Indian passport

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Indian passport
Indian Passport.svg
The front cover of an Indian passport (2021).
Type Passport
Issued by Ministry of External Affairs
First issued1920 (first version)
2021 (latest version Biometric Machine Readable Passport )
PurposeIdentification
Eligibility Indian citizenship
Expiration10 years (Adult)
5 or 10 years (age 15 to 18)
5 years (Minor)
CostAdult (36 pages): 1,500 [1]
Adult (60 pages): 2,000 [1]
Minor (36 pages): 1,000 [1]
Note: If the application for renewal of passport is made under the Tatkaal (expedited processing), the additional Tatkaal fee of 2,000 is to be paid in addition to the regular application fee. [1]

An Indian passport is a passport issued by the Ministry of External Affairs of the Republic of India to Indian citizens for the purpose of international travel. It enables the bearer to travel internationally and serves as proof of Indian citizenship as per the Passports Act (1967). The Passport Seva (Passport Service) unit of the Consular, Passport & Visa (CPV) Division of the Ministry of External Affairs functions as the issuing authority and is responsible for issuing Indian passports on application to all eligible Indian citizens. Indian passports are issued at 93 passport offices located across India and at 197 Indian diplomatic missions abroad. [2]

Contents

As of 12 December 2022, 7.2 percent (approximately 96 million) of Indian citizens possessed a valid passport, with Kerala having the highest number of passport holders of all Indian states. Previously, passports were not popular among the masses due to a time-consuming and complicated process and limited access to the passport facilitation centres located only in major cities. With the expansion of centres and technological improvements, accompanied by increased outsourcing of professionals and an expanding middle-class, the percentage is expected to go up. [3] [4]

History

British Indian passport BIpassport.jpg
British Indian passport

British Indian Empire

British Indian passports were issued to British subjects of the British Indian Empire, as well as to British subjects from other parts of the British Empire, and subjects of the British protected states in India (i.e. British protected persons of the 'princely states'). [5] These passports were introduced in British India after the First World War. [6] The Indian Passport Act of 1920 required the use of passports, established controls on the foreign travel of Indians, and foreigners travelling to and within India. [7] The passport was based on the format agreed upon by the 1920 League of Nations International Conference on Passports. [8] However, the British Indian passport had very limited usage, being valid for travel only within the British Empire, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, France, Spain, Norway, Sweden and Holland. [9]

Dominion of India

The use of the passport was discontinued after the establishment of the Dominion of India and Dominion of Pakistan in 1947, and its bearers were entitled to opt for Indian, Pakistani or British nationality.

Joint India-Pakistan passport issued to migrants to enable them to visit family, friends and ancestral homes located on the other side of the Radcliffe line. India-Pakistan passport.jpg
Joint India-Pakistan passport issued to migrants to enable them to visit family, friends and ancestral homes located on the other side of the Radcliffe line.

Passport laws were made strict in both the countries in 1952. Initially, Indian passports were granted only to "respectable" people. A literacy test was required, and passports were denied to Communist Party of India members. [10] Only in 1967 did the Supreme Court rule that every citizen had the right to a passport. [11]

Types of passport

Indian Passport.svg
Indian Official Passport.svg
Indian Diplomatic Passport.svg
Left to right: ordinary (navy blue), official (white), and diplomatic (maroon) passports of India.

In addition, select passport offices in India, as well as overseas missions, were authorised to issue regular India-Bangladesh Passport to Indian nationals resident in West Bengal and the North-Eastern States; India-Sri Lanka Passport to Indian nationals resident in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry; and the India-Pakistan Passport to Indian nationals whose ancestral homes lay on the other side of the Radcliffe Line. These three passports respectively permitted travel to Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan only and were not valid for travel to other foreign countries. Both India and Bangladesh stopped issuing the India-Bangladesh Passport in 2013 due to changes in ICAO regulations. [12] [13]

Tatkaal and SVP

Tatkaal Passports (for urgent needs), [14] and Short Validity Passport (SVP) [15] are also available and these are likely considered Ordinary Passports once issued.

e-Passports

The need for e-Passports (or Biometric passport) in India was realised in the late 2010s. Till early 2022, the government issued 20,000 official and diplomatic e-passports, but not to ordinary citizens of India. The government had issued the first e-passport to former President of India, Pratibha Patil in 2008. [16]

The Union government officially announced to roll out e-passports on the lines of international standards for Indian citizens in the 2022-23 fiscal year. The Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced the same during the Union Budget 2022 address to the Lok Sabha. ICAO compliant passports with embedded electronic chip and digital inlays have been aimed for speedy immigration checks and high security. For the roll out of e-Passports, the Ministry of External Affairs entered into a contract with the Tata Consultancy Services. This has been officially termed as Passport Seva Programme V2.0. [17]

