Argentine passport


Argentine passports are issued to citizens of Argentina by the National Registry for People. They were issued exclusively by the Argentine Federal Police up to 2011. Their primary use is to facilitate international travel.
Argentine passports are valid for travel all over the world, but some countries require a visa. For traveling within South America, Argentines do not need to use a passport, as they may use their National Identity Document.
On June 15, 2012, the Argentine Interior Ministry announced the immediate introduction of biometric passports. The new passports will have unique numbers, a significant change from the current policy, where passport numbers were the national ID number of the holders.

Bureaucracy

In accordance with Presidential Decree 2015/66, in order to get an Argentine passport, a person must go to the nearest Civil Registry and present his/her National Identity Document, birth certificate and a proof of marital status. If the person is an Argentine citizen by naturalisation rather than by birth, a Citizenship Certificate must also be presented. Citizens under the age of 18 may only get a passport with parental authorization. Argentines living outside the country must follow the same procedure at an Argentine Embassy or Consulate.
Regular Passport price is 550 ARS. Applicants usually receive their passports via postal mail within 15 days. There is an express service for 1250 ARS and an ultrafast passport for 3675 ARS, only available at Ministro Pistarini International Airport in Buenos Aires, with the possibility of getting a passport in only 15 minutes, if there are any proofs of an international flight for that same day.
Since January 2011, in all cases, Argentine passports are valid for 10 years. Beforehand, they were only given in 5-year-periods.
Passports are not issued to persons who are under arrest because of criminal offenses, or to those who appear as 'dangerous' in accordance with the South American Police Agreement of 1920.

Regular passport

In accordance with Mercosur regulations, it is blue-covered, with the legend MERCOSUR written on its top, followed by the country's name in Spanish, the national coat of arms and the word PASAPORTE. A biometric passport has the e-passport symbol at the bottom.
It has a data page with a machine-readable zone and a digital photograph of the passport holder. All the information is written in Spanish and English.
The previous version also included:
A map of South America appears on the back of Argentine passports, showing the country's location within the continent, together with the Argentine Antarctic Claim.

Passport message

Passports of many countries contain a message addressed to authorities of other countries identifying the bearer as a citizen of the issuing country, requesting that he or she be allowed to enter and pass through the other country, and requesting that, when necessary, he or she be given assistance consistent with international norms. In Argentine passports, the message is in Spanish, English, Portuguese and French. The message is:
In Spanish:
In English:
In Portuguese:
In French:

Other types of passport

The Argentine Ministry of Foreign Affairs also issues diplomatic passports to Argentine diplomats accredited overseas and their eligible dependents, and to citizens who reside in Argentina and travel abroad for diplomatic work. The Ministry also issues official passports to Government employees assigned overseas, either permanently or temporarily, and their eligible dependents, and to members of Congress who travel abroad on official business.
Under special circumstances, if a woman is stateless but married to an Argentine citizen, the Federal Police will issue a Pasaporte de Esposa de Argentino in order to leave the country. The same applies for persons under the age of 18 who were adopted by Argentine parents.