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Short Description: Complete guide to India’s 30-day e-Tourist Visa: eligibility, documents, fees, validity, entry rules, restrictions, refusals, and official sources.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-03

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country India
Visa name e-Tourist Visa (30 Days)
Visa short name e-Tourist-30D
Category Electronic visa / short-stay visitor visa
Main purpose Tourism, casual visit to friends/relatives, short-term yoga program, short-term voluntary work, and certain recreational courses
Typical applicant Foreign tourist visiting India for a short trip
Validity 30 days from date of first arrival in India
Stay duration Up to 30 days
Entries allowed Double entry
Extension possible? Generally no; extension is not the normal rule for e-Visa holders and is only possible in exceptional cases if permitted by Indian authorities
Work allowed? No
Study allowed? Limited; only short-term courses/recreational courses as permitted under tourist conditions
Family allowed? Yes, but each traveler generally needs a separate e-Visa; no dependent endorsement on one visa
PR path? No
Citizenship path? No, except indirect only if the person later qualifies under a completely different long-term immigration route

India’s e-Tourist Visa (30 Days) is a short-stay electronic visa issued online to eligible foreign nationals who want to visit India mainly for tourism and related permitted visitor activities.

It exists to simplify travel to India by allowing eligible applicants to apply online before travel rather than obtaining a traditional visa sticker through a consulate in many cases.

In India’s immigration system, this is:

  • a visa
  • issued electronically through India’s official e-Visa system
  • used for short visits only
  • not a residence permit
  • not a work permit
  • not a long-term stay category

The official umbrella system is commonly referred to as the Indian e-Visa. Within that system, one stream is the e-Tourist Visa. The 30-day version is distinct from longer tourist e-Visas that may also exist for some periods under Indian policy.

Common official naming includes:

  • Indian e-Visa
  • e-Tourist Visa
  • e-Tourist Visa (30 days)

People often confuse it with:

  • a regular paper/sticker Tourist Visa
  • e-Business Visa
  • e-Medical Visa
  • Conference Visa
  • Entry Visa
  • Employment Visa

Why it matters

This visa is designed for short, temporary, non-work visits. If your real purpose is work, journalism, long-term study, or residence, this is the wrong category.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best suited for

Tourists

Yes. This is the core target group.

Casual visitors to friends or relatives

Usually yes, if the visit is temporary and informal.

People attending a short yoga program

Usually yes, if it fits the official short-term tourist-permitted scope.

People doing short-term voluntary work

Possibly yes, but only where allowed under India’s e-Tourist policy wording. Applicants should verify current official wording because “voluntary work” can be interpreted narrowly.

Travelers taking a short recreational course

Possibly yes, if it is a short recreational course and not a formal academic program.

Usually not suitable for

Business visitors

No, if the purpose is business meetings, trade, commercial negotiation, recruitment, setup work, or professional activity. They should usually consider an e-Business Visa instead.

Job seekers

No. India does not treat tourism and job seeking as the same purpose. A person intending to work should look at the relevant employment route.

Employees

No. Paid or productive work is not allowed on a tourist e-Visa.

Students

No, unless it is a very short recreational course clearly allowed under tourist rules. For formal study, a Student Visa is the proper route.

Spouses/partners relocating

No. A tourist e-Visa is not a family settlement route.

Children/dependents relocating with a family member

No, unless they are simply visiting temporarily.

Researchers

Usually no, especially if research activity requires approvals. India has separate research-related permissions and categories.

Digital nomads

Legally risky and generally not the intended use. India does not officially market this as a digital nomad visa.

Founders/entrepreneurs

No, if the real purpose is business setup, investment activity, or operating a business. Consider a business visa category.

Investors

No, if coming for substantive investment or business structuring activity beyond tourist scope.

Retirees

Only for short tourism. Not for retirement residence.

Religious workers

No, if undertaking organized religious work, preaching, or long-term religious engagement.

Artists/athletes

No, if performing for payment, competing professionally, or engaging in commercial events.

Transit passengers

Usually no if simply transiting. A transit visa or visa-free transit rule may be more appropriate, depending on nationality and itinerary.

Medical travelers

No, if the main purpose is treatment. Consider an e-Medical Visa.

