
The long-anticipated single tourist visa for Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries has been officially approved and is set to be rolled out in the near future, UAE Minister of Economy Abdulla bin Touq Al Marri confirmed on Monday.
Speaking to Khaleej Times on the sidelines of the UAE Hospitality Summer Camp press conference, Al Marri announced that the unified visa plan has cleared major hurdles and is now under review by the UAE Ministry of Interior and other key stakeholders for final implementation.
“The single (GCC) tourist visa has been approved and is now waiting to be implemented, hopefully soon,” Al Marri stated.
Modeled after the Schengen visa used in Europe, the GCC Grand Tours Visa will allow foreign visitors to travel across all six GCC member states — the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, and Kuwait — with a single entry permit. The move is widely seen as a strategic step to enhance regional integration and streamline cross-border tourism.
Tourism and hospitality executives have hailed the unified visa as a potential game-changer for the Gulf’s tourism industry, with expectations that it will significantly stimulate both leisure and business travel — especially the growing trend of "bleisure" tourism, where professionals blend work and vacation into extended trips across neighboring countries.
Industry analysts forecast that the initiative will contribute to economic diversification and job creation, giving a substantial lift to the region’s GDP. These expectations are supported by robust data from the GCC Statistical Centre, which recorded 68.1 million tourist arrivals across the Gulf in 2023 — a 42.8% increase from pre-pandemic levels — and $110.4 billion in tourism revenue.
The UAE, a major player in regional tourism, continues to see steady growth in its travel sector. The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) reported that the industry supported 833,000 jobs in the country in 2023. That number is expected to rise to one million by 2030, outpacing earlier WTTC forecasts of 928,000 jobs by 2034.
Dubai, in particular, continues to cement its status as a global tourism magnet. The emirate attracted 7.15 million international visitors in the first four months of 2025, marking a 7% year-on-year increase, according to figures from the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism.
As implementation of the unified GCC visa nears, stakeholders across the Gulf are optimistic that the new policy will usher in a transformative era for tourism, making the region more accessible, connected, and economically dynamic than ever before.