the Swiss Confederation and the Principality of Liechtenstein on the accession of the Principality of Liechtenstein to the Agreement between the European Union, the European Community and the Swiss Confederation, concerning the association of the four States with the implementation, application and development of the Schengenacquis .[2][21]
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