Physical appearance

Early passports dating back to the British Empire were handwritten; in addition, more than a hundred thousand handwritten passports were issued between 1997 and 2000 with 20-year validity dates. These passports have been ruled invalid by the Indian government and holders must replace them with machine-readable versions with validity for 10 years due to ICAO regulations. [18]

Versions prior to 2021 had deep bluish cover with golden coloured printing. The Emblem of India emblazoned in the centre of the front cover. The words भारत गणराज्य in Devanagari and REPUBLIC OF INDIA were inscribed below the Emblem whereas पासपोर्ट in Devanagari and PASSPORT in English were inscribed above the emblem.

The latest version of 2021 has the official name of the country and "Passport" engravings' positions changed mutually. The passport has the passport number perforated. The pages have been re-designed.

The standard passport contains 36 pages, but frequent travellers can opt for a passport containing 60 pages. [19]

Bio-data page of an Indian Passport Issued from 2021 to present Indian Passport Bio Page 2021.jpg
Bio-data page of an Indian Passport Issued from 2021 to present

Identity Information Page

Bio-data page of an Indian passport issued from 2013 till 2021 Indian Passport Information page blank new.jpg
Bio-data page of an Indian passport issued from 2013 till 2021
Bio-data page of an Indian passport issued prior to 2013 Indian Passport Information page blank.png
Bio-data page of an Indian passport issued prior to 2013

Passport note

All passports contain a note in Hindi and English, nominally from the President of India, addressing the authorities of all countries and territories:

इसके द्वारा, भारत गणराज्य के राष्ट्रपति के नाम पर, उन सब से जिनका इस बात से सरोकार हो, यह प्रार्थना एवं अपेक्षा की जाती है कि वे वाहक को बिना रोक-टोक, स्वतंत्रतापूर्वक आने-जाने दें, और उसे हर प्रकार की ऐसी सहायता और सुरक्षा प्रदान करें जिसकी उसे आवश्यकता हो ।

भारत गणराज्य के राष्ट्रपति के आदेश से

These are to request and require in the Name of the President of the Republic of India all those whom it may concern to allow the bearer to pass freely without let or hindrance, and to afford him or her, every assistance and protection of which he or she may stand in need.

By order of the President of the Republic of India

The note bearing page is typically stamped and signed by the issuing authority in the name of the President of the Republic of India.

Languages

The text of Indian Passport is printed in Hindi and English, two of the twenty-two scheduled official languages (as per Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India) at the Union level.

Emigration check

A page in the Indian passport with Emigration check note. Warning inside Ankit Love's 2006 Republic of Inda passport.jpg
A page in the Indian passport with Emigration check note.

Holders of Emigration Check Required (ECR) type passports need a clearance called an Emigration Check from the Government of India's Protector of Emigrants when going to selected countries on a work visa. This is to prevent the exploitation of Indian workers (especially the unskilled and less-educated) when going abroad, particularly to Middle Eastern countries. ECR type passport holders travelling on a tourist visa do not need a clearance; this is known as an Emigration Check Suspension.

Emigration Check Not Required (ECNR) status passports are granted to:

In accordance with a ruling by the Ministry of External Affairs, passports issued from 2007 onwards do not have the ECNR stamp affixed; instead, a blank page 2 of the passport is deemed to have been ECNR endorsed. As a result, only ECR stamps are now affixed to Indian passports. For passports issued before January 2007, no notation in the passport means ECR. For passports issued in or after January 2007, no notation in the passport means ECNR. If Emigration Check is Required, there will be an endorsement in the passport regarding ECR.

Features

Since 25 November 2015, Indian passports that are handwritten or with an original date of expiry extending to 20 years have not been valid under ICAO travel regulations. [20] With more recent Indian passports the personal particulars of the passport holder, that were hitherto printed on the inner cover page, are printed on the second page of the document. Another added security feature in the newer non-handwritten passports is a ghost picture of the holder found on the right side of the second page. Apart from stymieing criminals from printing fake passports, recent changes also help prevent smudging of the document because of inkjet printers. [21] [22]

Fees

The price for a standard passport in India: [23]

Indian passports can also be issued outside India, for which fees vary by country.

Senior Citizens and children below 8 years get 10% discount as per official Fee Structure [24]

Issuance

Passport Seva Kendra

In September 2007, the Indian Union Council of Ministers approved a new passport issuance system under the Passport Seva Project. As per the project, front-end activities of passport issuance, dispatch of passports, online linking with police, and Central Printing Unit for centralised printing of passports will be put in place. The new system is trying to be 'timely, transparent, more accessible and reliable manner' for passport issuance. The applicant has to apply for fresh/reissue of passport through the Passport Seva system at one of the 77 Passport offices known as "Passport Seva Kendra"s operating throughout the country.

