About this article
Do Australians Need a Visa for India?
Yes. The good news: Australia is on the e-Visa eligible list, so the entire process is online with no consulate visit required for short-term visits.
Your purpose
Visa type
Tourism, yoga retreats, ashram stays (under 6 months)
e-Tourist Visa
Wellness, Ayurvedic treatment, structured yoga programs
Ayush Visa (introduced 2023)
Business meetings or conferences
e-Business Visa
Accompanying a medical patient
e-Medical Attendant Visa
The 30-Day Visa Confusion — Explained for Australians
This is the single most searched question by Australian travelers before going to India, and the confusion is real. Here is the clear answer.
When you apply for a 30-day Indian e-Tourist Visa, two separate time windows apply — not one:
Window 1 — ETA Entry Window: The period within which you must arrive in India. Shown on your approval document. You can now apply up to 120 days before your planned arrival. You must land before this window closes.
Window 2 — Your Permitted Stay: Your actual 30 days inside India. This begins the day you land and clear immigration. Not the day you applied. Not the day it was approved.
Real example:
Apply: 1 July → ETA Approved: 3 July → Fly into India: 20 July
Your 30-day stay runs: 20 July → 18 August
The days between approval and arrival are not lost. For Australians: Apply 1–2 weeks before departure. Processing takes 3–5 business days. You don't need the full 120-day window unless you have a complex multi-entry itinerary.
For the complete e-Visa breakdown including all visa types and the step-by-step application process, read our India e-Visa Guide 2026.
Which e-Tourist Visa Should Australians Choose?
Visa
Stay Allowance
Entries
Best for
30-Day (e-T1V)
30 days from arrival
Double
First visit, single trip
6-Month (e-T2V)
6 months from ETA grant
Single
Extended stays, long retreats
1-Year (e-T1V)
Up to 90 days per stay
Multiple
Return visitors, retreat regulars
5-Year (e-T1V)
Up to 90 days per stay
Multiple
Frequent practitioners, serious returnees
Many experienced Australian India travelers skip the 30-day visa entirely and get the 1-year multiple-entry — it removes all timing confusion at marginal extra cost.
The 180-day rule: Regardless of visa type, tourist visa holders can stay a maximum of 180 days in India per calendar year (rule since 2023).
How to Apply — Step by Step
Only one official site exists: indianvisaonline.gov.in — type it directly, never click links from Facebook groups, search ads, or travel sites. Many fake sites mimic the real portal and charge inflated fees.
Documents you need:
Australian passport with at least 6 months validity from your India arrival date, and 2 blank pages
Digital passport photo (JPEG, white background, face clearly visible)
Scanned passport bio page (PDF, under 1MB)
Return ticket or travel itinerary
Proof of accommodation (hotel or ashram confirmation)
Visit indianvisaonline.gov.in and select e-Visa Application
Choose your visa type (tourist, business, medical, Ayush)
Fill the form — every detail must match your passport exactly
Upload your passport scan and photo
Pay by credit or debit card
Note your Application ID for tracking
Receive your ETA by email — print it out. Also, complete the e-Arrival Card at boi.gov.in within 72 hours before flying and print it — some airports reject the electronic version shown on a phone
At Indian immigration: queue at the e-Visa lane for your passport stamp
New: e-Arrival Card Required Before You Land
India now requires all international travelers to complete an e-Arrival Card within 72 hours before arrival. This is separate from your visa — it's a short online form submitted at boi.gov.in or through the Indian Visa Su-Swagatam mobile app. Set a reminder to do this the day before you fly. As of March 2026, at least one major Indian airport did not accept the electronic version shown on a phone — they required either a printed copy or filling it out manually on arrival with a wait. Complete it online within 72 hours of departure and print it.
Staying longer or changing your plans while in India? The e-FRRO portal (indianfrro.gov.in) handles visa extensions, long-stay registration, and visa conversions — all online. For most 2–4 week visitors this never comes up, but if you're planning an extended ashram stay or yoga teacher training that pushes past your original visa grant, this is the system you'll use.
What Happens at Indian Immigration — What Australians Actually Experience
Many travelers focus on getting the visa approved and then aren't sure what to expect at the immigration counter. Here is what Australian travelers consistently report from recent trips (2025–2026).
