Slovak passport

The Slovak passport is issued to citizens of Slovakia to enable legal international travel. Every Slovak citizen is also a citizen of the European Union. The passport, along with the national identity card allows for free rights of movement and residence in any of the states of the European Economic Area, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Slovak passport
The front cover of a contemporary Slovak biometric passport.
TypePassport
Issued by Slovakia
First issued1 April 1993
15 January 2008 (biometric passport booklet)
26 November 2014 (current version)
PurposeIdentification
EligibilitySlovak citizenship
Cost€33/€66/€99 (16 and over 30/10/2 days); €13/€26/€39 (6 - 16 30/10/2 days); €8/€16/€24 (6 and under 30/10/2 days)[1]

Every Slovak citizen is entitled to possess two passports of the same kind, if he or she wishes to. The second passport is valid for 5 years (instead of the standard 10 years), while the fee remains the same. Passports in Slovakia are issued by the police force.

History

Slovakia started issuing the current biometric passports on January 15, 2008. The biometric data consisted of the face picture. On June 22, 2009 the passports were changed to include second biometric data of the fingerprints. Because of the nature of biometric data acquirement, passports are now issued only directly to the passport owners.[2]

Visa requirements

Visa requirements for Slovak citizens
  Slovakia
  Freedom of movement
  Visa not required
  Visa on arrival
  eVisa
  Visa available both on arrival or online
  Visa required prior to arrival

As of October 1, 2019 Slovak citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 181 countries and territories, ranking the Slovak passport 9th in terms of travel freedom (tied with Australian and Lithuanian passports) according to the Henley Passport Index.[3]

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gollark: Okay? That doesn't actually mean Google aren't gathering data if you literally use their browser, OS and apps?
gollark: Do you just not care about privacy? All of those (I mean, except cloud storage) seem to be available in open source or more privacy-respecting forms which are *still* free.
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gollark: What is WRONG™ with Brave Browser?

See also

References


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