Biometric passport

India initiated the first phase of biometric e-passport for Diplomatic passport holders in India and abroad. The new passports have been designed locally by the Central Passport Organisation, the India Security Press and IIT Kanpur. It contains a security chip with all personal data and digital images. In the first phase new passports will have a 64KB chip carrying a photograph of the passport holder and in subsequent phases it will have a fingerprint. The new passport has already been tested with passport readers in the United States and has 4-second response time, while the US Passport has 10-second response time. It need not be carried in a metal jacket for security reasons. It will first need to be skimmed through a reader, after which it would generate an access code which then unlocks the chip for reader access. [25]

In India, the e-passport is under its first phase of deployment and is restricted to Diplomatic passport holders. On 25 June 2008 the Indian Passport Authority issued the e-passport to the then President of India Pratibha Patil. [26] As of 2016, the Government has plans to issue e-passports to all of its citizens. Also the Government has authorized Indian Security Press to float a global three-stage tender for procurement of ICAO-compliant electronic contactless inlays along with its operating system, which is required for the manufacture of Biometric Passports. [27] The necessary procurement have been initiated by India Security Press, Nasik by calling for Global tender for the supply of electronic contactless inlays. [28] The actual transition to the new age passport is expected to commence on the successful completion of the tendering and procurement process. [29] The Biometric E-Passport work is currently in progress/pipeline and is yet to be available for Ordinary Passport holders. [30]

During the 2022 Union budget of India speech, Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that e-Passports with embedded chip and futuristic technology will be rolled out in 2022–23. It contains microchips that would have important security data stored in them, which enhances the convenience of citizens in their overseas travel. The Ministry of External Affairs has stated that the digital passport will allow greater security for personal data as well as smoother immigration process. [31] [32]

Passport power and visa requirements

Visa requirements for Indian citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of India.

Passport Power Ranking and visa-free travel

Visa requirements for Indian citizens
Republic of India
Freedom of movement
Visa not required
Visa available both on arrival or online (eVisa)
Visa on arrival
eVisa
Visa required prior to arrival Visa Requirements for Indian Citizens.svg
Visa requirements for Indian citizens
  Republic of India
  Visa not required
  Visa available both on arrival or online (eVisa)
  Visa on arrival
  eVisa
  Visa required prior to arrival

As of January 2024, Henley Passport Index ranks Indian passport at 85th place, moving down one place from last year's rank, with visa-free or visa on arrival access to 62 nations and territories to Indian citizens. [33]

The Passport Index currently ranks Indian passport at 67th place out of 93 countries on global ranking with 73rd mobility ranking (based on visa-free or visa on arrival access to nations or territories).

Minister of State for External Affairs V. Muraleedharan in his reply to an unstarred question in Rajya Sabha in November 2019 stated that the rank of the Indian passport on the Henley Passport Index is expected to improve. [34] [35] [36]

Indian citizens can live and work freely in Nepal under the generous terms of the 1950 Indo-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship.

Foreign travel statistics

According to the statistics these are the numbers of Indian visitors to various countries in 2017 (unless otherwise noted)