What immigration consistently asks for:
Passport
Printed hardcopy of your ETA (e-Visa approval document)
e-Arrival Card — completed online within 72 hours before departure
What immigration almost never asks for in practice:
Proof of funds / bank statements
Return or onward ticket
Hotel booking or accommodation details
COVID-19 vaccination certificate (occasionally at some airports, rare)
The honest picture: Officially, Indian e-Visa rules state you must hold a return or onward ticket and have sufficient funds to support your stay. In reality, experienced Australian travelers who visit India repeatedly report never being asked for either. The immigration officer's primary concern is that you are a genuine tourist — not intending to work, volunteer, or do missionary work illegally.
The one document that consistently matters beyond your passport: the printed ETA. Carry a physical paper copy. At Delhi airport in March 2026, biometric machines were in use before customs to record fingerprints and take a face photo — this is now part of the standard arrival process at major airports.
As of March 2026, at least one major Indian airport did not accept the electronic version of the arrival card shown on a phone — they required either a printed copy or filling it out manually on arrival (with a queue). Complete it online at boi.gov.in within 72 hours before your flight and print it — don't rely on showing it on your phone.
Most Australian travelers describe the process as quick and straightforward when documents are prepared. The queue slows because other passengers aren't prepared — if you are, you'll move through efficiently.
Pro tip from a Melbourne traveler who visits India once a year: "I carry paper copies of everything but no one has ever asked to see them beyond the visa and passport. Just have them ready in case."
Getting to India from Australia — Best Flight Routes
There are no direct flights from Australia to India. All routes connect through Asian hubs:
From Sydney or Melbourne:
Via Singapore (Singapore Airlines, Scoot) → Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai — the most popular routing, typically 13–16 hours total
Via Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia Airlines, AirAsia) → similar destinations, often the best budget option
Via Dubai (Emirates) → excellent connections to Delhi and Mumbai, 18–20 hours total
From Perth
Perth is geographically Australia's closest city to India. Flights via Singapore or Kuala Lumpur typically run 12–14 hours total — often the best value in economy class.
Best Indian entry airports for Australians heading to South India:
Most Australian spiritual and wellness travelers start in South India — shorter flight, warmer, temple-rich, and home to Kerala's Ayurvedic heartland.
Bangalore (BLR) — gateway for Karnataka, Mysore, Coorg
Chennai (MAA) — entry point for Tamil Nadu's temple circuits
Kochi (COK) — direct access to Kerala's backwaters and Ayurvedic retreats
Thiruvananthapuram (TRV) — southernmost hub, close to key ashrams
For North India (Rishikesh, Varanasi, Dharamsala): fly into Delhi (DEL).
Jet lag note: Australia to India involves a far smaller time gap than USA to India. IST is only 4.5 hours behind AEDT — adjustment is significantly easier for Australians than for North American travelers. Most people feel settled within 1–2 days.
Getting Around India Once You Arrive
Within cities: App-based cabs (Ola, Uber) work well in Delhi, Mumbai, Jaipur, Bangalore, Chennai, and most major cities — familiar, metered, and safe. Tuk-tuks and auto-rickshaws are fun for shorter distances — always agree on a price before getting in, or insist on the meter.
Between cities: Indian Railways is iconic and genuinely enjoyable — trains are how most long-distance travel happens and kids in particular tend to love the journey. Book in advance through IRCTC or use a travel agent. For shorter hops, domestic flights are cheap and fast — Delhi to Jaipur, for example, takes about an hour and costs roughly AUD $20–60.
Private driver with car: For first-time visitors, especially families or small groups, hiring a driver for multi-day road travel is the most comfortable and flexible option. Many travelers do 10+ days with the same driver covering Delhi, Agra, and Jaipur. A good driver becomes a guide, cultural interpreter, and logistics coordinator in one. Ask your accommodation or Smukti to recommend someone vetted rather than accepting approaches at tourist sites.
Important: Be specific with drivers about your itinerary from the start. A very common pattern for first-time visitors is being taken to textile shops and jewellery stores — commission-based detours that eat up your time. State clearly at the outset what you want to see and what you don't.
Delhi airport: Use the pre-booked taxi counter inside the terminal on arrival. Don't accept approaches from drivers outside — the counter price is fixed and safe.
Delhi metro: Safe, clean, cheap, and easy to navigate. Highly recommended for getting around Delhi rather than fighting traffic in a cab.
South India vs North India — Which to Choose First?
Both offer profound experiences. Most first-time Australian spiritual travelers find South India the more accessible and revelatory starting point.
South India holds some of the oldest living temple traditions in the world — Dravidian architecture, Shaiva and Vaishnava pilgrimage circuits, Kerala's Ayurvedic tradition, and the ashrams of Ramana Maharshi and Mata Amritanandamayi. The pace is steadier than North India, infrastructure is well-maintained, and English is widely spoken in spiritual centers.
