noun🎓 English idiom

red tape

excessive bureaucratic rules and paperwork

What it means

Red tape refers to the frustrating layers of official rules, forms, and procedures that slow down getting anything done through a government, large company, or institution. It's almost always used negatively, in contexts like permits, visas, customs, healthcare, or grant applications, where simple tasks turn into long bureaucratic ordeals.

Examples

  • Starting a small business here means cutting through endless red tape.
  • The aid was delayed for months by government red tape.
  • He spent half a year tangled in immigration red tape before getting the visa.
  • We need to reduce the red tape that's stopping doctors from treating patients faster.

Where it comes from

From the 16th- and 17th-century English practice of binding important legal and administrative documents with red ribbon or tape — a practical filing system in royal and government offices. By the 1700s the phrase had taken on its figurative meaning of obstructive officialdom.

Related idioms

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