Diplomatic/official travelers

No. They should use the official or diplomatic channel applicable to their status.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

Based on India’s official e-Visa framework, the 30-day e-Tourist Visa is generally used for:

  • tourism and sightseeing
  • casual visit to friends or relatives
  • attending a short-term yoga program
  • short-duration voluntary work, where expressly permitted
  • short-duration courses on local language, music, dance, arts and crafts, cooking, medicine, etc., which should not be formal or structured long-term academic programs

Prohibited or unsuitable purposes

  • employment in India
  • paid work of any kind
  • running or actively managing a business in India under a tourist pretext
  • journalism and media production requiring journalist clearance
  • long-term study
  • internships tied to productive work
  • missionary or organized religious work
  • formal research activity where special permissions are needed
  • medical treatment as the main purpose
  • transit as the sole purpose if another category applies
  • long-term residence
  • family reunion/settlement
  • investment or business setup as the main purpose
  • any activity inconsistent with tourist status

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

Remote work

Official Indian e-Tourist materials do not clearly create a remote-work permission. That means using this visa to live in India while working online for a foreign employer/client is legally uncertain and risky. If the true purpose of travel is extended remote work rather than tourism, the applicant should not assume it is allowed.

Volunteering

India has historically mentioned short-term voluntary work under e-Tourist purposes, but this should not be stretched into structured NGO work, labor, or unpaid work replacing a job.

Study

Very short recreational courses may be tolerated under tourist rules. Formal academic attendance is not.

Marriage

Coming to India to get married can raise category issues. If the trip is genuinely a short visit and the marriage is incidental, entry may still fall under tourism, but if the purpose is settlement or joining a spouse long-term, a tourist e-Visa is usually the wrong route.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Item Official/Practical Position
Program name Indian e-Visa
Stream e-Tourist Visa
Variant 30-day e-Tourist Visa
Format Electronic visa authorization
Nature Short-stay entry visa
Commonly confused with Regular Tourist Visa, e-Business Visa, e-Medical Visa, Entry Visa

Old vs current naming

India has, at different times, adjusted e-Visa nomenclature and available validity periods. The 30-day e-Tourist Visa remains part of the broader e-Visa system, but readers should verify the current active variants on the official e-Visa portal.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

Nationality

Only nationals of countries eligible under India’s official e-Visa program can apply. Not all nationalities qualify. The official e-Visa portal publishes the eligible country list.

Passport

Applicants need a valid passport. India’s e-Visa guidance generally requires:

  • an ordinary passport
  • sufficient remaining passport validity, often at least 6 months from date of arrival
  • at least two blank pages for immigration stamping at arrival

If your passport type is diplomatic, official, service, refugee travel document, or other special document, e-Visa eligibility may differ or be unavailable.

Purpose of visit

The declared purpose must match the e-Tourist category.

Age

There is no widely published general minimum or maximum age restriction for e-Tourist eligibility, but minors must have their own passport and application. Country-specific or airline requirements may also matter.

Education

Not applicable for this visa.

Language

No formal language requirement.

Work experience

Not applicable.

Sponsorship

Not generally required, though proof of host/contact may help if visiting friends or relatives.

Invitation

Not mandatory for ordinary tourism, but useful if staying with someone.

Job offer

Not applicable and not relevant.

Points requirement

None.

Relationship proof

Only relevant if visiting family or traveling with minors.

Admission letter

Not applicable unless attending a short permitted course and supporting documents are helpful.

Business/investment thresholds

Not applicable.

Maintenance funds

Applicants are generally expected to have sufficient funds for their stay, though India’s public e-Visa materials may not always state a precise minimum amount for tourist e-Visa applicants.

Accommodation proof

Often requested or practically useful. Hotel bookings or host details may be needed.

Onward travel

Travelers should be able to show return or onward journey arrangements if asked by airline or border authorities.

Health

No standard medical examination is usually required for an e-Tourist Visa. However, health screening at entry can occur under public health rules.

Character / criminal record

Applicants with criminal history, immigration violations, or security flags may face refusal or ineligibility.

Insurance

Travel insurance is generally advisable but not always stated as mandatory in the e-Tourist rules. Verify current airline and health-entry rules.

Biometrics

Usually not part of the pre-travel online e-Visa application in the same way as some countries’ VAC biometrics systems, but fingerprints/biometrics may be taken on arrival by Indian immigration.

Intent requirements

The applicant must intend a genuine short visit consistent with tourist conditions.

Return intent

This is a temporary visit route. Evidence of leaving India after the trip may be relevant.

Residency outside India

Applicants normally apply from abroad or while outside India through the online system. The visa is intended for entry, not status regularization inside India.

Local registration

Typically not required for such a short e-Tourist stay, but travelers should verify if any local or exceptional rule applies to their nationality or destination area.

Quota/cap/ballot

None publicly stated.

Embassy-specific rules

For the e-Visa itself, the central online portal controls most rules. However, if e-Visa is unavailable or unsuitable, consulate-specific sticker visa rules may matter.

Special exemptions

Nationality-based restrictions, protected/restricted area permissions, and other special cases may apply.

