Source: The Global Filipino Magazine

Oman: Reported new HIV test requirement for Filipinos traveling to Oman

11 April 2026
Source: The Global Filipino Magazine
Oman
Philippines
Travel
Travel restrictions

No HIV test, no check-in: Filipino tourists turned away from Oman-bound flights

Filipino nationals traveling to the Sultanate of Oman are now reportedly required to present a certificate of HIV test before departure — a development that has caught many travelers off guard and has yet to be officially confirmed by Philippine authorities.

Multiple accounts from Filipino travelers have emerged in recent weeks, with at least one individual claiming to have been denied boarding on a flight from Thailand to Oman on March 20 after failing to produce an HIV test certificate. The traveler, who asked to remain anonymous, said he was traveling on a 14-day tourist visa and had not been informed of the requirement beforehand.

“I was denied boarding for not having an HIV test,” the traveler recounted. “I told them I was not informed that it was required since I’m only a 14-day free visa traveler, not for work, but they refused to board me.”

The traveler also noted an inconsistency at the gate: a fellow Filipino passenger was initially refused boarding but was later allowed through. He said airline ground staff, when asked where the directive came from, told him it originated from the airline’s head office.

Social media accounts pile up

The traveler’s account was shared on a Facebook page based in Oman, catering to the Filipino community, and the post quickly drew responses from followers who reported the same experience. One commenter, who said she had personally verified the requirement with an immigration officer at Oman’s airport, confirmed that the HIV certificate is checked upon arrival alongside the passport and visa — and is being required specifically of Filipino tourists and visitors, not of those who already hold Omani residency or labor cards.

“Except sa Oman resident or may Labor card yung mga galing bakasyon pabalik dito sa Oman. Di kayo hahanapan,” the commenter wrote, explaining that returning residents are exempt. She added that her sister had been held at an Oman Air check-in counter in the Philippines over the same requirement, with the family told the rule had only been implemented the previous month.

Another follower corroborated the account, saying a fellow Filipino she spoke with — who had traveled to Oman on a 14-day visa-free entry from the Philippines — confirmed the HIV test was now required. A third commenter was more specific on the scope: “New rules, no HIV test for all those applying for tourist visas, family visit visas. Those are not airline rules, they are as per government rules.

The emerging picture from these accounts is that the requirement is being enforced at the airline check-in level — specifically by carriers operating flights to Oman — and applies to Filipino nationals traveling on tourist or visit visas. Filipino residents of Oman returning from vacation appear to be exempt.

What the documents show

A circular bearing the logo of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) of the Sultanate of Oman describes the requirement as an “Explanatory Annex to Circular Regarding Entry Facilities for Nationals of the Philippines.” It specifies that the pre-arrival medical examination focuses on HIV/AIDS testing, that the certificate is accepted from any officially accredited clinic or medical center in the country where the examination is conducted, and that the requirement applies to all Philippine nationals regardless of departure point — including those residing in GCC countries. Children are exempt.

A screenshot of what appears to be Oman Air’s internal airline operations system — displaying a travel information warning screen — also shows the same requirement posted as an active directive to check-in staff: “NATIONALS OF PHILIPPINES MUST OBTAIN A CERTIFICATE OF HIV TEST BEFORE DEPARTURE. THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO CHILDREN.”

OWWA Oman confirms, but details remain thin

When a concerned Filipino reached out to the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) Oman via messaging to ask whether the HIV certificate was also required for tourists, an OWWA representative replied in the affirmative. “Yes that's a new requirement for airlines,” the OWWA representative said. When pressed on the age threshold, the representative confirmed the requirement applies to those 18 years old and above, adding that local clinics were already aware of the process.

OWWA’s response, however, described the requirement as one being enforced by the airlines — consistent with what community members on the ground have observed — rather than framing it as a standalone Omani government directive formally communicated to Manila.

Philippine Embassy silent; travel agency unaware

As of this writing, the Philippine Embassy in Oman has not issued any advisory regarding the HIV testing requirement. The Global Filipino Magazine has reached out to the Embassy for an official statement and is awaiting a response.

TGFM also reached out to a Dubai-based travel agency, whose representative said they had not received any directive from the Omani government on the matter. The agency also noted that a UAE tourist visa holder who had recently transited through Oman to change visa status did not encounter the requirement — raising questions about whether enforcement is consistent across all entry points and traveler categories.

An awkward timing

The development comes at an ironic moment. Oman announced late last year that it would grant Filipino nationals visa-free entry for up to 14 days starting 2026 — a move hailed as a boost to bilateral ties and tourism. By early January 2026, the Omani Foreign Ministry’s entry visas page had been updated to include the Philippines among visa-exempt nationalities. The HIV testing requirement, if enforced as described, effectively layers a new medical prerequisite on top of what was intended to be a more open-door policy for Filipino visitors.

The timing also intersects with the Philippines’ worsening HIV epidemic. According to the World Health Organization, about 252,800 Filipinos are living with HIV in 2025, with an estimated 57 new diagnoses recorded daily — a staggering 550% increase in cases since 2010.

What travelers should know for now

Until an official advisory is issued by the Philippine Department of Migrant Workers, the Department of Foreign Affairs, or the Philippine Embassy in Muscat, the situation remains unconfirmed at the government-to-government level. Based on available accounts, Filipino nationals traveling to Oman on tourist or visit visas — regardless of departure point — are advised to secure an HIV test certificate from an accredited clinic or medical center before flying, as airlines appear to be enforcing the requirement at check-in.

Returning Filipino residents of Oman holding valid residency or labor cards appear to be exempt from the requirement.

The Global Filipino Magazine continues to seek comment from the Philippine Embassy in Muscat, the Department of Migrant Workers, and Oman Air. This is a developing story.