In a nutshell
Almost every Irish passport holder needs an Indian visa in 2026. For tourism the e-Visa is filed online, approved by email in three to five business days, and presented at the airport on arrival together with the e-Arrival Card filled out up to three days before travel (a 2026 requirement; the paper version is accepted until March 2026). Three popular Tourist tiers cover most trips: 30-day double-entry, 1-year multi-entry, 5-year multi-entry. Irish-Indian readers with one Indian-citizen parent or grandparent may qualify for OCI instead — a lifetime visa for the diaspora that removes the tier-choice exercise entirely (see the OCI guide for full eligibility, fees and process; Irish applicants apply through the Embassy of India in Dublin). This guide is the service desk for the whole flow: tier choice, the application process, the Embassy in Dublin, the hub routes from Dublin, and the questions Irish travellers actually ask.
Do Irish travellers need a visa for India?
Yes — almost certainly. Irish passport holders do not get visa-free entry to India, and EU membership has no bearing on the rule (India is outside the EU's reciprocal frameworks). Most travellers apply for the e-Visa online and pick one of three popular Tourist tiers — 30-day double-entry, 1-year multi-entry or 5-year multi-entry. You upload a passport scan and a passport-style photo, and the approval letter arrives by email within three to five business days. Irish readers with Indian heritage should also check the OCI guide — OCI is a lifetime visa that removes the tier-choice exercise entirely.
Travelling on a US, UK, Australian, Canadian or New Zealand passport instead? Our per-market editions cover the Indian mission that handles your area, the direct-flight gateways from your home airports and the home-country travel advisory: US, UK, Australia, Canada or New Zealand.
Below: which visa route applies to whom, the three popular Tourist tiers compared, the application walked through step by step, what to have ready before you start, two ways to file (DIY portal or visa service), the Embassy of India in Dublin, hub routes from Dublin and Cork, the four trip shapes Irish travellers actually plan, the restricted-area permits, the 180-day FRRO trap on long stays, what to do in an emergency in India, and the questions Irish travellers ask.
- Irish passport without Indian roots — e-Visa (the default): File the e-Tourist Visa online from your Irish address, pay in US dollars on an Irish credit card, and present the printed PDF at the immigration counter on arrival. Three popular Tourist tiers (30-day double-entry, 1-year multi-entry, 5-year multi-entry) plus a quieter 6-month single-entry variant. Tier choice depends on the shape of the trip, not the passport.
- Irish-Indian with Indian heritage — OCI is probably the move: If a parent, grandparent or great-grandparent was an Indian citizen, you may qualify for OCI — a lifetime visa that removes the tier-choice exercise and the per-trip application entirely. See the OCI guide for the full eligibility, application and re-linking story. If you do not have an OCI card yet and a trip is imminent, file an e-Visa as the interim path while the OCI is processed.
- Stamp 4 or other Irish residence on a foreign passport — that passport's rule: Irish Stamp 4 residence or any other Irish residence permission does not change the Indian visa rule for the foreign passport you travel on. If your foreign passport is on the e-Visa list (most major source markets are), file the e-Visa on that passport. If it is not on the list, file through the Embassy of India in Dublin. The Irish residence stamps matter for your re-entry to Ireland, not for Indian immigration.
- Restricted-area permits — on top of the visa, not instead of it: Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur and Mizoram in the Northeast; parts of Sikkim and Ladakh near the China-Tibet border; and parts of the Andaman & Nicobar Islands sit under the Protected Area Permit (PAP) or Restricted Area Permit (RAP) regime. The permit is required in addition to the e-Visa, never instead of it.
- 30-day double-entry — for the short tourism trip: Valid for 30 days from first arrival, two entries allowed in that window. The default choice for first-time Irish visitors planning a single two-to-four-week loop: the Golden Triangle, a Kerala backwater fortnight, a Goa beach week, a Mumbai-and-coast detour. Simplest application, simplest fee, by far the most-used tier.
- 1-year multi-entry — for the flexible visitor: Multiple entries inside a 365-day window from the grant date, with stay capped at 180 days per calendar year. The right tier for split trips — a winter month now and the Himalayas later — and for repeat tourism inside a single year. Same application form as the 30-day tier; same processing time.
