Puntos clave
- Grenada requires proof of onward travel for visa-free and short-visa entries β even though it permits a 90-day visa-free stay for most Western nationalities.
- Airlines flying into Grenada check proof of onward travel often but not consistently β especially on flights from countries with high overstay rates, with a financial incentive (carrier-liability fines) to catch issues at the desk.
- Without a verifiable onward ticket, the fallback is a full-fare one-way bought at the airline desk β typically $200-$400.
- A verifiable reservation with a live PNR (e.g. OnwardTicket.us) is the cheapest legitimate solution, starting at $7.
- Book your onward ticket the night before your inbound flight, with a departure date 5β10 days before your maximum permitted Grenada stay expires.
If you're flying into Grenada on a one-way ticket, you've probably been told you need an onward ticket for Grenada β and you almost certainly do.
Grenada permits a 90-day visa-free stay for most Western nationalities, but the visa-free permission almost always comes with a fine-print requirement: travelers must demonstrate they intend to leave before that stay expires.
Airlines flying into Grenada check proof of onward travel often but not consistently β especially on flights from countries with high overstay rates, and being refused at check-in usually means buying a full-fare one-way ticket on the spot β typically $200-$400.
A verifiable onward reservation from OnwardTicket.us β a real PNR-coded booking, delivered in minutes from $7 β satisfies the rule without locking you into a flight you don't actually want to take. Most travelers exiting Grenada on a placeholder reservation point the booking toward Miami, the cheapest accepted exit route from the Caribbean.
Does Grenada require an onward ticket in 2026?

Yes. The short answer is that Grenada permits a 90-day visa-free stay for most Western nationalities β and that permission to enter is conditional on you not overstaying. The mechanism that enforces "no overstaying" at the border is proof of onward travel.
Whether you're flying in for two weeks of holiday, a month of remote work, or a layover before another destination, the rule is the same: you must show, on demand, a flight reservation that takes you out of Grenada before your permitted stay ends.
In practice, enforcement varies β some airlines and immigration officers ask, others wave you through. Either way, the financial cost of being unprepared is steep: airlines facing carrier-liability fines push the cost onto you, usually in the form of a full-fare one-way ticket bought at the desk, $200-$400.
One useful framing: think of an onward ticket the same way you think of travel insurance. Most of the time you'll never need to show it. But on the day you do, the alternative β being denied boarding β costs hundreds of dollars and a missed trip.
How airlines and immigration check at GND (GND)

Two checks happen back-to-back when you fly into Grenada. The first is at check-in in your departure city. Airlines flying to Grenada check proof of onward travel often but not consistently β especially on flights from countries with high overstay rates. They're motivated: under IATA carrier-liability rules, the airline pays the return-flight cost and a fine if a passenger is refused entry.
That fine ranges from a few hundred dollars to several thousand. So the airline's incentive is to catch issues at the desk β not after you've already landed.
The second check is at immigration in Grenada. Officers at GND (GND) can ask to see your onward ticket as part of their standard interview. They ask less often than airlines do, but the question still comes up β especially if your stated travel plans seem vague.
Modern immigration desks have direct read access to airline reservation systems, which means a screenshot of a fake itinerary is much riskier than it was even five years ago. A real reservation with a live PNR pulls up cleanly when an officer types your name; a fake one doesn't.
If either check goes badly, you have one of three outcomes: (1) buy a full-fare last-minute one-way ticket on the spot, (2) get sent to secondary inspection where the wait can run six to twenty-four hours, or (3) be put on the next flight back at your own expense.
None of these are recoverable from inside an airport. The cheapest insurance against all three is a verifiable onward reservation purchased before you leave home.
What counts as a valid onward ticket for Grenada
Grenada immigration accepts any of the following as proof of onward travel, in descending order of how reliably airline staff will accept them:
- A confirmed flight reservation with a live PNR code. This is what airlines and immigration both verify against. The reservation must be in the same name as your passport and must depart Grenada before your visa-free stay or visa expires.
- An onward ticket service reservation (like OnwardTicket.us). These are real airline reservations β verifiable on "Manage My Booking" β that haven't been fully ticketed. They function exactly the same way at check-in and immigration.
- A bus, ferry, or train ticket exiting Grenada by land. Technically accepted by immigration policy, but airline check-in agents flying into Grenada often refuse to accept land transport as an "onward ticket" for the inbound flight. Use this as a backup, not your primary proof.
- A second-leg flight on the same booking (e.g. a layover or onward flight on the same PNR). This is the gold standard if you have it, but most one-way travelers don't.
Things that do not count, no matter how convincing they look: PDF screenshots from third-party booking sites without a real PNR, unverifiable hold-only itineraries that have already lapsed, or "ticket numbers" that don't pull up in the airline's system. Increasingly, both airline staff and Grenada immigration officers will check these against the actual reservation system before accepting them.
When the rule applies β and a few cases when it doesn't
The onward ticket requirement applies to most short-term visitors to Grenada, including:
- Visa-free arrivals. If you're entering on a visa-free or visa-on-arrival permission, you almost always need to demonstrate the exit.
- Tourist visa holders with a defined maximum stay.
- Transit passengers staying more than a few hours, especially if you leave the airport.
- Digital nomads on a short-term visa β even when the visa permits remote work, the underlying stay length still requires a verifiable exit.
