Guatemala visa options for Canada passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Visa-free · up to 90 days
Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for Guatemala
Rules are written primarily for non-visa-required nationals such as US, Canadian, EU/Schengen, UK and most Western passport holders; nationals of countries not on Guatemala's visa-exempt list may need a consular visa to enter.
- Most nomadsTourist
Visa-Free Tourist Entry (90-day stamp)
90 days on arrival, extendable once by ~90 days for a fee (~US$25-26); up to ~180 days total. Note: the 90 days is shared across the CA-4 region (Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua), not per country.
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required. Travel/health insurance with medical evacuation is recommended for visitors.
- Good for
- Short-stay visitors from the roughly 117 visa-exempt nationalities (incl. US, Canada, UK, EU/Schengen) for tourism or short visits.
- Requirement
- Valid passport (commonly required to be valid 6+ months); no advance visa for exempt nationals. Visa-required nationals must obtain a consular tourist visa.
- Business
Short Business Visit (under visa-free entry)
Same as the 90-day visa-free/short-stay entry; no separate long-stay 'business visa' is issued for ordinary business trips (verify).
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required. Business travel insurance recommended.
- Good for
- Visitors attending meetings, negotiations or trade/investment activities without taking up local employment.
- Requirement
- Valid passport; visa-exempt nationals use the standard entry stamp, visa-required nationals apply for a consular visa. Ongoing local business activity is instead handled via investor or self-employed temporary residence.
- Work
Work / Employment Temporary Residence
Temporary residence granted for 1-5 years at IGM's discretion, renewable; work authorization typically 1-2 years and renewable.
- Insurance
- OptionalNot explicitly mandated in sources; employed workers are enrolled in IGSS (state social security). Verify with IGM/employer.
- Good for
- Foreign nationals with a job offer from a Guatemalan employer.
- Requirement
- MINTRAB (Ministry of Labour) work-permit clearance filed by the employer plus an IGM residencia temporal (worker subcategory); employment contract and professional credentials; IGSS social-security enrolment for formal jobs.
- Study
Student Temporary Residence
Typically 1 year, renewable for the duration of studies (verify).
- Insurance
- OptionalNot specified in sources; confirm with the institution and IGM.
- Good for
- Foreign nationals enrolled at a Guatemalan educational institution.
- Requirement
- Enrollment/acceptance letter from the institution and proof of sufficient funds, filed as a residencia temporal student subcategory.
- Most nomadsDigital nomad
Digital Nomad / Remote-Worker Temporary Residence
Initial grant typically 1 year, renewable; temporary residence up to ~5 years total, then eligible for permanent residence. Reportedly launched 8 Oct 2025 via a 2025 IGM Acuerdo (verify exact decree).
- Insurance
- RequiredDisputed in sources — some report international health insurance is required for the remote-employment route, others list only a Guatemalan medical health certificate; confirm current rule with IGM. Insurance strongly recommended regardless.
- Good for
- Remote employees of foreign companies and self-employed freelancers/contractors earning foreign-source income.
- Requirement
- Proof of regular, verifiable foreign-source income — no single published minimum, with sources citing figures around US$1,500-US$2,000/month (and more with dependents); IGM fees commonly cited around US$225 for the first year. Treat all figures as approximate and verify.
- Residence
Investor Temporary Residence
Temporary residence ~3-5 years, renewable, with a path toward permanent residence/citizenship.
- Insurance
- OptionalNot stated in sources; verify.
- Good for
- Foreign nationals making a direct capital investment or running a business in Guatemala.
- Requirement
- Documented qualifying investment in Guatemala (one secondary source cites ~US$100,000 — unverified; confirm the current threshold with IGM).
- Most nomadsResidence
Rentista / Pensionado (Retiree & Passive-Income) Residence
Offers a direct route to permanent residency; commonly cited as renewable/valid for 5-year periods on proof of continued income.
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required; a Guatemalan medical health certificate is requested at application. Private health cover recommended for retirees.
- Good for
- Retirees and others with stable passive or pension income from abroad (pensions, annuities, investment income, e.g. US Social Security).
- Requirement
- Proof of foreign passive income of about US$1,250/month plus roughly US$300/month per dependent; apostilled income documents and a recent medical health certificate; initial fee commonly cited around US$400. No Guatemalan guarantor required.
- Residence
Permanent Residence
Indefinite, subject to an annual fee (commonly cited ~US$40/year).
- Insurance
- OptionalNot stated in sources; verify.
- Good for
- Foreign nationals converting from temporary residence (generally after ~5 years), family members of Guatemalans, Central American-born applicants, and qualifying rentistas/pensionados.
- Requirement
- Certification of the qualifying prior temporary residence period, or a qualifying family/Central-American/passive-income basis; fees commonly cited from ~US$400 to US$700 depending on route.
- Transit
Transit
Visa-exempt nationals transit under the standard short-stay entry; no separate transit visa is documented for them. Visa-required nationals should confirm transit rules with IGM/the nearest consulate.
- Insurance
- OptionalNot required.
- Good for
- Travellers passing through Guatemala en route to another destination.
- Requirement
- Valid passport and, for visa-required nationals, any applicable consular/transit visa; onward travel documentation.
Indicative summary compiled from public sources; durations, income thresholds and fees vary by nationality and change often, so verify with the Instituto Guatemalteco de Migración (IGM) before relying on any figure. Last checked: 2026-06.
Last verified June 2026
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into Guatemala, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
Canada → Guatemala: frequently asked
- Do Canada passport holders need a visa to visit Guatemala?
- Visa-free · up to 90 days. Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days. Always confirm with the official source before booking.
- Can a Canada passport holder live or work long-term in Guatemala?
- Yes, via a long-stay visa. Guatemala has 9 documented visa types covering work, study, residence and — where it exists — digital-nomad routes.
- Do I need travel insurance for Guatemala?
- Entry to Guatemala never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Guatemala visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.