Brasil - Visa and entry fee.
#1
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Brasil - Visa and entry fee.
As I understand it US citizens need a visa to enter Brasil and are photographed and fingerprinted upon entry, in addition are required to pay the $100 reciprocity fee ( or is it for the visa? ) .
Is that for every entry or is the visa/fee and the photograph/fingerprinting good for a period.
I may have to enter the country twice in an 10 day span in Nov.
Also if I am flying say from BA connecting onward in GRU do I have to go through the above?
Thanks.
mike
Is that for every entry or is the visa/fee and the photograph/fingerprinting good for a period.
I may have to enter the country twice in an 10 day span in Nov.
Also if I am flying say from BA connecting onward in GRU do I have to go through the above?
Thanks.
mike
#2
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Originally Posted by MIKESILV
As I understand it US citizens need a visa to enter Brasil and are photographed and fingerprinted upon entry, in addition are required to pay the $100 reciprocity fee ( or is it for the visa? ) .
Is that for every entry or is the visa/fee and the photograph/fingerprinting good for a period.
I may have to enter the country twice in an 10 day span in Nov.
Also if I am flying say from BA connecting onward in GRU do I have to go through the above?
Thanks.
mike
Is that for every entry or is the visa/fee and the photograph/fingerprinting good for a period.
I may have to enter the country twice in an 10 day span in Nov.
Also if I am flying say from BA connecting onward in GRU do I have to go through the above?
Thanks.
mike
If you are connecting, then you don't need a visa as you don't have to clear immigration to make an onward connection to say EZE; however, if you get stuck in GRU due to some issue of flights being cancelled and the like, then you may or may not come to regret not having a visa. But if you, as an American, don't use the visa, you've just wasted the money.
#3
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Thanks for the quick reply.
I am redeeming a C class award on SAA GRU/CPT but flying AA to Brasil or EZE hoped to incorporate a 3 day stop over in either GIG or EZE at the end,
am working out the mechanics since the wife is travelling with me 3 days in GIG might not be enough we have been to BA before so that layover may be more relaxing.
One thing though you did not mention if the photo/fingerprinting is done at every entry or just once?
Thanks,
mike
I am redeeming a C class award on SAA GRU/CPT but flying AA to Brasil or EZE hoped to incorporate a 3 day stop over in either GIG or EZE at the end,
am working out the mechanics since the wife is travelling with me 3 days in GIG might not be enough we have been to BA before so that layover may be more relaxing.
One thing though you did not mention if the photo/fingerprinting is done at every entry or just once?
Thanks,
mike
#4



Join Date: Oct 2000
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Originally Posted by MIKESILV
Thanks for the quick reply.
I am redeeming a C class award on SAA GRU/CPT but flying AA to Brasil or EZE hoped to incorporate a 3 day stop over in either GIG or EZE at the end,
am working out the mechanics since the wife is travelling with me 3 days in GIG might not be enough we have been to BA before so that layover may be more relaxing.
One thing though you did not mention if the photo/fingerprinting is done at every entry or just once?
Thanks,
mike
I am redeeming a C class award on SAA GRU/CPT but flying AA to Brasil or EZE hoped to incorporate a 3 day stop over in either GIG or EZE at the end,
am working out the mechanics since the wife is travelling with me 3 days in GIG might not be enough we have been to BA before so that layover may be more relaxing.
One thing though you did not mention if the photo/fingerprinting is done at every entry or just once?
Thanks,
mike
#5
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The photo - print thing seems to vary, maybe a face-saver thing, a kind of reciprocity different than the $100 fee. As GUWonder says, BE SURE to request a multiple-entry visa stamped into your passport, which is good for five years (or until your passport expires, if it has less than five eyars "life" left on it.) Even if you think you'll never be back - Brasil has ways of getting us to return!
#6
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Originally Posted by JDiver
The photo - print thing seems to vary, maybe a face-saver thing, a kind of reciprocity different than the $100 fee. As GUWonder says, BE SURE to request a multiple-entry visa stamped into your passport, which is good for five years (or until your passport expires, if it has less than five eyars "life" left on it.) Even if you think you'll never be back - Brasil has ways of getting us to return! 

