Hi!
How would you evaluate the following situation:
I have 90 days tourist visa that expires on December 10. If I leave Peru on December 28, pay the overstay fine, and come back January 2, 2026, would they let me back in? If not, what would happen? (EU citizen)
- This commment is unpublished.@GDHello GD,sorry for getting back to you so late. I was on vacation.As a EU citizens in general you can stay in Peru as a tourist for up to 183 days in a 365-day period. However, a publication issued by the Peruvian Ministry of Foreign Affairs divides this time in up to 90 days in a 180-day period. So, officially you can stay up to 3 months in Peru, then must leave the country for 3 months before you can return for another 3 months.You should be aware that you are not entitled to the full 183 days per running year or the full 90 days in half a year. It's always at the discretion of the immigration officer how he/she evaluates you/your situation/your travel history, if he/she lets you enter and for how long.With this being said, no-one can guarantee that you will be allowed to return if you already spent your max allowed time as a tourist in Peru (and even consider overstaying this) or if you are allowed to re-enter how many days you will get.So, it's a gamble, that many won, but a few lost. If you are lucky, you could face a relaxed immigration officer, who - if you haven't already spent half a year over the past 12 months - lets you return with no problems and even gives you another 90 days.But it's also possible that you have to deal with a strict immigration officer doing his job by the book. He/she could refuse to let you enter Peru. Depending on your situation you then can argue a bit hoping that you can change his/her mind - chances are good if you are (planning to get) married to a Peruvian, if you have a job offer or if you plan to apply for residency (have proof to show). If the immigration officers no remains a no, you are not allowed to enter; at a land border you are then ask to leave, at an airport you most probably have to leave on the next flight home, which could mean spending the night in a holding cell. If you could change the immigration officers no to being allowed to re-enter he/she can allow you to stay anything from a few days up to the max of 90 days. Unfortunately, no-one can tell you how your encounter with Peruvian immigration will go.GreetingsEva
