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24 Mar 2022 | 10:30 AM UTC

India: Authorities to lift most domestic COVID-19 measures from March 31 /update 60

India to lift most domestic COVID-19 restrictions from March 31. Ban on international commercial flights to end from March 27.

Warning

Event

Officials plan to lift most remaining domestic COVID-19 restrictions from March 31. However, the national government will continue to allow state governments to modify restrictions based on disease activity. Individuals must continue to wear facemasks and practice social distancing in public places.

Domestic Measures
Largely relaxed domestic COVID-19 measures remain in effect across India, with regional variations; officials will relax most ongoing measures from March 31. Businesses and transport services are operational. Facemask mandates and social distancing rules in public places are underway in almost all states and will remain in effect. Officials in some states continue to ban large gatherings, limit capacity for public venues and transport, as well as curtail operations of educational institutions, sports facilities, recreational venues, religious sites, and tourist spots. Multiple states also allow only those with proof of vaccination to enter nonessential public venues and use public transport. Several states are mandating fines for violators of social distancing rules, though poor adherence and enforcement levels are reported.

Most states require domestic and international travelers to register on the national Aarogya Setu mobile application and/or state-specific online portals for contact tracing purposes. Most interstate passengers must carry negative results of a COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours before departure or proof of completing vaccination at least 15 days prior to travel; some regions require such documents only for arrivals from designated high-risk domestic locations or allow proof of partial vaccination instead. The enforcement level of the measures varies across states.

International Travel Restrictions
Indian officials plan to resume inbound and outbound international commercial flights from 00:01 March 27. "Air bubble" services will cease once commercial operations resume March 27. Authorities have resumed the issuance of tourist visas. All international passengers must register on the Air Suvidha portal. Unvaccinated arrivals must also upload negative results of an RT-PCR test for COVID-19 taken within 72 hours before departure. Fully vaccinated arrivals from select locations may submit a vaccine certificate instead of a negative test. The complete list is available here. Entrants will still need to provide either a negative COVID-19 test or proof of vaccination after flights resume March 27. Air carriers may bar individuals exhibiting symptoms during pre-departure thermal screening to board flights to India.

International passengers will undergo thermal screening on arrival; isolation and testing are mandatory for symptomatic passengers. All entrants must self-monitor their health up to 14 days of arrival; authorities may conduct random free-of-cost testing of passengers at airports for surveillance. Officials may impose fresh restrictions for countries with increased disease activity or new variants at short notice.

International passengers traveling for emergency reasons need prior approval to enter without negative results of an RT-PCR COVID-19 test and must undergo on-arrival testing. Entrants requiring on-arrival paid testing facilities - available at several airports, including Bengaluru (BLR), Cochin (COK), Delhi (DEL), Hyderabad (HYD), and Mumbai (BOM) - must pre-book tests via the Air Suvidha portal and wait 1-6 hours for negative test results before boarding a connecting flight or exiting the airport.

States may impose varying quarantine and testing requirements; those seeking exemptions and waivers must do so from authorities in all intended destination and transit states before arrival. Citizens, residents, and long-term visa holders of foreign countries looking to exit India must confirm entry eligibility with the intended destination country's embassy and book their tickets through air carriers' websites. Authorities will likely continue to enforce entry restrictions at border crossings and mandate testing for people allowed to enter. Officials have reportedly lifted the requirement of pre-departure tests for travelers who have received a COVID-19 booster shot entering India through the Benapole land border crossing.

Advice

Abide by national health and safety measures. Reconfirm business appointments, deliveries, work, and travel arrangements. Do not check out of accommodation without confirming onward travel. Consider delaying traveling if experiencing symptoms associated with COVID-19, as they may prompt increased scrutiny and delays. Maintain contact with your diplomatic representation. Ensure contingency plans account for further disruptive measures or extensions of current restrictions. Carry proper identification documents, heed all security advisories.

Resources

Ministry of Health and Family Welfare Help Page
Bureau of Immigration
World Health Organization (WHO)
Air India
Air Suvidha Portal