Foreign travel statistics
DestinationNumber of visitors
Flag of American Samoa.svg  American Samoa [note 1] [37] 63
Flag of Angola.svg  Angola [38] 9,170
Blank flag.svg  Antarctica [note 2] [39] 292
Flag of Antigua and Barbuda.svg  Antigua and Barbuda [note 2] [40] 366
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia [note 2] [41] 302,200
Flag of Austria.svg  Austria [note 3] [note 1] [42] 147,300
Flag of Azerbaijan.svg  Azerbaijan [note 1] [43] 6,012
Flag of Barbados.svg  Barbados [note 3] [note 1] [44] 900
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium [note 1] [45] 44,898
Flag of Bhutan.svg  Bhutan [note 2] [46] 172,751
Bandera de Bolivia (Estado).svg  Bolivia [note 1] [47] 1,338
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg  Bosnia and Herzegovina [note 2] [48] 1,700
Flag of Botswana.svg  Botswana [49] 17,413
Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil [note 2] [50] 16,916
Flag of Cambodia.svg  Cambodia [note 1] [51] 46,131
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada [note 2] [52] 261,801
Flag of the Cayman Islands.svg  Cayman Islands [note 2] [note 4] [53] 292
Flag of Chile.svg  Chile [note 2] [54] 4,468
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China [note 1] [55] [56] 799,100
Flag of Colombia.svg  Colombia [57] 5,402
Flag of the Republic of the Congo.svg  Congo [note 5] [58] 2,373
Flag of Costa Rica.svg  Costa Rica [note 2] [59] 7,415
Flag of Croatia.svg  Croatia [note 2] [60] 55,745
Flag of Cuba.svg  Cuba [note 2] [60] 2
Flag of Dominica.svg  Dominica [61] 97
Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg  Dominican Republic [note 2] [62] 4,649
Flag of Eswatini.svg  Eswatini [note 1] [63] 6,867
Flag of France.svg  France [64] 524,055
Flag of French Polynesia.svg  French Polynesia [note 2] [65] 379
Flag of Georgia.svg  Georgia [note 2] [66] 59,732
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany [note 1] [67] 231,244
Flag of Guam.svg  Guam [note 2] [note 4] [68] 8
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong [note 2] [69] 392,853
Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary [note 3] [note 1] [70] 33,134
Flag of Indonesia.svg  Indonesia [note 1] [71] 422,045
Flag of Israel.svg  Israel [note 2] [72] 58,000
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy [note 1] [73] 225,000
Flag of Jamaica.svg  Jamaica [note 2] [74] 1,834
Flag of Japan.svg  Japan [75] 103,084
Flag of Jordan.svg  Jordan [note 1] [76] 57,720
Flag of Kazakhstan.svg  Kazakhstan [note 2] [77] 21,890
Flag of Kyrgyzstan (2023).svg  Kyrgyzstan [note 2] [78] 19,600
Flag of Laos.svg  Laos [note 2] [79] 4,343
Flag of Latvia.svg  Latvia [note 3] [note 2] [80] 5,476
Flag of Lebanon.svg  Lebanon [note 1] [81] 15,610
Flag of Macau.svg  Macao [note 2] [82] 148,121
Flag of Madagascar.svg  Madagascar [83] 2,234
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia [note 2] [84] 552,739
Flag of Maldives.svg  Maldives [note 2] [85] 83,019
Flag of Mali.svg  Mali [note 6] [86] 1,500
Flag of Mauritius.svg  Mauritius [note 2] [85] 86,294
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico [note 1] [87] 59,020
Flag of Mongolia.svg  Mongolia [note 2] [88] 1,888
Flag of Montenegro.svg  Montenegro [note 6] [note 3] [89] 1,131
Flag of Myanmar.svg  Myanmar [90] 34,628
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal [note 7] [91] 75,124
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands [note 2] [92] 155,000
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand [note 2] [93] 61,440
Flag of Oman.svg  Oman [note 2] [94] 321,161
Flag of Panama.svg  Panama [95] 6,748
Flag of Papua New Guinea.svg  Papua New Guinea [note 1] [96] 4,293
Flag of Peru.svg  Peru [note 2] [97] 7,201
Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines [note 2] [98] 107,278
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar [note 2] [99] 333,708
Flag of Romania.svg  Romania [note 1] [100] 16,753
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia [note 2] [101] 130,400
Flag of Seychelles.svg  Seychelles [note 2] [102] 13,518
Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore [note 2] [103] 1,272,069
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia [note 1] [note 3] [104] 6,805
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa [105] 85,639
Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea [note 2] [106] 123,416
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain [note 2] [107] 141,122
Flag of Sri Lanka.svg  Sri Lanka [note 1] [108] 356,729
Flag of Suriname.svg  Suriname [note 2] [109] 1,045
Flag of the Republic of China.svg  Taiwan [note 2] [110] 40,846
Flag of Tanzania.svg  Tanzania [note 1] [111] 69,876
Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand [note 2] [112] [113] 1,595,754
Flag of East Timor.svg  Timor-Leste [note 6] [note 7] [114] 799
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey [note 2] [115] 86,996
Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine [note 2] [116] 23,173
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates [note 2] [117] 2,073,000
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom [note 2] [118] 525,000
Flag of the United States.svg  United States [note 2] [note 8] [119] 2,055,480
Flag of Uzbekistan.svg  Uzbekistan [note 9] [120] 18,100
Flag of Zambia.svg  Zambia [121] 25,517
Flag of Zimbabwe.svg  Zimbabwe [122] 5,421
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Data for 2016
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 Data for 2017
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Counting only guests in tourist accommodation establishments.
  4. 1 2 Data for arrivals by air only.
  5. Data for 2012
  6. 1 2 3 Data for 2014
  7. 1 2 Data for arrivals by air only.
  8. Total number includes tourists, business travelers, students, exchange visitors, temporary workers and families, diplomats and other representatives and all other classes of nonimmigrant admissions (I-94).
  9. Data for 2015

See also

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