Can I enter Pakistan on my Pakistani passport which expires in less than 1 month?



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3















My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport that is about to expire?



Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to people returning to their country of citizenship?










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  • 1





    Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:37












  • Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

    – user41553
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:45











  • Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 18:33











  • The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

    – reirab
    Mar 24 '16 at 22:52


















3















My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport that is about to expire?



Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to people returning to their country of citizenship?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:37












  • Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

    – user41553
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:45











  • Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 18:33











  • The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

    – reirab
    Mar 24 '16 at 22:52














3












3








3








My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport that is about to expire?



Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to people returning to their country of citizenship?










share|improve this question
















My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport that is about to expire?



Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to people returning to their country of citizenship?







passports pakistani-citizens






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share|improve this question













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edited Mar 24 '16 at 18:33









David Richerby

14.5k94589




14.5k94589










asked Mar 24 '16 at 15:19









user41553user41553

18113




18113







  • 1





    Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:37












  • Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

    – user41553
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:45











  • Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 18:33











  • The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

    – reirab
    Mar 24 '16 at 22:52













  • 1





    Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:37












  • Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

    – user41553
    Mar 24 '16 at 15:45











  • Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

    – David Richerby
    Mar 24 '16 at 18:33











  • The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

    – reirab
    Mar 24 '16 at 22:52








1




1





Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

– David Richerby
Mar 24 '16 at 15:37






Are you asking about the possibility of entering Pakistan or the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan? (Or both?) Most (I assume all) countries allow citizens to return even without a passport, though some may fine people returning without a valid passport.

– David Richerby
Mar 24 '16 at 15:37














Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

– user41553
Mar 24 '16 at 15:45





Thanks David for your comment. I am asking the possibility of transiting in some other country on the journey back to Pakistan, and boarding airline. Would i have any issues with the airline? I think I should be able to enter Pakistan once there but could I experience issues with airlines who would notice that the passport expires in less than 1 month.

– user41553
Mar 24 '16 at 15:45













Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

– David Richerby
Mar 24 '16 at 18:33





Thanks! I edited your question to clarify this. Please check that I didn't make a mess of anything.

– David Richerby
Mar 24 '16 at 18:33













The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

– reirab
Mar 24 '16 at 22:52






The question of transiting another country should be asked specifically for country/countries you'd be transiting, as the requirements are very different from one country to the next (and even potentially one airport to another in the same country.) Some airports don't require you to enter their country at all to transit (HKG and ICN both come to mind,) while others have relatively strict requirements (including obtaining visas ahead of time and such.)

– reirab
Mar 24 '16 at 22:52











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















8














The six-month validity rule, and similar rules requiring passports to be valid beyond the date of arrival or anticipated date of departure apply only to people visiting countries other than their own.



Or, alternatively, countries apply these rules only to foreign passports.



The point of having such a rule is likely to avoid having foreigners in the country temporarily with expired passports. Passports can take a long time to replace, and such a person might be forced to overstay in such a situation.



For requirements at "different transit locations," the question is too broad; there are literally hundreds of countries which will all have different rules. Even limiting it to airport hubs, the question still covers dozens of jurisdictions.






share|improve this answer






























    2















    My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand
    that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for
    six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport
    that is about to expire?




    Yes. Your passport is valid till the midnight of the date of expiry; and as long as you pass immigration control (at Pakistan) before that, you are okay. Pakistan will not deny you entry even if your passport expires while you are waiting in line for immigration - as you are Pakistani citizen. They may take you aside and have to file some paperwork, but you are guaranteed entry.




    Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting
    through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to
    people returning to their country of citizenship?




    No, transiting countries care that you have proper documents/authorization. That means, you need to make sure that if you need any transit visas you have procured them before your trip.



    Other than that, they only care that your passport and any other documents are valid for the purpose and length of your journey.






    share|improve this answer






























      1














      You can enter Pakistan on any date up to and including the expiration date of your passport, but not after that.



      Given the difficulty of renewing the passport while abroad, it is a good idea to do so while you are in Pakistan.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 1





        I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

        – corsiKa
        Mar 24 '16 at 22:08











      • @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

        – Michael Hampton
        Mar 24 '16 at 22:38







      • 1





        If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

        – Burhan Khalid
        Mar 25 '16 at 7:16










      protected by Community Mar 25 '17 at 14:35



      Thank you for your interest in this question.
      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      8














      The six-month validity rule, and similar rules requiring passports to be valid beyond the date of arrival or anticipated date of departure apply only to people visiting countries other than their own.