My passport expires in March 06 and my Brasil trip ( whether I stay instransit on the way to EZE or not) is in late Nov 05, I read somewhere on these boards that some countries may not permit you to enter if the passport expiration date is relatively close to the arrival. Anybody has any idea whether it applies to Brasil, Argentina or South Africa for that matter or what the allowable periods might be?mike
#7
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The fingerprinting and photographing is for EVERY entry. Sometimes when the queue is busy, the officer will just waive you past or will wave every third or so person past with only a passport check. But if you're an American, you get in line, then about halfway through you are shunted over to a different line, get fingerprinted, then kind of get back in line and get called over to the next passport officer. It's a real pain in the butt and seems clearly designed to make it a pain in the butt. But hey - it's their country and I won't complain about it. But yes - if you're an American, you go through this EVERY time you enter. Period.
As for passport expiration, most countries on the planet will require that your passport have at least six months left before it expires for you to enter the country. Places that require you to get a visa beforehand will deny your visa if you don't have at least X months validity remaining (usually 6 months). Other countries that give you a visa stamp upon entry (lots of people don't realize that you get a visa everywhere - that's what the stamp in your passport is, unless you have a pre-arranged one) will usually also require this, and if you don't have 6 months left, they may make you turn around and go back home. If you are going to be close with your passport expiry, then go ahead and renew it now.
As for passport expiration, most countries on the planet will require that your passport have at least six months left before it expires for you to enter the country. Places that require you to get a visa beforehand will deny your visa if you don't have at least X months validity remaining (usually 6 months). Other countries that give you a visa stamp upon entry (lots of people don't realize that you get a visa everywhere - that's what the stamp in your passport is, unless you have a pre-arranged one) will usually also require this, and if you don't have 6 months left, they may make you turn around and go back home. If you are going to be close with your passport expiry, then go ahead and renew it now.
#8
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Thanks for the replies, looks like a new passport is in order.
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
#9
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Originally Posted by Boofer
lots of people don't realize that you get a visa everywhere - that's what the stamp in your passport is, unless you have a pre-arranged one
Also: the US has a reciprocal arrangement with many countries waiving the six-months-of-validity rule. Technically this is done by agreeing that, for some purposes, the passport is valid for six months beyond the expiration date printed in it.
#10
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The visa is good for 5 years even if your passport expires way before then. This is actually the way that many visas work for many countries, its just that US citizens in general are so unaccustomed to Visas or long term visas that many posters here do not realize this (to explain it in extraordinarily long verbiage, let's pretend that you receive your 5 year Brazil tourist visa tomorrow - Jan 20, and let's pretend that you passport expires on July 1st. Your visa is still valid even after you get a new passport and your old old is Cancelled, you just bring along the old passport with the visa inside it and it works, for the full five year term that it was issued for. Incidentally it works the EXACT same way for foreign citizens and their US visas.
#11
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Yeah,
I was told this by the Brasiliero Consulado in DC when I needed to replace a 'damages' passport. They just said to bring the new one and the 'damaged' one and the visa would be good until the stamped date of expiry. I couldn't see paying another $100 when I still had 4 years left.
HTH.
I was told this by the Brasiliero Consulado in DC when I needed to replace a 'damages' passport. They just said to bring the new one and the 'damaged' one and the visa would be good until the stamped date of expiry. I couldn't see paying another $100 when I still had 4 years left.
HTH.
Originally Posted by hfly
The visa is good for 5 years even if your passport expires way before then. This is actually the way that many visas work for many countries, its just that US citizens in general are so unaccustomed to Visas or long term visas that many posters here do not realize this (to explain it in extraordinarily long verbiage, let's pretend that you receive your 5 year Brazil tourist visa tomorrow - Jan 20, and let's pretend that you passport expires on July 1st. Your visa is still valid even after you get a new passport and your old old is Cancelled, you just bring along the old passport with the visa inside it and it works, for the full five year term that it was issued for. Incidentally it works the EXACT same way for foreign citizens and their US visas.
#12
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Originally Posted by MIKESILV
Thanks for the replies, looks like a new passport is in order.
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
The most painful thing for us was leaving. There was a police strike and the security line was ridiculous. We waited for HOURS. Surely that must be over now, but I dont know.
#13
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Originally Posted by MIKESILV
Thanks for the replies, looks like a new passport is in order.
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
Perhaps I will skip the stopover in Brasil this time not sure I want to go through that twice in under two weeks. If I was going to spend more time in the country OK but looks like BA here I come again.
mike
#14

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When I went to RIO this past September, we weren't fingerprinted or a photo taken. I don't even remember seeing the equipment. The immigration entry was painless. I expected to get fingerprinted and a photo taken.
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Multiple Entry?
Okay, I got my Visa last June and entered the country at GIG in July. I mad eno mention of multiple entry and was not asked about it either at GIG or by the Visa service that got me the visa. Is the five year thing automatic or did I need to do/request something else? I am going again over Presidents Day weekend and need to act fast if I need a new visa.
Thanks!
Thanks!

