Pitcairninseln

🇵🇳

Telefonvorwahl

+870

Hauptstadt

Adamstown

Bevölkerung

Pitcairninsulaner

Einheimischer Name

Pitcairn Islands

Region

Ozeanien

Polynesien

Zeitzone

Pacific Standard Time (North America

UTC-08:00

Pitcairn Island represents the ultimate adventure in remote travel—a volcanic speck in the vast South Pacific, roughly 5,500 kilometers from New Zealand and 5,300 kilometers from South America, making it one of Earth's most isolated inhabited places. With a current population hovering around 50 people (it has ranged between 40-60 in recent decades), Pitcairn holds the distinction of being the world's least populated jurisdiction. This British Overseas Territory is legendary as the final refuge of the HMS Bounty mutineers who, after their famous 1789 mutiny against Captain Bligh, settled here in 1790 with their Tahitian companions, burning the Bounty to avoid detection. Today's Pitcairn Islanders are predominantly descendants of those nine mutineers and the Polynesian men and women who accompanied them. The community speaks Pitkern, a unique creole language blending 18th-century English with Tahitian, alongside modern English. Life on Pitcairn follows rhythms unchanged for generations—the island has no airport, no harbor, and no scheduled passenger services. Visitors arrive aboard supply ships that call every few months or on private yachts brave enough to navigate the challenging waters. Landing is via longboat through often-turbulent surf, operated with remarkable skill by Pitcairn's residents. The island's dramatic landscape features towering cliffs dropping into azure waters, lush valleys growing tropical fruits, historic sites including Fletcher Christian's cave, and Adamstown—the world's smallest capital 'city' where all residents live. For those seeking the ultimate off-grid, once-in-a-lifetime adventure, Pitcairn offers experiences found nowhere else on Earth.

Entry Requirements for Pitcairn Island

Visiting Pitcairn Island requires advance planning measured in months, not weeks. All visitors, regardless of nationality, must obtain entry clearance from Pitcairn Island Immigration before arrival. There are no visa exemptions—even British citizens require advance permission. Applications should be submitted at least three months before intended travel, though longer lead times (6+ months) are recommended given the complexity of arranging transport. Entry clearance applications are submitted through the Pitcairn Islands Office or via the official Pitcairn government website. Applications require detailed information including full passport details, travel itinerary, confirmation of transportation to and from Pitcairn (name of vessel, captain details, dates), accommodation arrangements (home stays with island families must be arranged—no hotels exist), comprehensive travel insurance including medical evacuation coverage, character references, and a written statement of purpose for visiting. Applicants must demonstrate sufficient financial means and agree to conditions including respecting local laws and customs. The Pitcairn Island Council reviews applications and can refuse entry without providing reasons, though legitimate tourism applications are generally approved. Fees apply for entry clearance and are payable to the Pitcairn Islands Government. Additional fees cover accommodation with island families (typically arranged through the immigration process) and landing fees for yacht visitors. Given the island's remoteness and tiny population, authorities take immigration seriously to ensure visitors understand the challenges and can safely visit without placing undue burden on the limited resources of the 50-person community.

Gängige Visumtypen

Visitor Entry Clearance (Standard)

Typically 14 days; apply via Pitcairn Islands Office website; requires application form, passport copy (6+ months validity), vessel details, comprehensive travel insurance (USD $100,000+ medical evacuation), character references (2), visit purpose letter, home stay confirmation; entry clearance fees (NZD $100-150); processing several weeks; extensions rare.

For all tourists visiting Pitcairn Island regardless of nationality for tourism purposes.

Yacht Visitor Clearance

Few days to one week typically; requires vessel details (name, registration, flag, dimensions, crew list), captain info, cruising itinerary, anchoring dates, passenger passport details, vessel/crew insurance, purpose; landing fees per person; apply months in advance; departures often weather-dependent.

For private yachts and all crew/passengers planning to anchor at Pitcairn.

Extended Stay / Volunteer Placement

3 months to 2 years; requires professional qualifications, extensive background checks, medical certificates, willingness for isolated living, Island Council interviews; accommodation, meals, small stipends provided; advertised sporadically on Pitcairn government website; specific placement approvals required beyond visitor clearance.

For volunteers in teaching, medical services, construction, infrastructure, or administrative support roles.

Settlement / Immigration

Permanent; requires skills demonstration, financial self-sufficiency (2+ years), good health/character, genuine commitment; extensive documentation (credentials, financial statements, police clearances, medical exams, references, settlement plans); visit before applying recommended; free land available for approved settlers; Governor approval after Island Council recommendation; 12-24+ months processing.

For prospective immigrants with valuable skills (trades, healthcare, teaching, fishing, agriculture) seeking permanent residence.

Essential Travel Information

NO COMMERCIAL PASSENGER SERVICES exist to Pitcairn. The only regular service is quarterly supply ships from New Zealand (MV Claymore II or chartered vessels) that may accept limited passengers—bookings extremely difficult and expensive (NZD $5,000-10,000+ per person each way). Journey takes 7-10 days from New Zealand. Private yachts are the primary visitor access, requiring blue-water sailing experience and seaworthy vessels.

Landing on Pitcairn is via longboat through surf at Bounty Bay—the only accessible landing. Sea conditions frequently prevent landing. Visitors have been stranded on yachts for days waiting for calm seas, or had to depart without landing. There is no guarantee you can land even with entry clearance. Flexibility and patience are essential.

NO HOTELS, GUESTHOUSES, OR COMMERCIAL ACCOMMODATIONS exist. Visitors stay with Pitcairn families in their homes as paying guests (home stays). Accommodation must be arranged through immigration process—you cannot arrive without pre-arranged home stay. Facilities are simple but clean. Expect basic amenities.

Vertretungen vor Ort

Ausländische Vertretungen in Pitcairninseln

Diese Botschaften und Konsulate haben ihren Sitz in diesem Land. Wähle eine Vertretung, um Details und Kontaktinformationen zu öffnen.

Noch keine veröffentlichten Einträge

Wir haben für dieses Land noch keine ausländischen Vertretungen veröffentlicht. Unser Team ergänzt laufend geprüfte Datensätze.

Pitcairn Island is not for ordinary travelers—this is expedition-level adventure travel for those seeking the extraordinary. If you dream of standing where the Bounty mutineers first landed, of being welcomed into a community of 50 people maintaining a unique way of life against all odds, of swimming in waters rarely touched by outsiders, and experiencing one of Earth's last truly remote inhabited places, then Pitcairn calls to you. This journey requires extensive planning, flexibility, significant resources, and an adventurous spirit. The rewards are immeasurable—stories you'll tell for a lifetime, experiences so rare that few humans ever have them, and the knowledge that you've visited one of the world's most inaccessible and fascinating corners. Start planning 12-18 months ahead, research thoroughly, arrange your passage (yacht charter or supply ship), and prepare for an adventure beyond imagination. Pitcairn awaits those brave enough to make the journey.

Plan Your Pitcairn Expedition