Samoa visa requirements for Gaboneses

Travel and visa requirements

Samoan Visa is not required for Gaboneses

Stay Duration: 60 days

Entry Requirements

  • Gabonese intending to visit Samoa must first apply for an E-visa.
  • This online pre-visa can be granted by the Samoa consulate in the applicant's home country.
  • On presentation of the pre-visa at the border checkpoint of Samoa the traveller is then issued a visa on arrival.
  • This visa is valid for a maximum total stay of 60 days within a one-year period.
  • Alongside the printed confirmation that a visa will be issued upon arrival, the traveller must also have a return/onward ticket.
  • A proof of hotel accommodation is also needed, as well as an international certificate of vaccination.
  • Gabonese intending to visit Samoa are required to provide a passport with six months of validity and with atleast two blank pages for stamps on arrival and departure.

Frequently Asked Questions


Is Samoa part of the United States??
Officially Territory of American Samoa , unincorporated territory of the United States consisting of the eastern part of the Samoan archipelago, located in the south-central Pacific Ocean.


Is Samoa a safe place to visit??

Samoa is still safe and it still is the most beautiful country. Therefore, I encourage more tourists to visit our beautiful Samoa , because it is still a safe place.


Are Samoan and Hawaiin and Samoan the same??

Samaon’s are from Samoa, Māori from New Zealand and Hawaiin’s from Hawaii New Samoa and New Zealand are South Pacific countries and Hawaii is a state of the USA. All have different languages, but with the same roots, and share many similar words. Example: love can be aloha (Hawaiin), alofa (Samoan) or aroha (Māori).


Is there crime in Samoa??

Because crime is relatively low, Samoa does not require much of a force but a small one. There are 500 police officers in Samoa.


What race are Samoan??

Samoa people (Samoan: tagata Sāmoa), are a Polynesian ethnic group native to the Samoan Islands, an archipelago in Polynesia, who speak the Samoan language.