(INDIA) India began issuing electronic passports in 2025, launching an ambitious e-passport rollout under the government’s Passport Seva Programme Version 2.0 that officials say will reach every applicant point by the end of the year. The new document, already available at select Passport Seva Kendras and Post Office Passport Seva Kendras, carries a tiny chip inside the cover and is designed to cut down airport wait times while raising security against fraud.
Authorities say any Indian citizen who qualifies for a regular passport can request an e-passport, with the same application steps and standard fees. The expansion to more centers will continue each month through 2025 as printing and system upgrades come online.

What’s inside the e-passport
At the heart of the upgrade is a secure RFID chip that stores encrypted personal and biometric data.
- The chip holds fingerprints, a face image, and a digital signature.
- It’s protected by Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) so border gates can confirm a passport’s authenticity and detect tampering.
- The design cue is a small, gold rectangular symbol on the front cover that signals the chip is inside.
Officials say this reduces the risk of cloning, forgery, and identity theft at airports and international checkpoints. For travelers, the biggest change will be how the passport works with automated e-gates, which many major airports now use.
“Chip-backed data allows border systems to confirm authenticity faster and detect tampering,” — government officials (summary of official statements)
Speed and passenger flow benefits
The government highlights airport speed as a core selling point.
- With chip-backed data available to border systems, immigration officers can check records faster.
- More passengers can be processed during peak hours, which helps India’s busy international hubs where long lines form quickly.
- Travelers carrying the new document should see smoother movement through automated lanes, especially on routes using similar technology.
- Airport operators welcome the shift because it aligns with global security practices and reduces manual checks that slow clearance.
Technical and international standards
India’s e-passport meets ICAO standards, specifically Document 9303.
- This standard governs how machine-readable travel documents store and share data.
- Compliance improves compatibility with foreign systems and supports cross-border checks used for early risk screening.
- The chip can be read by standard airport equipment abroad, and security keys match international expectations, reducing errors and misreads.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, alignment with ICAO standards also helps India join other nations relying on shared verification methods, easing connections across multiple countries on long-haul trips.
Applicant experience — what stays the same
Authorities emphasize continuity for applicants:
- No new paperwork, special appointments, or extra scans beyond the usual passport process.
- The Ministry states there are no additional fees or added biometric steps beyond the standard booklet process.
- This policy applies to Indian missions overseas that have begun issuing the chip version.
For many families, avoiding extra cost and time is important—especially when applying for a first passport before study or job postings abroad.
Rollout progress (2025)
Access has grown steadily through 2025.
- As of August 2025, e-passports are being issued at:
- 37 Passport Offices
- 93 Passport Seva Kendras (PSKs)
- 450 Post Office Passport Seva Kendras (POPSKs)
- Indian embassies in places such as Abu Dhabi and Dubai are issuing the new passports without extra charges or biometrics.
The Ministry’s target is full coverage across India by the end of 2025 so applicants won’t need to travel far to obtain the chip version. The phased approach reflects the Passport Seva Programme’s mechanics: equipment installation, systems testing, and security key management.
How to apply
The application steps remain familiar and straightforward:
- Register and apply through the Passport Seva Portal.
- Book an appointment at a nearby center that is issuing e-passports.
- Attend the appointment for photo and fingerprint capture.
- Authorities process, print the passport with the embedded chip, and mail it to the address on record.
Because rollout is expanding, applicants should:
- Check whether their chosen PSK or Post Office center is issuing the chip version.
- If not available locally, either wait for the local rollout or apply at another center where e-passports are active (subject to appointment availability).
Validity of older passports
Many ask whether older passports must be replaced:
- There is no forced swap or extra fee for early replacement announced.
- Current booklets remain valid until expiry. Applicants can transition to the chip model upon renewal.
- This soft transition avoids overwhelming service centers and prevents rushes.
Benefits at airports and beyond
Wider e-passport use improves travel experience across multiple points:
- Automated e-gates reduce waiting times for eligible passengers and limit repetitive manual checks.
- Frequent travelers benefit from cumulative time savings, especially for tight connections on business routes.
- ICAO compliance lowers the chance of failed scans and misreads that divert passengers to slower lanes.
The rollout also affects non-airport venues:
- Smoother checks at foreign consulates, land crossings, and sea ports that follow international machine-readable document rules.
- Machine scans for visa paperwork are less likely to misread, reducing manual reviews and saving processing time.
Security improvements and system management
Security specialists emphasize anti-forgery gains as the most significant benefit:
- PKI-backed signatures make cloning or data-swapping attempts easier to detect.
- The system reduces pressure on consular teams handling stolen passports and on airlines managing last-minute issues.
- It supports cleaner data for pre-departure checks, enabling governments and carriers to act earlier when problems appear.
Key management is critical: authorities can update keys and revocation lists if a passport is reported lost or stolen. That trust chain is central to Version 2.0 of the Passport Seva Programme.
Final notes and advice for applicants
Officials reiterate the basics:
- The process is the same as before, with no additional fees.
- The plan remains to reach full national coverage by the end of 2025.
Current practical guidance:
- Confirm local availability before booking an appointment.
- Look for the gold chip symbol on the cover when the passport arrives.
- Expect faster clearance once e-gates are used more widely.
With 37 Passport Offices, 93 PSKs, and 450 POPSKs already issuing the new booklet, the project is beyond its early stage and expanding to more locations as equipment, supplies, and systems scale up.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
India rolled out e-passports in 2025 under Passport Seva Programme Version 2.0, introducing chip-embedded booklets at select offices to improve security and speed at border controls. The RFID chip stores fingerprints, a face image and a digital signature protected by PKI and complies with ICAO Document 9303. By August 2025, issuance reached 37 Passport Offices, 93 PSKs and 450 POPSKs, with embassies in Abu Dhabi and Dubai issuing the chip version. Applicants use the same application process and fees; older passports remain valid until expiry. Full national coverage is targeted by end of 2025.