Eligibility matrix

Requirement Typical rule for e-Tourist-30D
Eligible nationality Required
Valid ordinary passport Required
Passport validity Usually minimum 6 months from arrival
Blank pages Usually at least 2
Genuine tourist purpose Required
Funds for trip Expected
Return/onward travel Strongly advisable
Biometrics before travel Usually no standard VAC biometrics
Work rights No
Formal study rights No
Dependents on same application No

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Common ineligibility factors

  • nationality not on India’s eligible e-Visa list
  • non-ordinary passport type where e-Visa is unavailable
  • passport expiring too soon
  • damaged passport
  • purpose does not fit tourist category
  • prior overstay in India
  • prior deportation/removal
  • adverse security record
  • serious criminal issues
  • false or unverifiable information

Common refusal triggers

  • selecting tourism while documents show business, work, research, or medical purpose
  • unclear itinerary
  • poor-quality passport scan or photo
  • mismatched passport data
  • incomplete application fields
  • incorrect passport number or date of birth
  • weak or contradictory travel explanation
  • previous immigration violations
  • suspicious travel pattern
  • applying too late and then rushing errors
  • using unofficial agents who submit wrong information

Practical red flags

  • saying you are a “tourist” but carrying employer letters about assignments in India
  • stating you will “help” a company or “volunteer” in a way that looks like work
  • mentioning filmmaking/media activity without checking journalist rules
  • using a new passport but giving old passport details inconsistently

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • fully online application
  • no need for a traditional visa sticker in many cases
  • convenient for short trips
  • double entry within the 30-day validity period
  • suitable for ordinary tourism and short personal visits
  • often faster and simpler than full consular processing
  • useful for family members traveling together, provided each has a separate approval

What you can legally do

  • travel around India for tourism
  • stay up to the authorized period
  • visit friends or relatives
  • participate in short permitted tourist-type activities

What it does not do

  • does not provide residence rights
  • does not create work authorization
  • does not create a direct long-term immigration path

8. Limitations and restrictions

Key restrictions

  • no employment
  • no paid activity
  • no long-term study
  • no guaranteed extension
  • no guaranteed conversion inside India
  • entry is still subject to border officer approval
  • only valid through designated immigration checkpoints for e-Visa entry
  • restricted/protected areas may require separate permission

Important operational limitations

Entry ports

Indian e-Visas are valid only at designated airports and seaports for entry. Exit may be broader, but verify the current official list.

No open-ended stay

The 30-day e-Tourist Visa is a short-stay product. Overstay can lead to fines, exit issues, and future visa trouble.

No workarounds

Repeated tourist entries to effectively live in India can attract scrutiny.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Core rule

For the 30-day e-Tourist Visa, the official rule is generally:

  • validity: 30 days from the date of first arrival in India
  • entries: double entry
  • stay: up to 30 days within that validity

When the clock starts

This is a common confusion point.

For the 30-day e-Tourist Visa, the visa validity is tied to date of first arrival, not simply the date of grant in the same way some other visas are. Still, applicants must enter within the validity parameters shown on the approval and should read the granted Electronic Travel Authorization carefully.

Entry-by date vs stay period

Always read the approved document for:

  • date of issue
  • date of expiry
  • number of entries
  • any arrival window
  • any special condition

Grace period

No general grace period is publicly promised. If your authorized stay ends, you should depart before expiry.

Overstay consequences

Possible consequences include:

  • monetary penalties
  • exit permit complications
  • future visa refusal risk
  • immigration questioning on later travel

10. Complete document checklist

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Format Common mistakes
Online application form Official e-Visa digital form Core application record Online Typos, passport mismatches
Passport biodata page scan Photo page of passport Identity and nationality verification Clear color scan, usually PDF/JPEG per portal rules Cut edges, glare, blur
Passport-style photo Applicant photo Identity matching As per official pixel/background rules Wrong size, shadows, glasses glare

B. Identity/travel documents

  • valid ordinary passport
  • old passport details if relevant to travel history or dual-passport issues
  • national ID generally not required for the e-Visa itself

C. Financial documents

Not always uploaded for a straightforward tourist e-Visa, but applicants should have access to:

  • recent bank statements
  • card limits or travel funds proof
  • sponsor support evidence if someone else pays

D. Employment/business documents

Usually not required for standard tourism. However, carrying or being able to produce:

  • employer leave letter
  • self-employment proof
  • business registration

can help show ties outside India if ever questioned.

E. Education documents

Not generally required.

