Kazakhstan

🇰🇿

Phone Code

+7

Capital

Astana

Population

19 Million

Native Name

Қазақстан

Region

Asia

Central Asia

Timezones

Alma-Ata Time[1

UTC+06:00

+6 more

Kazakhstan is the world's largest landlocked country and ninth-largest overall, spanning Central Asia and Eastern Europe. A former Soviet republic (independent since 1991), Kazakhstan is known for vast steppes, Soviet-era architecture, futuristic capital city, Silk Road history, and space exploration heritage (Baikonur Cosmodrome). Astana — renamed Nur-Sultan in 2019 and back to Astana in 2022 — is the capital, featuring striking futuristic architecture like Bayterek Tower and Khan Shatyr. Almaty, the largest city and former capital, sits at the foot of the Tian Shan mountains. Visitors are drawn to Astana's futuristic skyline, Almaty's mountains and Soviet architecture, Charyn Canyon (Grand Canyon-like), Big Almaty Lake, Baikonur Cosmodrome rocket launches (world's oldest and largest space launch facility), Turkistan ancient mausoleum, nomadic culture, and Soviet heritage. Kazakhstan offers adventure tourism, Soviet nostalgia, and Central Asian culture with improving infrastructure.

Visa Requirements for Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan has liberalized visa policies significantly. Citizens of over 70 countries including United States, United Kingdom, EU member states, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and many others can enter visa-free for up to 30 days for tourism or business. Citizens of many other countries can obtain e-visas online through the government portal (www.gov.kz/evisa) with processing typically within 5 business days. E-visas cost approximately $60 USD and are valid for 30 days (single or double entry). Embassy visas remain available for nationalities not eligible for e-visa or visa-free entry. Registration with migration police is required for stays exceeding 5 days (hotels usually handle this automatically). Kazakhstan's visa liberalization is part of efforts to boost tourism and position itself as a regional hub.

Common Visa Types

Visa-Free Entry

Up to 30 days; passport must be valid 6 months beyond stay; no registration needed for stays under 5 days; for longer stays, register with migration police (hotels handle automatically); can't work on visa-free status.

For tourism or business for citizens of 70+ countries including US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and many others.

E-Visa (Tourist/Business)

30 days single or double entry; apply at www.gov.kz/evisa; costs ~$60 USD; processing 5 business days typically; requires passport scan, photo, hotel confirmation, travel itinerary; print e-visa to present at entry.

For nationalities not eligible for visa-free entry, applied for online before travel.

Embassy Visa

30-90 days depending on visa type; requires application form, passport, photos, invitation letter (for business), hotel booking; processing time varies by embassy; fees depend on nationality and processing speed.

Traditional visa obtained through Kazakhstani embassy or consulate for nationalities not eligible for visa-free or e-visa.

Migration Registration

Must register within 5 days of arrival; hotels register guests automatically; for private accommodation, register at local migration police office; fines for non-registration; keep registration slip with passport.

Mandatory registration with migration police for all visitors staying more than 5 calendar days.

Important Travel Information

Registration requirement: MUST register with migration police if staying over 5 days. Hotels handle automatically. For private stays, register at local migration police within 5 days. Keep registration slip. Fines/problems at exit if not registered.

Passport validity: Must be valid for at least 6 months beyond intended departure. Blank pages required for stamps.

Language: Kazakh is official state language, Russian widely spoken (Soviet legacy). English limited outside hotels and tourist areas. Russian essential for independent travel. Learn Cyrillic alphabet basics.

Travel Overview

Kazakhstan is best experienced as a country of scale and contrast rather than a checklist destination. Astana presents a deliberately futuristic capital in the middle of steppe landscapes, while Almaty offers a greener, more lived-in urban atmosphere framed by the Tian Shan foothills. Between and beyond these hubs, the country opens into very different travel identities: Soviet-era modernity, Silk Road heritage, mountain and canyon nature, and high-tech symbolism tied to Baikonur and the space age. Distances are vast, so strong itineraries usually focus on one or two corridors rather than trying to cross the whole country quickly. This is part of Kazakhstan's appeal: the journey itself, whether by long-distance train, domestic flight, or overland route, is central to understanding how geography shapes daily life. For visitors interested in post-Soviet transitions, architecture, and emerging Central Asian cultural scenes, Kazakhstan offers depth that is often missed in shorter regional summaries.

