India’s e-Arrival Card Becomes Sole Entry Document as Paper Forms Are Phased Out
Foreign travellers entering India must now complete a digital pre-arrival form within 72 hours, marking a full shift away from paper immigration cards and tightening border processing rules.
India has completed a structural overhaul of its border entry process, replacing the long-standing paper disembarkation form with a mandatory digital e-Arrival Card for all foreign nationals.
The change, introduced through a phased rollout beginning in 2025 and now fully enforced in 2026, eliminates paper arrival documentation entirely and makes online submission the only recognised entry declaration method.
What is confirmed is that all non-Indian passport holders, including Overseas Citizen of India cardholders, must now submit the e-Arrival Card before reaching immigration.
The form must typically be completed within a 72-hour window prior to arrival and generates a QR code that is checked by border officers on entry.
Without it, travellers may be directed to manual kiosks or face delays in clearance, as paper backup forms are no longer routinely provided at airports.
The reform replaces a decades-old system in which passengers filled out paper cards during flights or upon landing.
That process has been fully phased out following a transition period, with authorities moving toward digital processing as part of broader immigration modernisation efforts.
The system collects standard entry data such as passport details, travel history, contact information in India, and declared purpose of visit, and feeds it into immigration databases designed to speed up verification and risk screening.
The key issue is not only administrative convenience but also control and data centralisation.
By requiring advance submission, authorities gain access to passenger data before arrival, allowing pre-screening and reducing reliance on manual checks at the border.
This shift aligns India with a wider global trend toward digital travel authorisation systems, though implementation details vary by country.
For travellers, the immediate consequence is procedural discipline.
Airline staff increasingly verify completion of the e-Arrival Card at check-in, and failure to produce confirmation can result in additional screening or boarding complications.
While the system is intended to reduce queues and streamline immigration processing, it also introduces a stricter compliance requirement before departure rather than on arrival.
The transition also affects frequent travellers and dual-document holders, who previously relied on paper forms as a fallback.
That option has now been withdrawn under the fully digital framework, meaning all entry declarations must be completed electronically in advance.
Immigration authorities retain discretion to request additional verification on arrival, but the baseline requirement is now uniform digital submission.
The shift reflects a broader policy direction toward digitised border management, where entry permission is increasingly tied to pre-arrival data submission rather than purely on-the-spot inspection.
In practice, it moves a key part of immigration processing upstream, into the hours and days before travel begins.