- 5-year multi-entry — for the long-horizon traveller: Multiple entries inside a 5-year window from grant, capped at the same 180 days per calendar year. Suits slow-travel writers and photographers cycling between Goa winters and Himalayan summers, Irish consultants on recurring assignments in Bangalore or Hyderabad, and yoga teachers who return for training cycles. Removes the application step from every subsequent trip across those five years.
Beyond the three popular tiers
Three other categories run alongside the popular Tourist tiers. The 6-month single-entry e-Tourist Visa (e-T2V) suits travellers planning one long uninterrupted stay between three and six months — a single trip rather than several visits. The Business e-Visa covers trade-fair attendance, conference participation, sales calls and short consulting work; it requires an Indian-side invitation letter and does not double as a Tourist visa for paid work. The Medical e-Visa and its associated Medical Attendant e-Visa cover treatment trips to Indian hospitals; admission letter required, with a slot for the accompanying family member.
- 1Pick your tier: Choose between 30-day double-entry, 1-year multi-entry, 5-year multi-entry, 6-month single-entry, Business or Medical based on the shape of your trip. The application form is the same; only the fee and the validity differ. If you are unsure, the 30-day Tourist tier covers most first-time Irish trips.
- 2Open the application portal: The Indian e-Visa portal accepts applications between 30 and 120 days before your intended arrival, depending on the tier (30 days for the short tier; 120 for the 1-year and 5-year). Earliest is best — peak-season volume can extend processing past the typical three-to-five-day window. If your trip is less than four days away, the e-Visa is not a viable path; the consular route through the Embassy in Dublin is the only fallback (and is too slow for most last-minute trips).
- 3Upload your documents: You need a clear scan of your Irish passport bio page and a passport-style photo as a JPG file between 10 KB and 1 MB, equal height and width, full face front view, eyes open, no glasses, plain light or white background. The portal rejects oversize files and shadowed backgrounds without telling you which one tripped — check the dimensions and lighting before you upload.
- 4Fill the form and pay: Enter your personal information exactly as it appears on your Irish passport. The address-in-India field accepts the name and phone number of your first hotel for tourism applications. Pay the fee in US dollars by credit or debit card; an acknowledgement number is generated immediately and emailed to you.
- 5Wait for the approval email: Most clean applications resolve in three to five business days. Sensitive-nationality profiles, naturalised-from-an-off-list-country applicants and any application with a documentation flag can take seven to fourteen days. Status is checkable at any time on the portal with your acknowledgement number and passport number.
- 6Fill the e-Arrival Card and fly: A 2026 requirement: complete the e-Arrival Card online up to three days before travel (one form per traveller). The paper version is being phased out and is accepted through March 2026. Print the e-Visa approval letter PDF and carry it separately from your phone — the e-Visa counter at the airport accepts either, but a flat phone battery at the wrong moment is a small but real risk. At immigration in Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru or any of the 33 e-Visa airports, head to the counter labelled e-Visa, present the PDF and the passport with the e-Arrival Card QR code, submit fingerprints, and you are through in five to fifteen minutes.
Pre-application checklist
A short checklist prevents avoidable rejections and surprises. Passport validity: minimum six months from the date of application, with at least two blank pages for immigration stamps. Renew at home if you are inside that window — the consular passport-renewal route from inside India is slow.
The passport-style photo rules are above; the most common cause of rejection is a shadow on a wall-mounted background or a file that exceeds 1 MB. Irish pharmacies and photo shops (Boots, Snappy Snaps, the local An Post shops with photo services) all hit the spec if you tell them it is for an Indian e-Visa.
The address-in-India field appears on every application. For tourism, the name and phone number of your first hotel and its city are enough — you do not need to list every onward leg. For a yoga school, ashram or language course, use the institution's official registered address.