      Or, alternatively, countries apply these rules only to foreign passports.



      The point of having such a rule is likely to avoid having foreigners in the country temporarily with expired passports. Passports can take a long time to replace, and such a person might be forced to overstay in such a situation.



      For requirements at "different transit locations," the question is too broad; there are literally hundreds of countries which will all have different rules. Even limiting it to airport hubs, the question still covers dozens of jurisdictions.






      share|improve this answer



























        8














        The six-month validity rule, and similar rules requiring passports to be valid beyond the date of arrival or anticipated date of departure apply only to people visiting countries other than their own.



        Or, alternatively, countries apply these rules only to foreign passports.



        The point of having such a rule is likely to avoid having foreigners in the country temporarily with expired passports. Passports can take a long time to replace, and such a person might be forced to overstay in such a situation.



        For requirements at "different transit locations," the question is too broad; there are literally hundreds of countries which will all have different rules. Even limiting it to airport hubs, the question still covers dozens of jurisdictions.






        share|improve this answer

























          8












          8








          8







          The six-month validity rule, and similar rules requiring passports to be valid beyond the date of arrival or anticipated date of departure apply only to people visiting countries other than their own.



          Or, alternatively, countries apply these rules only to foreign passports.



          The point of having such a rule is likely to avoid having foreigners in the country temporarily with expired passports. Passports can take a long time to replace, and such a person might be forced to overstay in such a situation.



          For requirements at "different transit locations," the question is too broad; there are literally hundreds of countries which will all have different rules. Even limiting it to airport hubs, the question still covers dozens of jurisdictions.






          share|improve this answer













          The six-month validity rule, and similar rules requiring passports to be valid beyond the date of arrival or anticipated date of departure apply only to people visiting countries other than their own.



          Or, alternatively, countries apply these rules only to foreign passports.



          The point of having such a rule is likely to avoid having foreigners in the country temporarily with expired passports. Passports can take a long time to replace, and such a person might be forced to overstay in such a situation.



          For requirements at "different transit locations," the question is too broad; there are literally hundreds of countries which will all have different rules. Even limiting it to airport hubs, the question still covers dozens of jurisdictions.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 24 '16 at 15:44









          phoogphoog

          76k12164246




          76k12164246























              2















              My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand
              that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for
              six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport
              that is about to expire?




              Yes. Your passport is valid till the midnight of the date of expiry; and as long as you pass immigration control (at Pakistan) before that, you are okay. Pakistan will not deny you entry even if your passport expires while you are waiting in line for immigration - as you are Pakistani citizen. They may take you aside and have to file some paperwork, but you are guaranteed entry.




              Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting
              through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to
              people returning to their country of citizenship?




              No, transiting countries care that you have proper documents/authorization. That means, you need to make sure that if you need any transit visas you have procured them before your trip.



              Other than that, they only care that your passport and any other documents are valid for the purpose and length of your journey.






              share|improve this answer



























                2















                My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand
                that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for
                six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport
                that is about to expire?




                Yes. Your passport is valid till the midnight of the date of expiry; and as long as you pass immigration control (at Pakistan) before that, you are okay. Pakistan will not deny you entry even if your passport expires while you are waiting in line for immigration - as you are Pakistani citizen. They may take you aside and have to file some paperwork, but you are guaranteed entry.




                Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting
                through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to
                people returning to their country of citizenship?




                No, transiting countries care that you have proper documents/authorization. That means, you need to make sure that if you need any transit visas you have procured them before your trip.



                Other than that, they only care that your passport and any other documents are valid for the purpose and length of your journey.






                share|improve this answer

























                  2












                  2








                  2








                  My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand
                  that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for
                  six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport
                  that is about to expire?




                  Yes. Your passport is valid till the midnight of the date of expiry; and as long as you pass immigration control (at Pakistan) before that, you are okay. Pakistan will not deny you entry even if your passport expires while you are waiting in line for immigration - as you are Pakistani citizen. They may take you aside and have to file some paperwork, but you are guaranteed entry.