F. Relationship/family documents

Relevant only where applicable:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificate for minors
  • parental consent documents
  • host relationship proof

G. Accommodation/travel documents

Useful and sometimes requested:

  • hotel reservation
  • host address in India
  • return or onward ticket
  • travel itinerary

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

If staying with family/friends:

  • invitation letter
  • host address
  • host ID/residence proof if available

I. Health/insurance documents

Usually not core e-Tourist upload items, but practical to carry:

  • travel insurance policy
  • vaccination/health records if required by public health rules

J. Country-specific extras

Varies by nationality. Some travelers may face extra scrutiny or be unable to use the e-Visa route.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • separate passport for each child
  • separate application for each child
  • birth certificate
  • parental consent if one parent is absent
  • custody documents if applicable

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

For the e-Visa itself, most core documents are passport/photo based and usually do not require notarization. If supporting documents are in a language not accepted by the system or officials, certified translation may help. India’s public e-Visa portal does not always publish broad translation rules for every supporting document, so verify if your case is unusual.

M. Photo specifications

Use the exact official portal specifications. Common rules typically involve:

  • recent color photo
  • plain light background
  • full face visible
  • no shadows
  • no cropping errors
  • correct file size and dimensions

Common Mistake: Uploading a passport-page photo as a selfie or using a casual travel photo instead of a compliant passport photo.

11. Financial requirements

Official rule

India’s e-Tourist guidance generally expects travelers to have sufficient money to support themselves during their stay, but a fixed public minimum is not always clearly stated for every nationality.

What counts as acceptable proof

If requested or needed at the border:

  • recent bank statements
  • credit card plus supporting bank evidence
  • sponsor support letter with sponsor financial proof
  • employer-funded trip proof, if relevant to a legitimate tourist side trip

No clear public seasoning rule

There is usually no published “3 months minimum balance” rule specific to the e-Tourist Visa. Still, stable and understandable funds are better than sudden unexplained deposits.

Hidden costs to budget for

  • visa fee
  • bank/card charge
  • flight tickets
  • accommodation
  • insurance
  • internal travel
  • emergency funds

Proof strength tips

  • keep statements recent
  • be ready to explain large deposits
  • ensure your name matches across records
  • carry access to funds even if not uploaded

12. Fees and total cost

India’s e-Visa fees can vary by visa type, nationality, reciprocity, and season. The 30-day tourist e-Visa fee structure has historically differed from longer e-Tourist categories and may change.

Check the latest official fee page before paying.

Typical cost components

Cost item Official position
Application fee Payable online; varies by category/nationality/season
Processing fee Usually part of the visa fee structure
Biometrics fee Usually not a separate standard pre-travel fee for e-Tourist
Medical exam fee Usually not applicable
Police certificate cost Usually not applicable
Translation/notary cost Usually only if supporting docs need it
Service center fee Usually not applicable if fully online; beware unofficial agents
Courier fee Usually not applicable
Insurance cost Optional/practical, not typically built into visa fee
Legal/consultant fee Optional; not required
Travel cost Separate from visa
Renewal fee Usually not applicable because extension is generally unavailable
Dependent fee Each traveler pays separately
Priority fee Not typically structured like some Western visa systems

Warning: Indian e-Visa fees are generally non-refundable, even if the visa is refused or not used.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm correct visa

Use the 30-day e-Tourist route only if your purpose is genuinely tourism or another officially permitted tourist activity.

2. Gather documents

Prepare:

  • passport scan
  • compliant photo
  • itinerary details
  • contact details in India
  • payment card

3. Complete the official online form

Use India’s official e-Visa portal. Enter data exactly as shown in your passport.

4. Pay fees

Pay online through the official system.

5. Biometrics/interview

Usually no separate pre-travel appointment for a standard e-Tourist e-Visa.

6. Submit application

Review carefully before final submission.

7. Upload documents

Upload passport scan and photo in the required format.

8. Medicals/police checks

Generally not required for this visa.

9. Track application

Monitor status through the official system and your email.

10. Respond to requests

If the authorities request clarification or corrected uploads, respond quickly.

11. Decision

If approved, you receive an Electronic Travel Authorization or equivalent e-Visa approval.

12. Download and print

Carry a printed copy and an electronic copy.

13. Arrival in India

Present passport and e-Visa approval at the designated entry point.

14. Post-arrival registration

Usually not applicable for a standard short 30-day tourist stay.

15. Permit activation

No residence card is issued for this visa.

14. Processing time

India’s official e-Visa portal may provide current expected timelines. Processing can be fast, but applicants should not assume same-day approval.

What affects timing

  • nationality
  • completeness of application
  • passport/photo upload quality
  • security screening
  • public holidays
  • peak travel seasons

Practical expectation

Apply with a reasonable buffer before travel. Do not leave it to the last minute.

Pro Tip: Even if approvals are often fast, submit early enough to fix errors but not so early that your travel details change unnecessarily.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Pre-travel biometrics are usually not part of the standard e-Tourist online process. Immigration may take biometrics on arrival.

Interview

A consular interview is usually not required for the e-Tourist route.

Medical

Routine medical examination is generally not required.

Police clearance

Usually not required for this short tourist category.

