History
Often erroneously described as a ''Bermuda Passport'', this is identical to the passports issued in other British Overseas Territories except for minor differences referencing Bermuda. All recipients of new or replacement British passports issued in Bermuda, prior to 2002, received this passport, whether they possessed Bermudian status or not. The citizenship of the holder was indicated by rubber stamp in the appropriate field inside the passport. Prior to 1983, the citizenship for British citizens from the United Kingdom or the colonies was ''Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies''. After 1983, when citizens in the United Kingdom became ''British Citizens'', colonials became ''British Dependent Territories Citizens'', this type of British Citizenship did not entitle the holder to right of abode in any British Dependent Territory, including Bermuda. Bermudian status was indicated by the addition of ''(Bermuda)'' after ''British Dependent Territories Citizen'' on the rubber stamp), losing the right of abode in the United Kingdom unless already settled in the United Kingdom or having been born in, or having a parent who had been born in, the United Kingdom. Prior to 2002, it was not legal for a person to hold two British passports. A person who possessed both Bermudian status and right of abode (or ''settled'' status) in the United Kingdom could have both indicated in the same passport. A ''British citizen'' who did not possess Bermudian status would receive the supposedly ''Bermudian passport'' if obtaining it in Bermuda, with the citizenship stamped as "British Citizen" only (unless the holder also possessed status in another territory or held yet another type of British Citizenship). Those who held neither Bermudian status nor the right of abode in the United Kingdom, but who were entitled to a British Passport would also receive the "Bermudian" Passport in Bermuda, with the appropriate citizenship stamped inside. Before 1983, a Bermudian ''Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies'', and, after 1983, a ''British Dependent Territories Citizen'' with Bermudian status who did not possess the right of abode in the United Kingdom, who obtained a British Passport in the United Kingdom, or at a United Kingdom Consulate in a foreign country, received a normal British Passport (not the ''Bermudian'' passport) with the appropriate citizenship rubber-stamped inside. In 1988, when the blue British Passports were replaced with a burgundy one of a common European Union pattern, the passports issued in the British Dependent Territories were changed accordingly (entitlement to free movement in the European Union was indicated only on the passports on the United Kingdom type passports, with ''EUROPEAN UNION'' added above ''UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND'' on the outside of the front cover (where the ''Bermudian'' passport reads only ''BRITISH PASSPORT''). In 2002, ''British Dependent Territories Citizenship'' was re-named ''British Overseas Territories Citizenship'', remaining as the default citizenship for British citizens born in what was at the same time re-designated the ''British Overseas Territories'', and the barriers that had been put in place in 1983 to end free movement of most Overseas Citizens (excepting Falkland Islanders and later Gibraltarians) into the United Kingdom were removed. British Overseas Territories Citizens were also entitled to obtain ''British Citizenship'' by obtaining a normal British Passport with the citizenship stamped as ''British Citizen''. The restriction against holding more than one British passport was removed. The Department of Immigration was no longer permitted to issue new or replacement passports except for British Overseas Citizenship holders. The citizenship for these was entered only as ''British Overseas Territories Citizen''. Bermudian status was stamped in separately on one of the internal pages. Without the stamp indicating that the passport holder is registered as a Bermudian, a ''Bermudian'' Passport with the citizenship entered as ''British Overseas Territories Citizen'' is not sufficient to identify the holder as a Bermudian. The endorsement indicating the holder has Bermudian status can be stamped into any British Passport, with the citizenship entered as either 'British Overseas Territories Citizen'' or 'British Citizen''. As the ''Bermudian'' passport still lacked ''EUROPEAN UNION'' on the front cover, and used the country code ''BMU'' in the Machine Readable Zone (MRZ) inside instead of the ''GBR'' indicated in the British Citizen/United Kingdom passport, it is not necessarily accepted in other European Union countries as entitling the holder to free movement within the European Union. As a consequence, the only practical reason a Bermudian would obtain the ''Bermudian'' passport, whether in addition or in preference to the normal British passport with Bermudian status stamped inside, was for the purpose of entering the United States of America, which has lower entry restrictions on Bermudians than on other British nationals, but specifies they must present a British Passport with ''Government of Bermuda'' on the front, citizenship entered as either ''British Dependent Territories Citizen'' or ''British Overseas Territories Citizen'', and the endorsement stamped to show the holder has been registered as a Bermudian. Because the HM Passport Office in the UK became the sole issuer of all British passports in 2016, only the normal (UK-type) British Passport is issued, whatever the type of British Citizenship entered. Bermuda Immigration enters the Bermudian status stamp separately (passports applied for in Bermuda can be obtained by handing the application to the Department of Immigration in Bermuda, which forwards it to the HM Passport office and receives it back on behalf of the applicant).Application
Adult applicants can apply for a standard BermudianPassport statement
The inside cover of Bermudian passports contains the following words in English only: ::Travel
United States
Mexico
Travellers with Bermudian passports are allowed visa-free entry to Mexico. No other British Overseas Territory passport allows visa-free entry to Mexico.Visa RequirementsSee also
*References
External links