On 27 September 2025, on the sidelines of UNGA80 in New York, the UAE and Trinidad & Tobago signed a mutual agreement on visa exemptions. The deal was signed by H.H. Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan (UAE Deputy PM & Foreign Minister) and Sean Sobers (Trinidad & Tobago Minister of Foreign & CARICOM Affairs) in the presence of Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar. The agreement spells out who can now enter each country without a visa but it is not perfectly reciprocal, so the details matter.
Agreement in plain language — who gets visa-free entry
- Signed at the UN General Assembly high-level week (UNGA80), New York, 27 Sept 2025. This mutual exemption of entry-visa requirements between the UAE and Trinidad & Tobago.
- For
UAE citizens going to Trinidad & Tobago: UAE holders of diplomatic, special, ordinary and “mission” passports were listed as exempt from Trinidad & Tobago visa requirements. - For Trinidad & Tobago citizens going to the UAE: the exemption in the UAE’s announcement applies to Trinidad & Tobago diplomatic and official passports (not all ordinary passport holders). That difference creates an asymmetric practical outcome.
UAE nationals carrying ordinary passports appear to benefit when visiting Trinidad & Tobago under this text, whereas ordinary T&T nationals do not automatically gain the same visa-free access to the UAE — the agreement, as reported, privileges T&T diplomatic/official travelers for entry into the UAE.
Why this matters: Diplomatic, economic and mobility angles
- Diplomatic convenience: easing travel for officials and mission staff lowers the friction for high-level visits, negotiations and cooperation programs, a predictable gain after face-to-face UN meetings.
- Trade & investment signaling: the UAE has been actively courting Caribbean partners; visa facilitation (even limited to diplomatic/official travel) is a signal that the UAE wants deeper economic, cultural and institutional ties with the region.
- People-to-people impact (limited): because the exemption is asymmetric, ordinary T&T passport holders do not get the same immediate travel freedom to the UAE, so tourism or business travel flows for ordinary citizens are unlikely to change until a fuller reciprocal arrangement is negotiated or published.
- Precedent and outreach: the UAE has previously engaged Caribbean states on visa and MoU arrangements (historical ties with some islands are on record), so this sits inside a broader pattern of targeted bilateral outreach.
What travelers, officials and reporters should check next
- Effective date & implementation: the UAE
MOFA press release and the coverage confirm the signing on 27 Sept 2025, but they do not specify an operational effective date or the administrative steps (e.g., passport-stamping rules, transit rules or whether prior registration is needed). Check both countries’ official sites for the final entry rules before travel. - Which passport you hold matters: if you hold an ordinary Trinidad & Tobago passport, do not assume visa-free entry to the UAE yet the published text cites diplomatic/official passports for T&T. Conversely, UAE nationals (including ordinary passport holders) are listed as exempt for entry to Trinidad & Tobago in the UAE statement verified with Trinidad & Tobago consular channels before booking.
- Contact points: confirm with (a) UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs & International Cooperation (MOFA), (b)
WAM (UAE state news) updates, and (c) Trinidad & Tobago’s Ministry of Foreign & CARICOM Affairs or its consulate / immigration site to see the exact rules, any visa waiver formalities, and whether the waiver needs parliamentary ratification.
UAE citizens can now look forward to visa-free entry into Trinidad & Tobago, while the Caribbean nation’s officials enjoy reciprocal access to the Emirates. However, the deal’s full scope including timelines, stay durations, and whether another Caribbean country is included still requires clarification. Until official updates are published, travelers should rely on embassy advisories for the latest guidance.