Discover Kazakhstan

Astana is one of the most distinctive purpose-shaped capitals in Eurasia. Its skyline of symbolic state buildings, broad boulevards, and engineered urban axes reflects Kazakhstan's post-independence nation-building narrative. Landmarks like Bayterek Tower and Khan Shatyr are not only tourist sites but visual statements of political identity and modernization strategy. The city is especially rewarding for travelers interested in architecture, civic planning, and contemporary state symbolism.

Ways to Experience This Destination

Post-Soviet Urban Exploration

Astana and Almaty for architecture, museums, civic spaces, and contemporary urban culture in a transforming Central Asian context.

Mountain and Nature Travel

Tian Shan foothills, Big Almaty Lake, and canyon routes for travelers prioritizing landscapes and outdoor day trips.

Historical and Silk Road Context

Turkistan and southern heritage corridors for Islamic architecture, mausoleums, and pre-Soviet historical depth.

Space and Technology Interest

Baikonur-focused itineraries for visitors interested in launch history, Soviet science, and aerospace infrastructure.

Long-Route Overland Travel

Train and domestic-flight combinations across major distances for travelers who want to experience Kazakhstan's geographic scale directly.

Money & Currency

Money & Currency
лв

Kazakhstani Tenge (KZT)

Currency code: KZT

Practical Money Tips

Kazakhstani Tenge (KZT) — exchange USD or EUR on arrival in Almaty or Astana

Kazakhstan uses the Kazakhstani Tenge (KZT, symbol ₸). Check the current rate before travel — the tenge is oil-linked and Kazakhstan is a major oil exporter, so the currency tracks crude loosely. Exchange offices (обменники) in Almaty's city centre and in Astana offer the best rates — consistently better than airport counters. Bring USD or EUR in clean, undamaged notes; older series USD bills (pre-2013) are sometimes refused at stricter exchange points. The Russian ruble is also accepted at many exchange offices near the Russian border but at less convenient rates. Avoid street currency traders.

ATMs widely available in Almaty and Astana; Kaspi Bank and Halyk Bank ATMs are the most reliable for foreign cards

ATMs are plentiful in Almaty and Astana, and reasonably available in Shymkent, Aktau, and other regional centres. Kaspi Bank and Halyk Bank machines reliably accept international Visa and Mastercard cards. Typical withdrawal limits: 150,000–300,000 KZT per transaction. ATM fees: your own bank's international withdrawal fee plus occasionally a small local fee. In smaller towns, rural areas, and national parks like Charyn Canyon, ATMs are sparse or absent — withdraw sufficient KZT in the city before heading out. Notify your bank before travel as Kazakhstan can trigger fraud alerts.

Cards accepted in modern venues — Kaspi Pay dominant for locals; Apple Pay and Google Pay functional via international cards

Visa and Mastercard are accepted at hotels, larger restaurants, and shopping centres in Almaty and Astana. Kazakhstan's dominant payment ecosystem is Kaspi Bank's own QR payment system (Kaspi Pay/QR), used by most locals — you will see QR codes everywhere but this requires a Kazakhstani Kaspi account. For visitors, contactless card payments work at larger chains. Apple Pay and Google Pay function at contactless terminals when you have an international card linked. Local businesses, bazaars (Zelyony Bazaar in Almaty, Karaganda bazaars), taxis, and rural accommodation are cash-only. Always carry KZT cash for daily spending.

Budget guide: street samsa ~150 KZT; restaurant meal 2,000–5,000 KZT; Charyn Canyon taxi 15,000–25,000 KZT from Almaty

Kazakhstan is affordable by European standards. Street food: samsa (baked pastry) 100–200 KZT; lagman noodle soup at a local canteen 800–1,500 KZT. Mid-range restaurant in Almaty: 3,000–8,000 KZT per person with drinks. A taxi from Almaty to Charyn Canyon (200 km): 15,000–25,000 KZT negotiated. Hotel in Almaty: budget guesthouses from 5,000–8,000 KZT/night; business hotels 25,000–50,000 KZT. Almaty metro: 80 KZT/ride. Tipping is not traditional but a 5–10% tip at restaurants is appreciated in tourist areas. Yurt stays on the steppe: 5,000–12,000 KZT/night including meals.

Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.

Common Money Questions

Cities with missions

Where this country maintains embassies or consulates

States & Regions in Kazakhstan

Explore different regions and their cities.

Diplomatic Network

Kazakhstan Embassies Worldwide

Hosted missions

Embassies in Kazakhstan

These foreign embassies and consulates are based here. Choose a mission to open its in-depth guide and contact details.

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Need help checking visa requirements or applying for your trip to Kazakhstan?

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