Exceptions

If a case is flagged, authorities can ask for more information or refuse the visa without offering the simplified experience applicants expect.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official public approval-rate statistics for this exact visa are not typically published in a detailed, user-friendly way.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals appear linked to:

  • data-entry mistakes
  • poor photo/passport uploads
  • ineligible nationality
  • mismatch between stated tourist purpose and actual travel plan
  • security/background concerns
  • previous Indian immigration problems

Do not rely on internet claims about “automatic approval.” This visa is easier than some consular visas, but it is not guaranteed.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Best legal strategies

  • match your purpose to the correct category
  • use exact passport details
  • upload a crystal-clear passport scan
  • follow photo rules exactly
  • keep itinerary realistic
  • provide host details if staying with family/friends
  • ensure your arrival/departure plan makes sense
  • disclose previous refusals or passport changes honestly if asked
  • check that your nationality is eligible before paying

Practical document presentation

Even if only a few uploads are required, keep a backup file set with:

  • passport
  • approval notice
  • hotel bookings
  • return ticket
  • bank statement
  • travel insurance
  • host invitation if relevant

Purpose clarity

If your trip includes yoga, family visit, and sightseeing, that is fine. If it includes business meetings or work tasks, choose the proper visa instead.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Apply with enough cushion

A sensible window is to apply early enough to correct errors, but still aligned with your confirmed travel plan.

Use a file naming system

Examples:

  • Passport_Lastname_Firstname.pdf
  • Photo_Lastname_Firstname.jpg
  • Ticket_Lastname_Firstname.pdf

Keep your India contact details consistent

Your hotel, local host address, and phone contact should not conflict across documents.

Handle large bank deposits transparently

If you may need to show funds at the border, keep an explanation ready for any large recent deposit.

Families should prepare each case separately

Each traveler needs their own application. Keep family passports, birth certificates, and consent letters organized in parallel folders.

Don’t over-explain with the wrong visa

If your trip mixes tourism and business, do not “simplify” it into tourism. Apply under the proper category.

Use only the official portal

This reduces wrong submissions and inflated service fees.

Print the approval

Many travelers rely only on their phone. Carry a printed copy in case of battery or connectivity problems.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

For a standard e-Tourist Visa, a cover letter is often not mandatory. But it can be useful in edge cases.

When useful

  • unusual itinerary
  • mixed tourism and family visit
  • prior refusal
  • prior Indian travel issue
  • staying with a host instead of hotels
  • minor traveling in a special custody situation

Good structure

  1. Applicant identity
  2. Purpose of visit
  3. Travel dates
  4. Places to be visited/stay address
  5. Funding source
  6. Confirmation of compliance with visa conditions
  7. List of attached documents

What not to say

  • that you may work while there
  • that you might “look for opportunities”
  • that you plan to stay longer somehow
  • that you will do “volunteer work” that looks like employment without clarifying legality

Sample outline

  • I am applying for an Indian e-Tourist Visa for travel from [date] to [date].
  • My purpose is tourism and visiting [city/cities].
  • I will stay at [hotel/host address].
  • I will fund my trip through my personal savings/employment income.
  • I will return to [home country] on [date].
  • Attached are my passport copy, travel bookings, and supporting records.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Is sponsorship required?

Usually no for a normal tourist stay.

If staying with friends or relatives

Useful sponsor/host documents may include:

  • invitation letter
  • host full address
  • host contact number
  • host ID/residence proof if available
  • brief explanation of relationship

Sponsor mistakes

  • vague address
  • no phone number
  • invitation that sounds like employment
  • claiming to “host” someone indefinitely on a tourist visit
  • inconsistent names or dates

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Not as dependent endorsements on one visa. Each traveler must generally apply separately.

Spouse/partner

A spouse can apply for their own e-Tourist Visa if eligible.

Children

Children also need separate e-Visas and their own passports.

Proof required

Where relevant:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificate
  • parental consent letter
  • custody order if one parent is absent
  • adoption papers if applicable

Work/study rights of dependents

Same as the principal traveler’s category: no work rights, no long-term study rights.

Family strategy

Apply as a group in practical terms, but maintain complete individual files for each person.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

No.

This includes:

  • salaried work
  • freelance work for Indian clients
  • productive work on-site
  • joining an Indian employer
  • paid performances
  • internship-like productive roles

Self-employment

Not allowed if the activity amounts to work in India.

Remote work

Not clearly authorized. Treat as a risk area, not a permitted benefit.

Volunteering

Only short-duration voluntary work if expressly allowed under current e-Tourist policy and genuinely within that scope.

Side income

Not permitted if earned through activity undertaken in India.

Passive income

Passive income from abroad, such as dividends or investments, is not the same as working in India, but it does not expand visa rights.

