Places that serbian citizens can visit without a passport

Posted by averege_guy_kinda

23 Comments

  1. BigFloofRabbit on

    That map is even smaller for British people. I think it is only Ireland we don’t need to show a passport to visit haha

  2. yollarbenibekler on

    Serbians are always welcome in Turkiye. Nice people. Nice cuisine. Tasty pleskavitsa and cevabi. Delicious bureks. I was amazed at how many Turkish tv shows were airing in local channels in my visit to Belgrade. People were super nice.

  3. Serbs could go to Bulgaria with ID only. But now when Bulgaria is part of Schengen area, I am not sure.

  4. Chance-Ear-9772 on

    Could someone explain to me why Bosnia allows Serbians in without a passport? I’d assume they wouldn’t be too thrilled about them.

  5. MeMyselfAnd1234 on

    as I know they can go to Romania only with the ID and no passport

    I went from Romania to Serbia just with my ID a few years ago

  6. Serbian citizens cannot visit Turkey with an ID card, only passport is accepted. The agreement between Serbia and Turkey to use ID cards has been signed, but it has not yet entered into force. The map is incorrect.

  7. The choice to include kosovo as part of serbia here makes no sense.
    This is a map about what people can do with which documents. This depends entirely on the administration that administrates a given territory. Kosovo is not administered by Serbia. People who live in Kosovo don’t have their official documents issued by Serbia.
    This is not a map about which place is official recognised by which entity, so UN membership is completely irrelevant.

  8. I’m surprised it’s needed to enter Croatia, since Croatian citizens can enter Serbia without a passport. Did it change with Croatia joining Schengen?

  9. Willing-Corgi-6607 on

    As a Turk gamer, there is only one nation who shares our dark sense of humor and its Serbians. I love chatting Serbs online.

  10. I wonder about this, seeing that my Serbian ID is in Cyrillic.

    OK, I imagine the readable chip in it renders info in Latin alphabet on screen at the airport, possibly at land crossings, but if a policeman on the street for some bizarre reason needs to check my ID, maybe there is a riot leading to civil war like in Minneapolis or something, I doubt Albanian and Turkish cops would be able to read it unless they had to bring me to the station — something no tourist would want.

    Also if I need to identify myself at a bank, and since I defintiely will need to identify myself at the hotel, how does that work?

  11. I think that for Turkey it’s only valid via air travel, you still need a passport if you go by land