The Gulf Cooperation Council has approved a major step toward seamless travel across the region, selecting the UAE and Bahrain to trial a new system that will simplify movement between member states.
GCC Secretary General Jasem Al Budaiwi announced the initiative during a meeting of interior ministers in Kuwait City, confirming that the pilot phase will begin in December, operating initially through air travel between the two countries. If the trial succeeds, the system will expand to all six GCC states.
According to the Kuwait News Agency, the new scheme will allow citizens to complete all travel procedures at their point of departure, eliminating the need for repeated immigration or security checks upon arrival. The goal is to cut waiting times, improve connectivity, and make cross-Gulf travel feel almost like domestic flights.
Should the trial prove effective, the system will extend to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar, creating a unified travel experience across the bloc.
This initiative is part of a long-term GCC strategy to strengthen mobility for citizens and residents. A key element of this effort is the upcoming unified GCC visa, approved in 2023 and modeled on Europe’s Schengen system. The visa—also known as the GCC Grand Tours Visa—will allow non-Gulf nationals to visit all six states on a single entry permit. A shared electronic platform will support the system by exchanging real-time information on border records and travel violations.
Hospitality leaders say the unified visa could reshape tourism by enabling multi-stop trips across the region. “A unified visa would effectively integrate six destinations into a single, connected itinerary,” said Victor Abou-Ghanem, CEO of Story Hospitality.
Adding to this transformation, the long-awaited GCC rail network is set to open in December 2030. The line will run through Saudi Arabia to Bahrain, link to Doha, and continue across the UAE via Etihad Rail before reaching Muscat. GCC Railways Authority officials say border crossings will be seamless, with immigration checks completed before boarding and no stops at borders.
Together, the unified travel procedures, visa system, and future rail network mark a new era of connectivity for the Gulf region.