Travel from Palau to Andorra is conditional — see requirements below
This is the generic answer for any Palau citizen. Not legal or medical advice — verify with your airline and destination authorities before travel.
Palau passport holders can travel to Andorra without a visa for stays of up to 90 days.
This is the generic case for any Palau citizen. Sign in (free) to personalize this Andorra analysis for your passport, vaccinations & connecting flights.Personalize →Generic country-level guidance for Andorra. Verify against the official source before you travel.
This page covers a direct flight to Andorra. 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.
Andorra has no airport. Travellers arrive via Spain (Barcelona) or France (Toulouse) and continue overland. Because you enter via Spain, the binding entry requirement is Spain's (Schengen Area) — reflected in the visa verdict below — not Andorra's own, which is an open border with no separate immigration control.
No visa required for entry to Andorra. Stays of up to 90 days are permitted under the visa-waiver agreement.
You're travelling to Spain (ES). 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.
This page covers the generic case for any Palau 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 →Declare EUR 10,000 or equivalent when entering or leaving Spain (ES). Form: Cash declaration form. EU-wide: declare €10,000+ when entering/leaving the EU. Individual member states may have additional rules.
The US State Department publishes these advisories for your route. Spain: Level 2 — Exercise Increased Caution (as of 2025-05-12). Review the country page for the specific areas and risks flagged before you go. This is a US State Department safety perspective, not an entry or boarding rule — it doesn't affect whether you can board, only what to be aware of on the ground. Travellers from other countries should also check their own government's advisory.
The EU is introducing ETIAS, a pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors to the Schengen Area (like the US ESTA) (about €20), valid 3 years. It is NOT required yet — expected to start around Q4 2026, phased toward 2027 (after a transitional period of at least 6 months). Dates have slipped before, so confirm the current status at the official portal: https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias_en. Once live you'll need it before boarding on a visa-exempt passport. If you also hold an EU/EEA/Swiss passport, entering on that avoids ETIAS entirely.
Spain (ES) requires every visitor to hold travel health insurance. Minimum coverage: €30,000. Schengen visa requirement; must cover medical repatriation Print or save the policy summary page (insurer, policy number, coverage limit, dates) — that's what border officers look for.