It May Soon Be Easier to Visit the ‘Gates of Hell’
By Jenn Gidman
Turkmenistan, long known for its fortress-like borders and scarcity of foreign visitors, is making tentative moves toward welcoming more tourists. In April, the government announced a plan to streamline its notoriously labyrinthine visa process, sparking cautious optimism among tour operators and adventurous travelers, per CNN. For now, though, the much-anticipated changes—like online applications and scrapping the requirement to obtain a “Letter of Introduction,” part of a process that “often [deters] potential visitors due to its complexity and lack of transparency,” notes Travel Noire—remain in bureaucratic limbo.
For decades, Turkmenistan has ranked among the world’s most closed-off nations, its isolation rivaling that of North Korea and Eritrea. A Soviet-style travel system lingers: Visitors are still funneled through state-approved tour groups and face vetting that can drag on for months. But if the reforms materialize, the barriers to entry could drop, potentially giving the country’s trickle of visitors a much-needed boost.