Vishnyeva (Belarusian: Ві́шнева, Višnieva; Russian: Вишнево, Vishnevo; Lithuanian: Višnevas; Polish: Wiszniew; Yiddish: וישנעווע, Vishneva) is an agrotown in Valozhyn Raion, Minsk Region, Belarus, near the border with Lithuania.
In 1921–39, the town was part of the Second Polish Republic as part of Nowogródek Voivodeship.
The population of Vishnyeva in 1907 numbered 2,650, of which 1,863 were Jews. However, the entire Jewish population has since disappeared. Most were killed by German soldiers during World War II.
On August 30, 1942, some 1,100 Jews from the town were killed by the SS. The remaining Jews were taken to the ghetto in the nearby town of Valozhyn. A Jewish cemetery remains in the town. The survivors have emigrated.
The city was the birthplace of Shimon Peres, the former President of Israel, who emigrated to Mandatory Palestine with his family in 1934, and Nahum Goldmann, founder and longtime president of the World Jewish Congress. The city was the place of death of Symon Budny.