Albania Visa For Malaysian

As of 1 January 2017, Malaysian passport holders enjoy visa-free travel to Albania, a European country located in the south east part of the Balkan peninsula and one of the six constitutional monarchies in Europe. The city state has a country population of 3.8 million and is ranked as an upper middle-income economy on the World Bank’s and International Monetary Fund’s list. In 1711 the Kosovo War erupted between Austrian Empire and Ottoman Empire which led to the withdrawal of Ottoman Turks from central and most of southern Albania leaving a vacuum for many Albanian principalities in disarray fighting each other for supremacy.

Those who are looking to travel abroad for leisure or business purposes should now be glad to know that Albania has a new way of granting convenient visa. This means that from now on, all those who want to visit this European country will just need to go online and submit their Albanian Visa applications.

Albanian visa is issued to the nationals of countries currently enjoying diplomatic relations with the government of Albania. These citizens applying for visas can either apply at any Embassy or Consulate of Albania, or submit the documents at the visa application center through a professional law firm in their territory. This is an overview of what you need to obtain an Albanian tourist visa – Albanian Schengen Visa – Albanian Business Visa – Albanian Transit Visa

Visa requirements for Malaysian citizens

Visa requirements for Malaysian citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Malaysia. As of 13 April 2021, Malaysian citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 179 countries and territories (tied with Liechtenstein), ranking the Malaysian passport, ranked 12th in the world according to the Henley Passport Index,[1] making it the 2nd highest-ranked passport in Southeast Asia after Singapore, the 4th highest-ranked in Asia[2] and the highest-ranked passport in the developing world and among Muslim-majority countries.

Although Malaysian passports bear the inscription “This passport is valid for all countries except Israel” and the Malaysian government officially allows travel to Israel for Christian pilgrims only, the travel restrictions imposed by the Malaysian government have no bearing on the Israeli government, which issues visas to Malaysian citizens according to Israeli regulations.

In September 2017, Malaysia announced a ban on all Malaysian citizens from travelling to North Korea, in the wake of strained Malaysia–North Korea relations following the assassination of Kim Jong-nam at Kuala Lumpur International Airport.[3]

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