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India's e-Passports Are Here: What You Need to Know About the New Biometric Travel Document

India rolls out new chip-enabled e-passports with faster immigration, global acceptance, and tighter security. Here's what it means and how to get one.

August 05, 2025 / 17:26 IST
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India's e-Passports Are Here: What You Need to Know About the New Biometric Travel Document

India has entered a new era of digital travel identity. After months of phased trials, the Ministry of External Affairs has now officially rolled out biometric e-passports across several cities, with plans to expand nationwide. The move is part of the broader Passport Seva Programme (PSP) 2.0, aiming to modernise the way Indians travel abroad by introducing smarter, safer, and faster systems.

So what exactly is an e-passport? How is it different from your regular passport? And should you get one right away?
Here’s a detailed look.

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What is an e-Passport?
At first glance, the e-passport looks just like the regular dark blue booklet you already have. But inside the cover, embedded within a thick page, is a secure electronic chip that stores your biometric data— your face photo, fingerprints, and key personal details. These passports are compliant with ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) standards, which means they are globally accepted and can be read at e-gates and smart immigration counters in over 120 countries. The chip uses Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) encryption to prevent data theft or tampering — a feature missing from traditional passports.

Why India Is Making the Shift
Security is the biggest motivator. With increasing cases of identity theft and document forgery worldwide, biometric passports make it much harder to clone or misuse someone's identity. Equally important is efficiency. At airports, e-passports can be scanned using contactless readers. This reduces wait time at immigration counters — especially at busy international hubs. The upgrade also positions India in line with global digital travel practices, putting it alongside countries like the US, UK, Germany, Singapore, and others already using biometric passport tech.