Every passport, measured in days.
Other indexes count how many borders open. This one also counts how long each door stays open — and what’s behind it. Every figure double-sourced, conflicts settled against official pages.
Open the full board · 199 passportsSort by score · doors · stay depth
11
JP
Three numbers, one score
The formula is public — anyone can recompute any score. No panels, no opinions, no paid placements.
Doors, weighted honestly
Visa-free counts in full. An eTA is minutes online; an eVisa is a real application with real refusals. Each entry class carries its own published weight.
eTA 0.92 · VoA 0.80
eVisa 0.55 · Visa 0.00
The days angle
Ninety days is the global gold standard; two weeks is a layover. Every destination’s allowed stay feeds the score — because staying is the point of going.
30–59 0.70 · 15–29 0.60
≤14 d 0.50
What the doors are worth
Opening Japan is not opening a microstate. Destinations are weighted by a public GDP and travel-volume formula, floored so every country still counts.
Floor 0.4 · ceiling 1.0
Every figure has a paper trail
Two independent datasets must agree on a cell before it enters the board. When they disagree, the conflict is settled against the destination government’s own page — never averaged. Each row shows its deciding source and check date; the whole matrix is re-checked monthly.
How is this different from Henley or Passport Index?
Those indexes count destinations. This one also scores how long you may stay (days-weighted) and how much of the world each destination represents — and publishes the formula so you can recompute any score yourself.
Where does the data come from?
Two independent open sources per figure, with every disagreement resolved against the destination government’s official page. Sources and check dates are shown on every passport page.
Do residence permits change what a passport can do?
Substantially — a Schengen residence permit alone unlocks 28 countries. That’s the Residence board, and the My Documents view in the Countly app combines both.
Your days are the other half of the story.
Countly counts the days you spend in each country — the 183-day rule, Schengen 90/180, and the presence rules that keep a residence permit alive.