Study rights

Only very limited short recreational courses that fit tourist conditions.

Business activity

Do not use this visa for:

  • meetings
  • trade fairs in a business capacity
  • supplier negotiations
  • recruitment
  • commercial setup

That is what the e-Business Visa is for.

Work/study rights table

Activity Allowed on e-Tourist-30D?
Tourism Yes
Visit friends/family Yes
Paid employment No
Business meetings No, use e-Business
Formal study No
Short recreational course Limited, if within tourist rules
Medical treatment No, use e-Medical
Journalism No, use appropriate journalist route
Remote work Unclear/risky; not officially granted as a right

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

e-Visa is not absolute admission

Even with approval, final admission is decided by immigration officers at the Indian border.

Documents to carry

  • passport used in application
  • printed e-Visa approval
  • return/onward ticket
  • hotel bookings or host address
  • sufficient funds evidence
  • travel insurance
  • child consent/custody documents if relevant

Onward/return ticket issues

Airlines may refuse boarding if they think you lack proper proof of onward travel or valid entry documents.

Immigration questions on arrival

Typical questions may include:

  • purpose of visit
  • length of stay
  • where are you staying
  • return ticket date
  • who is funding the trip

Re-entry

The 30-day e-Tourist Visa is generally double-entry. If you leave and re-enter, ensure both entries occur within the visa’s validity and all conditions remain met.

New passport issues

If your passport changes after approval, do not assume the e-Visa transfers automatically. Verify whether you need a new application.

Dual nationals

Use the same passport for application, boarding, and entry. Mixing passports can create problems.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Extension

Generally no for ordinary cases.

Renewal

Not applicable in-country in the usual sense. You would generally need to leave and apply again if eligible, but repeated use may attract scrutiny and should not be used to live in India unofficially.

Switching to another visa inside India

Usually not the normal route. Tourist status is generally not intended for in-country conversion to work, long-term study, or residence.

Exceptional cases

Only exceptional government-approved circumstances may allow relief, extension, or special handling.

Extension/switching options table

Option Usual position
Extend in India Generally no
Renew in India Generally no
Switch to work visa in India Generally no
Switch to student visa in India Generally no
Reapply from abroad Possible if eligible
Exceptional relief Only in limited cases under authority discretion

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

PR path

No direct path.

Citizenship path

No direct path.

Does time count toward settlement?

No, not in any normal long-term residence sense.

Indirect path

Only if the person later qualifies under a different long-term category such as employment, family, business, or other lawful route. Tourist visits do not create settlement credit.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax

Because this is a short tourist stay, most travelers will not become Indian tax residents solely by using a 30-day e-Tourist Visa. But tax analysis can depend on actual presence and activities.

Registration obligations

For a standard short tourist e-Visa, police/foreigner registration is generally not the usual requirement. Verify if a special rule applies to your nationality or special area of travel.

Address compliance

Carry and be able to provide your accommodation details.

Overstay compliance

Leave on time. Overstay can lead to serious practical problems.

Work compliance

Do not work, even casually, “for experience,” or “just online” without clear legal basis.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Eligible nationality list

The e-Visa is only available to listed nationalities. This can change.

Special passport categories

Diplomatic, official, service, refugee, and travel-document holders may be excluded or directed to other channels.

Protected/restricted areas

Travel to certain areas in India may require separate permits even if you have a valid e-Visa.

Regional/bilateral variations

Some nationalities may face added scrutiny or different practical outcomes. If the official portal or embassy guidance for your nationality differs, follow that.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Allowed if separately eligible and documented.

Divorced/separated parents

Carry custody orders or notarized parental consent where applicable.

Adopted children

Carry adoption papers and identity linkage documents.

Same-sex spouses/partners

For tourism, relationship recognition usually matters less than for residence visas. If traveling together, each person should qualify individually. If relying on host/family evidence, be ready for document scrutiny.

Stateless persons / refugees

e-Visa eligibility may not apply. These cases often need direct consular advice.

Prior refusals

A prior visa refusal does not always bar approval, but non-disclosure where asked can create bigger problems.

Overstays

Prior Indian overstay can seriously affect approval.

Criminal records

Can trigger refusal or security review.

Urgent travel

The e-Visa may still be possible, but there is no guarantee of expedited handling.

Expired passport but valid visa

Do not assume the e-Visa remains usable. Verify whether a new application is needed.

Applying from a third country

Usually possible online if your nationality is eligible, but local travel and airline issues still matter.

Change of name

Ensure all identity documents match, or carry official name change proof.

Gender marker mismatch

If passport, booking, and other records differ, correct them before travel where possible.

