(INDIA) India’s passport system uses colour as a quick signal of purpose and status, a detail that matters at check-in counters, consulates, and border booths worldwide. As of September 2025, officials confirm that India continues to issue dark blue, white, and maroon passports, while the orange variant remains a historical marker tied to emigration rules rather than a current design choice.
The mix shows how passport colours remain a practical tool, but also a sensitive one: visible differences can affect dignity and treatment. For anyone holding an Indian passport, the cover colour shapes expectations abroad — from queue placement to the questions officers ask — and sometimes the benefits available under international practice.

Who uses which colour and why
- Dark blue (Type P): Used by ordinary citizens for tourism, study, employment, business, and family visits. This is by far the most common booklet.
- White Official Passport (Type S): Carried by government employees when travelling on sanctioned official duty; use is restricted to government business.
- Maroon Diplomatic Passport (Type D): Issued to senior diplomats, certain Ministry of External Affairs officers, and eligible family members; this signals diplomatic rank and related courtesies.
- Orange (historical): Once indicated Emigration Check Required (ECR) status for certain workers; the orange cover has been phased out to avoid stigma. The ECR regime remains administratively, but the visible orange booklet is no longer routine.
Validity, security upgrades and procedures
The rules behind the covers shape daily travel:
- Validity
- Adults: 10 years (typical for dark blue ordinary passports)
- Minors: 5 years (or shorter on request)
- Checks before issue
- Identity proof, address proof, and police verification are standard.
- Security upgrades
- Since 2024, ePassports with embedded chips have been rolled out increasingly, storing key data to reduce fraud and speed inspection.
- Functional limits
- A white or maroon cover does not override visa rules or local entry laws; it indicates role and purpose so counterpart agencies know how to process the traveller.
Colour is a shorthand, not an automatic privilege. White or maroon does not erase visa requirements or host-country rules.
Policy context and recent developments
- India’s ePassport rollout modernises what’s inside the booklet without changing the colour scheme.
- The orange ECR design, once tied to education level, has been discontinued to prevent visible labels that could shame or expose workers. ECR checks remain in databases rather than on covers.
- Officials emphasise that the three active covers are a signalling device for faster processing, not a “status ladder.” Misuse of a white passport for private travel is not allowed and can cause problems.
Impact on travellers and officials
- Ordinary travellers with a dark blue passport
- Still need the correct visas and documentation.
- Benefit from chip-enabled faster processing where eGates are available, but should not assume automatic entry.
- Must retain appointment receipts, police verification records, and application acknowledgements until the booklet is received.
- Public servants with a white Official Passport
- Must use it strictly for sanctioned duty travel.
- Should not mix official and personal travel on the same passport; when travel overlaps, separate exit/entry on the blue booklet is safest.
- Agencies usually brief staff, but confusion persists at airports, so keep supporting letters/tickets handy.
- Diplomatic families with a maroon passport
- May receive queue priority or courtesies at some posts; immunities depend on posting and receiving state law.
- Dependents may need to switch to ordinary passports after postings end; plan for impacts on visas, studies, and applications abroad.
- Workers previously identified by ECR/orange
- Emigration safeguards still apply for certain jobs and destinations, but the visible orange booklet is gone.
- Recruiters and employers must brief candidates on actual steps to clear departure; airlines refer to ECR status in records, not by cover colour.
Practical guidance — applications, travel prep, and checks
- For first-time applicants and renewals:
- Prepare identity proof, address proof, and (if required) police verification.
- Ensure name and date of birth match other official records.
- Apply via the official portal and follow the checklist for your category.
- Official portal: Passport Seva — use this for appointments, fees, and updates.
- For public servants:
- Confirm trip qualifies for a white Official Passport; carry sanction letters and mission notes.
- If personal travel follows official duty, consider exiting and re-entering on the ordinary blue passport to avoid problems.
- For diplomatic households:
- Maintain mission letters or notes verbale where needed.
- Keep ordinary paperwork (visas, travel insurance) ready for family members who use blue booklets.
- Document organisation tips:
- Keep appointment receipts, acknowledgement numbers, and SMS updates until the booklet is collected.
- Prepare travel packs per person with a checklist on the front: name, expiry date, police verification status, visas, tickets, and mission/host contact details.
- Label passport folders internally (small sticker on inside cover) with name, expiry date, and any pending actions.
Tips to avoid problems at airports
- Confirm the passport you use matches the purpose on your ticket.
- Carry supporting documentation:
- For white passports: sanction letter or departmental contact.
- For maroon passports: mission contact or note verbale if required.
- For blue passports: visa, return ticket, hotel/host address.
- If mixing official and personal travel, split trips rather than risk denial at check-in.
- Guard ePassport chips: use a sturdy sleeve, keep away from magnets and extreme heat, and avoid bending or soaking the booklet.
- If damage occurs, start reissue early to avoid departure delays.
Broader considerations and fairness
- Colour coding speeds processing and reduces sorting errors, but visible markers can invite bias.
- Ending the orange cover removed a visible tag that could stigmatise workers while keeping protections inside the system.
- The current scheme — dark blue, white, maroon — aims for operational clarity without labels tied to schooling or class.
Practical takeaway: colour helps route and identify travellers, but it does not replace visa policy, customs, or local law. Always choose the correct booklet for the trip and keep a simple file proving your purpose and credentials: who you are, where you’re going, how long you’ll stay, and how you’ll support yourself.
Travel safe: carry copies, keep records until collection, and when in doubt consult your department’s travel desk or the Passport Seva portal well before departure.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
India’s passport colour system—dark blue (ordinary), white (official), and maroon (diplomatic)—remains in place as of September 2025; the orange ECR cover is a discontinued visual marker though ECR checks continue administratively. Adults generally receive ten-year blue passports while minors get five-year booklets. Since 2024, ePassports with embedded chips have been rolled out to strengthen security and speed border processing. Authorities emphasize that cover colours are signalling tools only and do not override visa requirements or host-country entry laws. Travellers should prepare standard identity and address proofs, retain appointment receipts, and, for officials, use white passports only for sanctioned travel to avoid complications.