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When you need to get your Yemen travel visa processed quickly, Travel Document Systems is here to help. All of the Yemen visa requirements and application forms, plus convenient online ordering.
$1 = ر.ي.249.99
When you are travelling to Yemen with a U.S. Passport, a Tourist Visa is required.
TDS is unable to assist at this time.
TDS is unable to assist in the tourist visa process please contact the Yemen Embassy for more information.
When you are travelling to Yemen with a Non-US Passport, a Tourist Visa is required.
When you are travelling to Yemen with a U.S. Passport, a Business Visa is required.
Get My Business Visa
When you are travelling to Yemen with a Non-US Passport, a Business Visa is required.
When you are travelling to Yemen with a U.S. Passport, a Student Visa is required.
Get My Student Visa
When you are travelling to Yemen with a Non-US Passport, a Student Visa is required.
When you are travelling to Yemen with a U.S. Passport, a Official or Diplomatic Visa is required.
Get My Official or Diplomatic Visa
When you are travelling to Yemen with a Non-US Passport, a Official or Diplomatic Visa is required.
Get the most up-to-date information for Yemen related to Yemen travel visas, Yemen visa requirements and applications, embassy and consulate addresses, foreign relations information, travel advisories, entry and exit restrictions, and travel tips from the US State Department's website.
Vaccination Certificate for Yellow Fever Required if a Arriving from an infected area within 5 Days.
Get more health information for travelers to Yemen:
Read about the people, history, government, economy and geography of Yemen at the CIA's World FactBook.
Yemen was one of the oldest centers of civilization in the Near East. Between the 12th century BC and the 6th century AD, it was part of the Minaean, Sabaean, and Himyarite kingdoms, which controlled the lucrative spice trade, and later came under Ethiopian and Persian rule. In the 7th century, Islamic caliphs began to exert control over the area. After this caliphate broke up, the former north Yemen came under control of Imams of various dynasties usually of the Zaidi sect, who established a theocratic political structure that survived until modern times. (Imam is a religious term. The Shi’ites apply it to the prophet Muhammad's son-in-law Ali, his sons Hassan and Hussein, and subsequent lineal descendants, whom they consider to have been divinely ordained unclassified successors of the prophet.) Egyptian Sunni caliphs occupied much of north Yemen throughout the 11th century. By the 16th century and again in the 19th century, north Yemen was part of the Ottoman Empire, and in some periods its Imams exerted control over south Yemen.
Learn more about Yemen in our World Atlas