Previous deportation/removal

High-risk factor. Seek official clarification before applying.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs fact table

Myth Fact
“Tourist e-Visa holders can do a little work if unpaid.” False. Unpaid activity can still count as prohibited work.
“Approval means guaranteed entry.” False. Border officers make the final admission decision.
“I can convert it to a work visa after I arrive.” Usually false. Tourist status is generally not meant for in-country switching.
“I can use any passport at boarding if I have dual nationality.” False. Use the passport tied to the application.
“Remote work is obviously allowed because I’m paid abroad.” Not officially stated as a right; this is risky.
“Children can travel under a parent’s visa.” False. Each child generally needs a separate visa.
“I don’t need to check my entry airport.” False. e-Visa entry is valid only at designated checkpoints.
“The 30-day period starts when the visa is granted.” Not necessarily; for this category, the official wording ties validity to first arrival. Read the approval carefully.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You may receive a refusal or non-grant outcome through the e-Visa system.

Appeal rights

Formal appeal or administrative review options for e-Visa refusals are not always publicly structured the same way as court-review systems in some countries. In many cases, the practical option is to correct issues and reapply if eligible.

Refund

Usually no refund.

When to reapply

Reapply only after identifying and fixing the actual problem, such as:

  • wrong passport data
  • poor photo
  • wrong visa type
  • unsupported travel purpose

Refusal reason vs solution table

Refusal issue Practical legal response
Wrong visa class Apply under correct category
Bad photo/passport upload Prepare compliant files and reapply
Passport validity issue Renew passport first
Nationality not eligible Use regular consular visa route if available
Prior violation/security issue Seek official clarification; reapplying without addressing issue may fail again
Inconsistent information Correct all records and explain discrepancies honestly

31. Arrival in India: what happens next?

At immigration

You will generally:

  1. present passport
  2. present printed e-Visa approval if asked
  3. answer basic questions
  4. provide biometrics if required
  5. receive entry permission/stamp

After entry

For most 30-day tourist visitors:

  • no residence card pickup
  • no tax number process
  • no work registration
  • no student reporting
  • no routine FRRO process for an ordinary short stay

Practical first-week tasks

  • keep passport and e-Visa copy secure
  • know your departure date
  • keep accommodation records
  • respect local laws and any area permit rules

32. Real-world timeline examples

Solo tourist

  • Day 1: confirm eligibility and travel dates
  • Day 2: prepare passport scan and photo
  • Day 3: submit e-Visa application
  • Day 4-7+: await decision
  • Before departure: print approval, book hotel, carry return ticket
  • Arrival: clear immigration and begin trip

Student

Not the right visa for formal study. A student should stop and apply for the proper Student Visa route instead.

Worker

Not the right visa. A worker should use the Employment Visa or other appropriate category.

Spouse/dependent visitor

  • Prepare separate applications for each family member
  • Add marriage/birth/custody records to the travel folder
  • Carry family bookings and hotel/host details

Entrepreneur/investor

Not the right visa if business setup or investment is the real purpose. Use the business route.

33. Ideal document pack structure

Even if upload requirements are light, organize your travel pack well.

Recommended folder structure

  1. 01_Passport
  2. 02_Photo
  3. 03_eVisa_Approval
  4. 04_Flights
  5. 05_Accommodation
  6. 06_Financial_Proof
  7. 07_Host_Documents
  8. 08_Family_Documents
  9. 09_Insurance

Naming convention

  • 01_Passport_John_Smith.pdf
  • 02_Photo_John_Smith.jpg
  • 03_eVisaApproval_John_Smith.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • no cropped corners
  • under 300–400 dpi is often enough if clear
  • avoid shadows and file corruption
  • keep file sizes within portal limits

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • confirm nationality is eligible
  • confirm purpose fits e-Tourist rules
  • confirm passport validity
  • confirm designated entry point
  • prepare compliant photo
  • prepare clear passport scan
  • confirm travel dates
  • note India contact/address
  • arrange payment card

Submission-day checklist

  • passport number entered correctly
  • name exactly matches passport
  • date of birth correct
  • nationality correct
  • purpose selected correctly
  • uploads open properly before final submit
  • fee paid through official portal

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

Not usually applicable for this visa.

Arrival checklist

  • passport
  • printed e-Visa approval
  • return/onward ticket
  • hotel booking or host address
  • funds access
  • child consent/custody papers if relevant

Extension/renewal checklist

Not applicable for this visa in ordinary cases.

Refusal recovery checklist

  • read reason carefully
  • identify whether issue is technical or substantive
  • correct passport/photo/data errors
  • change visa category if needed
  • collect clearer supporting evidence
  • reapply only when the issue is fixed

35. FAQs

1. Is the 30-day e-Tourist Visa single or multiple entry?

It is generally double entry.

2. Does the 30-day period start from approval date?

For this visa, official wording generally ties validity to the date of first arrival. Always check the granted approval notice.