Amy Landry, an Australian yoga teacher and author who has led retreat groups across South India for years, specifically takes groups to places like Udupi and Sringeri — deliberately off the tourist trail, into the living heart of the tradition.
North India — Rishikesh, Varanasi, Haridwar, the Himalayan pilgrimage routes — offers a different intensity. The Ganges, the yoga capital of the world, and cities older than recorded history. For Australians with 3+ weeks, combining South and North in a single journey is deeply rewarding.
One note: the classic Golden Triangle (Delhi–Agra–Jaipur) is the default suggestion for first-time visitors, but many experienced travelers now recommend considering South India or less-visited regions like Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, or Goa as alternatives that offer deeper authenticity with fewer tourist-industry pressures.
Read: Why Australians Are Discovering the Real India in the South — an interview with Australian yoga teacher Amy Landry.
Practical Tips for Australians Traveling to India
Health prep: Recommended vaccines for Australia-to-India travel: Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Typhoid, Tetanus, and Dukoral (traveller's diarrhoea/cholera). None are mandatory for entry but all are strongly recommended. Consult your GP or a travel medicine pharmacist 6–8 weeks before departure. Check smartraveller.gov.au for the latest health and safety advisories. Also consider starting a good probiotic in the weeks before you travel — this is widely recommended by experienced India travelers and genuinely helps your gut adjust.
Read our full guide: How to Avoid Getting Sick in India
Medicine Kit — What to Pack
Anti-diarrhoea medication (Imodium / Loperamide)
ORS / electrolyte sachets — critical if you get dehydrated
Paracetamol
Broad-spectrum antibiotics (get a prescription from your GP before leaving)
Antibiotic cream and bandaids
Hand sanitiser and wet wipes — used constantly
Any personal prescription medications
Good news: pharmacies are widely available across India, medications are inexpensive, and hospitals operate without the appointment wait times common in Australia. If something goes wrong, getting seen quickly is rarely the problem.
Food Safety in India
Safe to eat: Freshly cooked hot food, masala chai from any vendor (it's boiled), bottled water with an unbroken seal, fruit you can peel yourself, veg curries from busy restaurants.
Avoid: Street food (especially for the first few days), raw salads, cut fruit displayed openly, ice (often made from tap water), meat from street stalls.
The first two days rule: Go easy on spice for the first couple of days. Don't jump straight into the hottest dishes — let your stomach adjust before you experiment.
Water discipline: Drink only sealed bottled water. Use bottled water to brush your teeth and wash fruit. This is the single most repeated piece of advice from experienced India travelers.
SIM card: Get an Airtel or Jio SIM at the airport immediately on arrival. Indian mobile data is among the cheapest in the world. You need an Indian number from day one — many apps and services require OTP verification to a local number.
Full connectivity guide: India SIM Card & Internet Guide for International Travelers
Money: Withdraw Indian rupees at airport ATMs on arrival. Cards are accepted at hotels and larger restaurants, but cash remains essential at temples, street food stalls, and local transport.
Temple etiquette: Cover shoulders and knees at all temples. Remove shoes at every entrance. Some Tamil Nadu and Kerala temples restrict entry to non-Hindus in the inner sanctum — respect this boundary, the outer architecture and atmosphere are profound in their own right.
Best time to visit: October to March. Australian summer aligns with Indian winter — post-monsoon, dry, cooler, and coinciding with major festivals including Diwali (Oct/Nov) and Karthigai Deepam (Dec).
Ayush Visa — For Australians Coming for Yoga or Ayurvedic Treatment
If your primary purpose is structured wellness — an extended Ayurvedic program, a yoga teacher training of significant duration, or therapeutic care at a registered institution — India's Ayush Visa (introduced 2023) may be more appropriate than a standard tourist e-Visa. Some treatment centers require an invitation letter from a registered Ayush institution. Check with your retreat center before applying.
Planning Your Journey — Next Steps
Whether you're drawn to Tamil Nadu's ancient temple circuit, Kerala's Ayurvedic healing tradition, Karnataka's off-the-beaten-path sacred sites, or a Himalayan ashram stay — Smukti curates spiritual journeys across India built specifically for international seekers.
Browse India Spiritual Tours →
Bringing a Group? Planning a Retreat?
If you're a yoga teacher, wellness facilitator, or retreat leader considering bringing a group from Australia to India, Smukti works with retreat leaders to build bespoke group itineraries — venues, logistics, spiritual guides, and on-ground support.
Start by understanding what your retreat might cost: