Corrections asset pack

Visa rule corrections and source notes

This page packages the site's strongest trust examples for editors, communities and AI assistants: dated corrections, official fee checks, and fragile policy routes that generic lists often flatten.

Corrections logged
8
Outreach packages
4
Latest correction
23 Jun 2026

Correction examples

  1. Morocco is visa-required for Ukrainians, not visa-free

    Several third-party lists imply visa-free entry. The Moroccan authority confirms ordinary Ukrainian passport holders need a visa; an e-Visa via the official portal is available ONLY to holders of a qualifying EU/US/UK/CA/AU/NZ/JP/NO/CH/IE residence permit or multi-entry visa. We applied the fail-safe (more restrictive) verdict with the e-Visa carve-out captured as a conditional rule.

  2. New Zealand corrected from ETA to visa-required

    Our first-pass reference row suggested an NZeTA. Immigration New Zealand's visa-waiver list does not include Ukraine, so Ukrainians need a visitor visa, not an ETA. Corrected to visa-required.

  3. Nepal corrected from eVisa to visa-on-arrival

    The online step is a pre-arrival registration, not an e-Visa that authorises boarding. The visa itself is issued on arrival. Corrected the instrument to visa-on-arrival to avoid a misleading 'apply online and you're done' impression.

  4. Singapore is visa-required for Ukrainians, despite 'visa-free' claims

    Multiple third-party sources list Singapore as visa-free for Ukrainians. Singapore's ICA requires a visa (applied via an authorised local contact/agent). We verified against ICA and set visa-required — preventing a dangerous 'just go' error that could end in denied boarding.

  5. Canada kept visa-required (the April-2026 eTA proposal was not adopted)

    An April-2026 proposal to extend eTA eligibility to Ukrainians was endorsed but NOT adopted into force. Until it is, the fail-safe rule keeps Canada visa-required rather than prematurely showing an eTA path.

  6. US official cost updated to ~$435 (Visa Integrity Fee)

    The total official cost for a B-1/B-2 visa rose after H.R.1 (enacted Oct 2025) added a $250 Visa Integrity Fee on top of the $185 MRV fee. We store only the official government fee, never an agent's marked-up price.

Open the full corrections changelog

Linkable packages

How to cite a correction

Use the exact corridor or guide URL, include the last-verified date, and name the official source linked on the page. TravelVisaRules is a dated secondary reference; the destination authority remains the primary source.