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Visa & Foreign Exchange Visa and Foreign Exchange
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Visitors Information
Visa & Foreign Exchange

VISA and FOREIGN EXCHANGE FORMALITIES

 

aVISA : All foreign tourists visiting India must be in possession of a valid passport and visa. An Indian visa is readily available from Indian Consulate in the country of your origin. There are also certain parts of India that require a special permit to visit. This will be advised to you at the time of booking the tour. Visa fees may vary from country to country. It is recommended to obtain a multiple Entry Tourist Visa since this simplifies the procedure for visiting neighbouring countries like Nepal and Sri Lanka. Indians holding foreign passports would also have to obtain an Indian Visa before entering India.
aHEALTH : Tourists coming to India via Africa and South America or any other yellow fever infected area must have yellow fever vaccination certificate. No other vaccination certificate is mandatory though you may like to consult your doctor for innoculation against typhoid, and meningitis. Inoculations for cholera and hepatitis A and anti-malarial pills are recommended.
aEXCHANGE CONTROL FORMALITIES : Exchange Control formalities to be observed by foreign visitors coming to India are quite simple. Foreign exchange facilities widely available. There are a few regulations on certain items. Those relating to all key areas are summarised below:

  • CURRENCY AND JEWELLERY
    • FOREIGN CURRENCY: Foreign exchange comprising foreign currency notes, travellers cheques, drafts drawn on banks in India or bank letters of credit can be brought into India without limit. However, if the total amount of foreign currency notes or travellers cheques brought into India at one time exceeds US$10,000/- or its equivalent, it is required to be declared by the holder to the Indian Customs authorities on arrival on a Currency Declaration Form (CDF). A copy of the CDF duly certified by the customs will be handed over to the declarant. This declaration facilitates easy conversion of foreign currency into Indian currency by the tourists and also reconversion of their unspent balances of Indian rupees into foreign currency at the time of their departure from India. Blank Currency Declaration Forms are available with the airport/seaport Customs.
    • INDIAN CURRENCY: Bringing Indian currency of any denomination into India is prohibited. Foreign tourists' returning to India from Nepal are, however, permitted to bring with them unspent Indian currency which needs to be declared. There is no restriction on bringing into India of cheques/drafts issued by overseas bank and denominated in Indian rupees drawn on banks situated in India.
    • PERSONAL JEWELLERY: Foreign tourists are permitted to bring with them their personal jewellery either worn on their person or as part of their personal effects in accordance with Customs Baggage Rules. The Rules, inter alia, require an endorsement by the Indian Customs on the tourists' passports about the jewellery brought by the latter. In order to facilitate Customs clearance of the same personal jewellery at the time of the tourist's departure from India, details thereof are endorsed on the tourist's passports at the time of entry.

aCARRYING FOREIGN/INDIAN CURRENCY OUT OF INDIA:
FOREIGN CURRENCY: Foreign tourists are permitted to take out with them, in any form, unspent foreign exchange previously brought into India by them against the production of Currency Declaration Form, wherever issued at the time of arrival.
INDIAN CURRENCY: Taking out of any Indian Currency is prohibited. Foreign visitors going to Nepal from India can, however, take with them in denominations of Rs. 100/- and below, Indian currency acquired out of sale of foreign exchange brought into India by them.
aPROCEDURE FOR ENCASHMENT OF FOREIGN CURRENCY:
A foreign visitor should present his/her travelers cheques or foreign currency notes to an authorized dealer or licensed money-changer along with the Currency Declaration Form (CDF) if one was filled up at the time of his arrival in India. Mercury Travels is an authorized money changer and provides encashment facilities at its offices in India. Please retain the Encashment Certificates handed over at the time of encashment, to facilitate reconversion of unspent Indian currency into foreign exchange at the time of their departure from India. Unspent balances of Indian currency can be re-converted into foreign currency at the time of departure from India, only against Encashment Certificates, which are valid for 3 months from the date of their issue. In the absence of any Encashment Certificate, a maximum of Rs. 10,000/- will be allowed to be converted into foreign currency at the exit point.