                  Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting
                  through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to
                  people returning to their country of citizenship?




                  No, transiting countries care that you have proper documents/authorization. That means, you need to make sure that if you need any transit visas you have procured them before your trip.



                  Other than that, they only care that your passport and any other documents are valid for the purpose and length of your journey.






                  share|improve this answer














                  My Pakistani passport expires less than a month from now. I understand
                  that some countries only let people in if their passport is valid for
                  six months or more. Will I be able to enter Pakistan on a passport
                  that is about to expire?




                  Yes. Your passport is valid till the midnight of the date of expiry; and as long as you pass immigration control (at Pakistan) before that, you are okay. Pakistan will not deny you entry even if your passport expires while you are waiting in line for immigration - as you are Pakistani citizen. They may take you aside and have to file some paperwork, but you are guaranteed entry.




                  Also, travelling back to Pakistan is likely to involve transiting
                  through some other country. Does the six-month rule still apply to
                  people returning to their country of citizenship?




                  No, transiting countries care that you have proper documents/authorization. That means, you need to make sure that if you need any transit visas you have procured them before your trip.



                  Other than that, they only care that your passport and any other documents are valid for the purpose and length of your journey.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 25 '16 at 7:13









                  Burhan KhalidBurhan Khalid

                  36.7k372147




                  36.7k372147





















                      1














                      You can enter Pakistan on any date up to and including the expiration date of your passport, but not after that.



                      Given the difficulty of renewing the passport while abroad, it is a good idea to do so while you are in Pakistan.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1





                        I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                        – corsiKa
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:08











                      • @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                        – Michael Hampton
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:38







                      • 1





                        If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                        – Burhan Khalid
                        Mar 25 '16 at 7:16
















                      1














                      You can enter Pakistan on any date up to and including the expiration date of your passport, but not after that.



                      Given the difficulty of renewing the passport while abroad, it is a good idea to do so while you are in Pakistan.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1





                        I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                        – corsiKa
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:08











                      • @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                        – Michael Hampton
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:38







                      • 1





                        If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                        – Burhan Khalid
                        Mar 25 '16 at 7:16














                      1












                      1








                      1







                      You can enter Pakistan on any date up to and including the expiration date of your passport, but not after that.



                      Given the difficulty of renewing the passport while abroad, it is a good idea to do so while you are in Pakistan.






                      share|improve this answer













                      You can enter Pakistan on any date up to and including the expiration date of your passport, but not after that.



                      Given the difficulty of renewing the passport while abroad, it is a good idea to do so while you are in Pakistan.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Mar 24 '16 at 20:25









                      Michael HamptonMichael Hampton

                      38.4k385170




                      38.4k385170







                      • 1





                        I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                        – corsiKa
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:08











                      • @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                        – Michael Hampton
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:38







                      • 1





                        If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                        – Burhan Khalid
                        Mar 25 '16 at 7:16













                      • 1





                        I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                        – corsiKa
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:08











                      • @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                        – Michael Hampton
                        Mar 24 '16 at 22:38







                      • 1





                        If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                        – Burhan Khalid
                        Mar 25 '16 at 7:16








                      1




                      1





                      I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                      – corsiKa
                      Mar 24 '16 at 22:08





                      I'm pretty sure any country of which you're a citizen will let you back in the country if you can prove identity, which an expired passport usually can. They might make a note on your file and you encounter difficult situations down the road, though.

                      – corsiKa
                      Mar 24 '16 at 22:08













                      @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                      – Michael Hampton
                      Mar 24 '16 at 22:38






                      @corsiKa Many countries will, but unfortunately this is not true of all of them. India and Pakistan are two well known examples of this.

                      – Michael Hampton
                      Mar 24 '16 at 22:38





                      1




                      1





                      If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                      – Burhan Khalid
                      Mar 25 '16 at 7:16






                      If you are talking about the cases of illegal repatriation; then that's a different issue all together; and does not apply here. Also, I don't know of difficulties (beyond the fact that it takes longer) in renewing passports outside of the home country.

                      – Burhan Khalid
                      Mar 25 '16 at 7:16






                      protected by Community Mar 25 '17 at 14:35



                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
                      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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