The rule typically does not apply if you hold a long-term residence permit or work visa for Grenada, an open-ended business visa with multiple-entry permission, or a passport from a neighboring country covered by a regional free-movement agreement. Even in those cases, however, airline staff sometimes ask anyway β having a backup onward reservation in your inbox costs $7 and removes the friction.
Travel tip: book your onward reservation to depart 5β10 days before your maximum stay expires, not on the last permitted day. Grenada immigration occasionally bumps your stamped exit date a day or two earlier than expected, and a tight onward booking can technically appear to violate the stay rule even when it doesn't.
Need an onward ticket in the next few minutes?
OnwardTicket.us issues a real, verifiable flight reservation with a live PNR from $7. Accepted by airlines and embassies, delivered to your inbox within minutes.
The cheapest legitimate solution: a verifiable onward reservation
OnwardTicket.us exists specifically for travelers in this situation β flying one-way into Grenada, no firm exit plan, but needing a verifiable reservation to pass check-in.
Pricing starts at $7 for a one-way reservation, $11 for a return, and $16 for a multi-city booking.
Each reservation is a real airline booking with a live PNR that you (or an immigration officer) can verify on the carrier's official "Manage My Booking" page.
Delivery is typically within a few minutes, and the reservation is valid for 24+ hours β long enough to clear both check-in and immigration.
Most travelers entering Grenada on a placeholder reservation point the onward booking toward Miami. It's a cheap, well-served route from Grenada, accepted by every major carrier flying in and out of the country. If your real plan involves multiple onward stops, OnwardTicket.us can also generate a multi-city itinerary that satisfies the rule while preserving your flexibility on the rest of the trip.
The math is straightforward. A $7 onward reservation versus a $200-$400 last-minute one-way ticket at the airline desk is a 50Γ to 100Γ return on the precaution. Even if you'd happily pay for a real exit flight, booking it before you've decided on your travel plan locks you in. The reservation route lets you stay flexible until your trip in Grenada is well underway.
Common Grenada onward-ticket mistakes (and how to avoid them)
We see the same handful of mistakes repeatedly from travelers who get caught at Grenada check-in or arrival. Each one is fixable in advance:
- Booking the onward ticket too late. If you generate the reservation 90 minutes before your flight, you're betting on email delivery and PNR propagation timing. Book the night before, not the morning of.
- Mismatched passport name. The reservation must match your passport exactly, including middle names if your passport shows them. Airlines reject "John Smith" against a passport that reads "John David Smith".
- Using a third-party screenshot. A PDF from an OTA without a verifiable PNR is increasingly treated as a fake by Grenada immigration. Use a service that issues a real reservation in the airline's system.
- Onward date past your permitted stay. If your stay is 90 days, the onward ticket must depart before that window closes. We see travelers book 91-day onwards into a 90-day visa-free country and get rejected.
- Booking land transport for a flight check-in. A bus or ferry to a neighboring country counts at Grenada immigration but often does not count at the desk of the airline flying you in. Use a flight reservation for the inbound airline check.
If any of these sounds familiar, the fix is the same: a verifiable, name-matched, in-window onward reservation booked at least a few hours before you check in.
Frequently Asked Questions
1 Do I really need an onward ticket for Grenada if I have a long passport stay?
Yes β the rule applies to the visa-free or short-stay visa you enter on, not the maximum stay your passport theoretically allows. Even if you have a 90-day visa-free permission, both the airline and Grenada immigration are checking that you have a verifiable exit before that stay window closes. The shorter the stay, the more visibly the rule is enforced.
2 Can I use a refundable flight as proof of onward travel for Grenada?
Technically yes β a fully-refundable real ticket counts. The catch is that 24-hour-cancellation policies vary by airline and fare class, and a $400+ refundable fare often has stricter conditions than a $7 onward-ticket reservation. Most travelers find that an onward-ticket service is cheaper, faster, and avoids the multi-week refund processing window that real airlines use.
3 Will Grenada immigration call the airline to verify my onward ticket?
Sometimes. Officers at GND have direct read-access to airline reservation systems and can pull up your PNR in seconds. This is exactly why a verifiable PNR-coded reservation works and a fake screenshot does not. If your booking is real and live in the airline's system, you pass.
4 What happens if I arrive in Grenada without an onward ticket?
Two scenarios. If the airline catches it at check-in, they'll refuse to board you until you produce one β usually meaning a full-fare one-way ticket bought at the desk. If you slip through and Grenada immigration catches it, you'll be sent to secondary inspection β which can mean a six-to-twenty-four-hour wait, a fine, or being put on the next flight back at your own expense.
5 Is using an onward-ticket service legal in Grenada?
Yes. A real flight reservation that hasn't been fully paid is a legitimate booking under IATA rules, not a forgery. The reservation appears in the airline's system, has a real PNR code, and matches the criteria immigration uses to verify proof of onward travel.
Grenada authorities have no record of prosecuting travelers for using verifiable onward-ticket services β the law targets fake or forged documents, which is the opposite of what these services produce.
6 How far in advance should I book my Grenada onward ticket?
Book it at least a few hours before your inbound flight check-in β ideally the night before. The reservation typically remains valid for 24+ hours, which covers your check-in plus your immigration arrival. Booking too far in advance can mean the reservation expires before you arrive; booking too late means you risk delivery delays during a tight check-in window. The night-before sweet spot is what most experienced travelers use.
Onward Ticket Editorial
Verified AuthorTravel Documentation Expert at OnwardTicket.us
Helping 3,455+ travelers navigate onward travel requirements, visa documentation, and immigration processes.
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