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Passport Comparison
Side-by-side passport strength comparison 2026
41.5
SCORE / 100
74.5
SCORE / 100
Taiwan has the stronger passport with a higher Travel Freedom Score.
| Category | Egypt | Taiwan |
|---|---|---|
| Global Rank | #84 | #32 ✓ |
| Strength Score | 41.5/100 | 74.5/100 ✓ |
| Visa-Free Countries | 52 | 122 ✓ |
| eVisa Countries | 13 | 14 ✓ |
| Visa on Arrival | 16 ✓ | 11 |
| Total Accessible | 81 | 147 ✓ |
| Schengen Member | No | No |
| EU Member | No | No |
| GCC Member | No | No |
Taiwan holds the stronger passport in this comparison, ranked #32 globally with a Travel Freedom Score of 74.5/100. Egypt ranks #84 with a score of 41.5/100 — a gap of 33 points. Taiwan passport holders can enter 70 more countries without a pre-arranged visa. Across all accessible destinations (visa-free, eVisa, and visa-on-arrival), Taiwan leads by 66 countries.
VizaHunt's Travel Freedom Score is a weighted index: visa-free access (60%), eVisa availability (25%), visa-on-arrival options (10%), and reciprocity quality (5%). Scores range from 0 to 100. Global Rank compares total accessible destinations — anywhere you can enter without a pre-arranged embassy appointment. A higher score and lower rank number both mean a more powerful passport.
Passport strength reflects diplomatic relationships built over decades. Countries with strong trade partnerships, bilateral visa waiver agreements, and mutual travel treaties tend to have higher scores. Geopolitical tensions, sanctions, or newly negotiated agreements can shift rankings significantly within a single year.
Schengen and EU membership provide significant boosts because all member-state citizens benefit from the same travel agreements, effectively pooling diplomatic relationships. Similarly, GCC member passports share certain visa-free corridors across the Gulf region.
Do Egypt passport holders need a visa to visit Taiwan?
Entry requirements depend on your specific passport and destination. Check the full visa requirements on the Egypt → Taiwan visa check page, or the reverse: Taiwan → Egypt.
Can I use whichever passport gives me better access?
Yes, if you hold both passports, you can always choose to enter a country on whichever one gives you better access. There's no obligation to use a specific passport unless your own country requires it for entry/exit.
Does a stronger passport mean no visas are ever required?
No. Even the highest-ranked passports (Singapore, Japan, Germany) require a visa for a handful of countries. A stronger passport simply means fewer destinations require advance planning, you might only need visas for 3–5 countries rather than 50+.
How often do passport rankings change?
Rankings update when bilateral visa agreements change between governments. This can happen multiple times per year. A single new agreement, like the EU granting visa-free access to a country, can shift dozens of passports simultaneously.
What does "Total Accessible" mean vs "Visa-Free"?
"Visa-Free" counts destinations where you need absolutely no visa arrangement. "Total Accessible" adds destinations where an eVisa or visa-on-arrival is available, meaning you can arrange entry without an embassy appointment.
Why does this score differ from the Henley Passport Index?
Different indices use different methodologies. Henley counts raw visa-free destinations. VizaHunt's Travel Freedom Score weights eVisa and visa-on-arrival access because they require minimal planning, making them meaningfully different from a full embassy appointment.