3. Can I work remotely for my overseas employer from India on this visa?

This is not clearly authorized by official tourist visa rules and is risky.

4. Can I attend business meetings on this visa?

No. Use the e-Business Visa if business meetings are the real purpose.

5. Can I visit friends and relatives?

Yes, that is generally allowed.

6. Can I study in India on this visa?

Only very limited short recreational courses may fit. Formal study does not.

7. Can I volunteer at an NGO?

Only if it clearly falls within any currently permitted short-duration voluntary work wording. Do not assume all volunteering is allowed.

8. Do children need separate e-Visas?

Yes.

9. Can I include my spouse on my application?

No. Each traveler generally needs a separate application.

10. Is travel insurance mandatory?

Not always stated as mandatory, but it is strongly recommended.

11. Do I need a return ticket before applying?

It may not always be required for submission, but you should have onward/return plans and may be asked at boarding or arrival.

12. What if my passport expires in five months?

That may be a problem. India generally expects at least six months’ validity from arrival.

13. Can I enter through any airport?

No. You must use a designated e-Visa entry checkpoint.

14. Can I leave India from any airport?

Exit options may be broader, but verify current official rules.

15. Can I extend the 30-day e-Tourist Visa?

Generally no, except possibly in very limited exceptional cases.

16. Can I switch to a work visa inside India?

Usually no.

17. What if my e-Visa is approved but I change my passport?

You may need a new visa. Do not assume transfer is automatic.

18. What if I made a small typo in my application?

If the typo affects identity or passport details, it can cause refusal or boarding issues. Correct it through official channels if possible; otherwise reapply.

19. Are visa fees refundable if refused?

Usually no.

20. Do I need hotel bookings for every night?

Not always, but you should have a credible accommodation plan.

21. Can I travel to restricted or protected areas?

Not automatically. Additional permits may be required.

22. Is prior travel to India necessary?

No.

23. Will a previous refusal from another country affect this application?

Not automatically, but if the form asks about prior refusals, answer honestly.

24. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?

Usually yes online, if eligible, but practical travel and airline documentation still matter.

25. Can I marry in India on this visa?

A short visit where marriage is incidental may be possible, but this visa is not a settlement route. If long-term joining of spouse is the real purpose, use the proper visa.

26. Can I use a tourist e-Visa for medical treatment?

No. Use the e-Medical Visa.

27. Can I stay more than 30 days if I enter late?

No. The stay is governed by the visa validity/conditions, not by personal convenience.

28. What if I overstay by one day?

Even a short overstay can create penalties and future visa problems.

29. Can I reapply immediately after refusal?

Yes, if eligible and after fixing the reason for refusal.

30. Do I need to visit an embassy?

Usually not for a standard e-Tourist e-Visa, unless your case cannot be handled through the e-Visa system.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources only. Check them again before applying because India’s visa rules, fees, eligible nationalities, and designated entry points can change.

Primary official source

The primary source for this visa is the Government of India’s official e-Visa portal.

Source notes

Where a point above is described as unclear, that is because Indian authorities do not always publish every operational detail in one single plain-language page for this exact sub-variant, or wording can change over time. In such cases, the approval notice and latest official portal instructions control.

37. Final verdict

The Indian e-Tourist Visa (30 Days) is best for genuine short-term tourists and casual visitors who want a simple online route for a brief trip to India.

Biggest benefits

  • online application
  • relatively simple documentation
  • good fit for short travel
  • double entry
  • no need for a traditional consular visa in many cases

Biggest risks

  • using the wrong category for business, work, or study
  • assuming approval guarantees entry
  • passport/photo errors
  • misunderstanding the 30-day validity rules
  • trying to stretch tourist status into remote work or residence

Top preparation advice

  • confirm your nationality is eligible
  • confirm your purpose is truly tourism
  • check passport validity carefully
  • use the official portal only
  • carry printouts and supporting travel documents
  • leave on time

When to consider another visa

Choose another visa if your purpose is:

  • business meetings or commercial activity
  • medical treatment
  • formal study
  • employment
  • journalism
  • long-term family stay or relocation

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • whether your nationality is currently eligible for India’s e-Visa program
  • the latest official fee for your nationality and season
  • the current designated airports/seaports for e-Visa entry
  • whether any temporary public health rules apply
  • whether your passport type is accepted for e-Visa use
  • whether short-term voluntary work remains permitted in your exact intended form
  • whether your short course qualifies as a recreational course rather than formal study
  • whether any protected/restricted area permits are needed for your itinerary
  • whether any special conditions apply due to prior Indian overstays, refusals, or immigration issues
  • whether your dual-nationality or renewed-passport situation requires a fresh application
  • whether any embassy or mission has additional nationality-specific guidance that affects you

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