Travel from Montserrat to Antigua and Barbuda is conditional — see requirements below
This is the generic answer for any Montserrat citizen. Not legal or medical advice — verify with your airline and destination authorities before travel.
Montserrat passport holders can travel to Antigua and Barbuda without a visa.
This is the generic case for any Montserrat citizen. Sign in (free) to personalize this Antigua and Barbuda analysis for your passport, vaccinations & connecting flights.Personalize →Generic country-level guidance for Antigua and Barbuda. Verify against the official source before you travel.
This page covers a direct flight to Antigua and Barbuda. If your route connects through a third country, that country may require its own transit visa — sometimes even for a short stop inside the airport between flights (a layover). Transit rules depend on your specific routing, so check the country you connect through separately, or analyse your full itinerary.
No visa required for entry to Antigua and Barbuda. Confirm the latest allowed-stay duration with the destination's official source before travel.
If you qualify as a CARICOM Skilled National under one of the 15 approved categories, you can enter for an initial 6-month period with the right to work, with the stay becoming indefinite once immigration verifies your Certificate of Recognition of Caribbean Community Skills Qualification. The 15 categories are: University Graduates, Artistes, Musicians, Media Workers, Sportspersons, Nurses, Teachers, Artisans (CVQ Level II+), Holders of Associate Degrees, Domestic Workers, Agricultural Workers, Beauty Service Practitioners, Barbers, Private Security Officers, Aviation Personnel. If you hold a Skills Certificate, carry it (and any supporting qualification documents). Apply for the certificate in advance through the relevant ministry in your destination state if you don't have one yet.
Year-round averages. Warm band = typical daily low to high (°C); blue bars = typical rainfall (mm). Hover or tap a month for details.
Warmest around Aug (~31°C); wettest around Sep (~144mm).
This page covers the generic case for any Montserrat citizen. Sign in (free) and create a traveler profile to factor in your specific passport expiry, vaccinations, previous visas held, and connecting flights — and get the same analysis for your exact itinerary.
Sign in (free) & build your profile →Your MS CARICOM citizenship gives you up to 6 months of visitor entry to other CARICOM Member States without a visa. Bring a return/onward ticket (most non-BBC4 destinations require it) and a passport valid for the duration of your stay. To stay longer or work, see the Skilled National option above.
CARICOM free movement is your legal right, but airline check-in is the common failure point — agents are trained on standard visa rules, not regional treaties. Carry your CARICOM citizenship documentation and a printout (or open this Travel Brief on your phone) referencing the specific article — Article 45 of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas for the general right of free movement, Article 46 for the Skilled National right, or the 2025-10-01 Enhanced Cooperation declaration for BBC4-internal travel.
You're travelling to Antigua and Barbuda (AG). Your home cellular plan may or may not include data abroad — check your carrier's international options before you fly. An eSIM is a low-commitment alternative if your plan doesn't cover the destination or charges high roaming rates.
Antigua and Barbuda (AG) requires every traveller to submit the Antigua Arrival Form for entry — best done a few days before departure rather than in the airport queue. Without it, expect to be pulled aside at the border or denied boarding. Apply at: https://arriveantigua.com
Your MS citizenship gives you free movement to this destination — no visa and no return-ticket requirement. (Entry can still be refused on security or public-order grounds — the residual limit every free-movement regime keeps.) Bring your passport (some OECS borders also accept a national ID), and at the immigration counter ask for the OECS / freedom-of-movement line if there is one.
OECS free movement is your legal right, but airline check-in is the common failure point: agents are trained on visa rules, not regional treaties, so they sometimes refuse boarding or ask for a return ticket you don't actually need. Carry a printout of your OECS citizenship and the OECS Commission's free-movement page (or open this trip's Travel Brief on your phone) so you can hand over a single source if pushed back.