01/29/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/29/2026 05:20
On 29 January, the Commission adopted its first-ever EU Visa Strategy, setting out a framework for a visa policy that advances the EU's long-term interests. It makes visa policy more strategic and better equipped to respond to growing mobility, regional instability, and geopolitical competition.
The Strategy aims to:
Alongside the Strategy, the Commission also adopted a Recommendation on attracting talent for innovation, to make the EU more attractive to highly skilled professionals, students, researchers and innovative entrepreneurs and to support the EU's competitiveness in a global context.
The Visa Strategy is built on 3 key pillars:
Strengthening the EU's security
This includes:
Boosting competitiveness
The strategy puts forward new measures to support the EU's global competitiveness, attract talent, and make legitimate travel easier, faster and more predictable for tourists and business travellers, including:
Better conditions for talent
Additional support to non-EU nationals and employers to address challenges related to the visa process through the European Legal Gateway Offices
Modern visa tools
The EU is deploying advanced digital tools to modernise visa and border management. The EU's IT systems will be interoperable by 2028, making it possible to query multiple databases at once and through a single, central search, improving information-sharing and preventing visa abuse.
Recommendation complements the Visa Strategy setting out concrete ways in which Member States can make the EU more attractive for students, researchers and highly skilled workers, startup founders and innovative entrepreneurs in key sectors for the EU's competitiveness and strategic autonomy.
Recommendation encourage Member States to have simpler and faster procedures for long-stay visa and residence permits through more digitised processes, fewer documents and shorter processing times, easier transitions to work or entrepreneurship from study or research in the EU, improved intra-EU mobility as well as better access to information and stronger coordination between Member States' authorities, universities, and research organisations.
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