  • PAYMENT OF HOTEL BILLS:
    Foreign nationals have to pay their hotel bills in foreign exchange. They may also pay in rupees, provided the rupees are derived out of sale of foreign exchange to authorised dealers/licensed money-changers as evidenced by the production of Encashment Certificates. (See iii). International credit cards are accepted in most hotels.
  • TRAVEL WITHIN INDIA:
    For travel within India, foreign tourists have to pay their fares in foreign exchange. All booking offices of Indian Airlines, all other private airlines and booking offices of Indian Railways at many important centres accept payment in foreign exchange from foreign tourists. Rail fares can be paid in Indian rupees on the production of the Encashment Certificates obtained earlier. (See procedure for encashment of foreign exchange)
  • BOOKING RETURN PASSAGE FROM INDIA:
    Foreign tourists not holding return tickets purchased abroad may book their passage tickets for travel out of India through any airlines/shipping company or licensed travel agent. The passage fare has to be paid in foreign exchange or in Indian currency obtained in an approved manner.
  • UNACCOMPANIED BAGGAGE:
    Foreign visitors are required to pay charges for their excess baggage or freight on their unaccompanied baggage in foreign exchange. Payment in Indian rupees is also acceptable if supported by valid Encashment Certificates.
  • PURCHASE OF GOODS/ARTICLES BY FOREIGN TOURISTS:
    Shops/emporia selling goods or providing services to foreign tourists are permitted to accept payment in foreign exchange against all major Credit Cards/ Bank Drafts, Travellers cheques. Foreign tourists are permitted by Indian Customs to take with them goods purchased in India without any value limit. There are restrictions on the export of antiquities and art objects more than 100 years old. Export of most wildlife products is prohibited or strictly regulated: therefore avoid buying any thing made of ivory, reptile skin, fur, musk, tortoise shells and any part of wild animals, provided the goods are purchased out of funds brought from abroad. The visitors have to complete a tourists questionnaire which is available with shops/travel agencies and submit it alongwith their Encashment Certificate. Some shops and emporia also undertake to send the goods abroad as unaccompanied baggage at the request of the tourists.
  • OPENING OF BANK ACCOUNTS:
    A foreign tourist may open a temporary Rupee account with a bank in India by sale of foreign exchange brought or against remittance received from abroad. Such accounts can be maintained for a maximum period of 6 months and have to be closed before the account holders leave India.
Some interesting facts on India

Some interesting facts on India

  • India is the world's largest, oldest, continuous civilization.
  • India is the only subcontinent in the world.
  • Only country after which an ocean is named.
  • Varanasi, also known as Benares, was called "the ancient city" when Lord Buddha visited it in 500 B.C. and is the oldest living city in the world today.
  • Grammar constitutes one of India's greatest contributions to Western philology. Panini, the Sanskrit grammarian, who lived between 750 and 500 B.C., was the first to compose formal grammar through his 'Astadhyai'.
  • India invented the Number System. Aryabhatta invented zero.
  • The World's first university was established in Takshashila in 700 B.C. More than 10,500 students from all over the world studied more than 60 subjects. The University of Nalanda built in the 4th century B.C. was one of the greatest achievements of ancient India in the field of education.
  • Sanskrit is the mother of all the European languages. It is the most suitable language for computer software, says a report in the July 1987 issue of Forbes magazine.
Mountains

Mountains

 
  • Himalayas 2,400 km long, between 240 km and 320 km wide. The Kanchenjunga peak is at 8,534 mts.
  • Aravalli Ranges (Rajasthan Mount Abu 1,219 mts)
  • Eastern Ghats (Height 610 mts)
  • Western Ghats (Height 915-1220 mts, some mountains upto 2,440 mts)
Rivers

Rivers

 
  • Ganges 2,510 km
  • Brahmaputra 2,900 km

aDeserts

  • 200,000 sq km with about 1/3 cultivable land.

aFlora

  • 45,000 different species
  • 15,000 Vascula Flora about 35% endemic
Nature Park

Nature Park

  • 80 National parks
  • 441 Wildlife Sanctuaries
  • About 23 Tiger reserves (Project Tiger)
  • 40,000 Tiger population end of 19th century
  • 2,000 in the 70's
  • 6,000 today
  • Has 60% of the worldwide tiger population

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