
Tunisia
North African nation qualifying for 2026 World Cup whose fans face US visa bond barriers.
Last refreshed: 10 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Tunisian fans afford the $15,000 bond to attend the World Cup they qualified for?
Timeline for Tunisia
Qualified African nation whose fans face $15,000 US visa bond
2026 FIFA World Cup: Mentioned in: Al Jazeera names CAF for $15,000 bond silenceMentioned in: State Dept has no data on visa impact
2026 FIFA World CupVisa-bond programme now covers 50 countries
2026 FIFA World Cup- Why do Tunisian fans need to pay a bond to attend the 2026 World Cup?
- The US State Department added Tunisia to its Visa Bond Pilot Programme on 2 April 2026, requiring adults to post up to $15,000 before receiving a tourist Visa.Source: US State Department
- Does the US government know how many fans the visa bonds will exclude?
- No. The State Department confirmed on 7 April 2026 that it has no estimates for how the bonds and travel bans will affect World Cup attendance or economic impact.Source: US State Department
- How many times has Tunisia qualified for the World Cup?
- Six times, including the inaugural 1978 tournament and 2026.Source: FIFA records
Background
Tunisia became the latest country added to the US State Department's Visa Bond Pilot Programme on 2 April 2026, requiring Tunisian nationals to post bonds of up to $15,000 per person to receive a US tourist Visa. This brings to five the number of qualified World Cup nations subject to the programme: Algeria, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Tunisia. On 7 April, the State Department confirmed it 'does not have any estimates' for how the bonds and travel bans will affect World Cup attendance or economic impact , meaning the government expanded the programme to 50 countries without modelling the consequences.
Tunisia is a North African republic of about 12 million people, bordered by Algeria and Libya, with a Mediterranean coastline and a predominantly Arab and Berber population. It has a relatively diversified economy compared to its neighbours, with tourism, phosphate exports, and light manufacturing as key sectors. Politically, Tunisia underwent a democratic transition after the 2011 revolution that sparked the Arab Spring, before President Kais Saied consolidated power through a 2021 self-coup, new constitution, and dissolution of Parliament, drawing international censure.
On the football pitch, Les Aigles de Carthage are one of Africa's most experienced World Cup sides, having qualified six times including the inaugural 1978 tournament. Their 2026 qualification extended that record. The addition of the Visa bond requirement , coming 67 days before the tournament , has given Tunisia a dual presence in World Cup coverage: as a competing nation and as a symbol of the political friction between US immigration policy and the sport's global ambitions.