Sensitive nationalities and origins. Two cohorts face extra paperwork and a longer processing window: Irish citizens naturalised from Pakistan, and Irish citizens whose parents or grandparents held Pakistani citizenship. The file usually moves through the Embassy of India in Dublin rather than the e-Visa portal. The bilateral framework refreshes every year; confirm the current documentation list with the Embassy before you apply.
Children and minors each need their own e-Visa application tied to their own Irish passport — the parent's e-Visa does not cover the child. Include the international long-form birth certificate naming both parents in the upload bundle, plus a parental-consent document if the child travels with one parent or a guardian.
Yellow Fever certificate. Travellers arriving within six days of departure from a Yellow Fever-endemic country must present a valid International Certificate of Vaccination at Indian immigration. India treats 29 listed African countries and 13 listed Central or South American countries as endemic. The certificate becomes valid ten days after the vaccine and is recognised internationally for life. Irish travellers routing via a Gulf or African transit need to check this before they fly; without one, you face quarantine of up to six days at a designated facility.
Two ways to file: DIY portal vs visa service
DIY through the government portal is the cheapest path and works perfectly well for first-time applicants with simple profiles, a passport that has a year or more of validity, a recent photo that hits the spec, and no Pakistani-origin or off-list-passport complications. Pay the government fee in USD on a credit card. Total cost is the base fee for your tier. The trade-off is that the portal is unforgiving — rejections do not include a reason most of the time, the help line is slow, and a single rejected application means re-filing from scratch with a new fee.
A visa service partner sits between you and the portal: pre-submission document review (catches the photo-spec and name-mismatch errors that cause most rejections), a single point of contact for status updates, family-application coordination so each minor's documents are tied correctly, a last-minute backup if the portal hiccups in the final 72 hours before departure, rejection-and-reapply handling if the first file is bounced, and a customer-service touch when the government channel goes quiet. The trade-off is a moderate handling fee on top of the government fee — typically tens of euros per applicant — for the peace of mind. For families with several applications, for first-time applicants without a year of passport runway, and for any trip with hard timing constraints, the service path tends to be the calmer option. The CTA card on the right of this page is one such service.
- Embassy of India, Dublin: The Embassy of India in Dublin is Ireland's single mission for Indian consular and visa work. It handles applications for the whole of Ireland — Republic and overseas — and also liaises with the Honorary Consulate where relevant. For applications that need an in-person presence (PIO/OCI biometric enrolment, sensitive-nationality files), the Embassy is the only option short of travelling to the High Commission of India in London for emergency cases. Routine tourist e-Visas do not need any physical visit to the Embassy — they are processed online directly with the Indian government portal.
Hub routes from Ireland in 2026
No direct flights from Dublin or Cork to India in 2026. Every Irish-India itinerary routes through a one-stop European or Gulf hub. The natural map:
Via the UK. Aer Lingus and British Airways connect Dublin, Cork and Shannon to London Heathrow, then Air India, British Airways or Virgin Atlantic onward to Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru and Chennai. Aer Lingus also serves Manchester for the Manchester–Delhi Air India connection. Total travel time typically 13 to 16 hours. The most straightforward option for first-time travellers and the easiest for visa-free transit since Heathrow handles airside without an additional UK visa for international transfers.
Via continental Europe. Lufthansa from Dublin via Frankfurt (FRA) or Munich (MUC) to a wide Indian network. KLM via Amsterdam (AMS) from Dublin and Cork to Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru. Air France via Paris (CDG) from Dublin to the same Indian hubs.
Via the Gulf. Emirates from Dublin via Dubai (DXB) and Etihad via Abu Dhabi (AUH) cover the deep Indian network with the most onward frequency. Qatar Airways via Doha (DOH) operates Dublin–DOH–[Delhi/Mumbai/Bengaluru/Hyderabad/Chennai/Kochi]. Total travel time via the Gulf is typically 14 to 18 hours and often offers the most flexible date and routing options.

Varanasi at Diwali — the ghats along the Ganges fill with oil lamps and ceremonial fires during the festival of lights, one of the most layered spiritual experiences a first-time Irish visitor can plan a trip around.
Liubov / Adobe Stock
- Golden Triangle — Delhi, Agra and Rajasthan: The standard first-India loop and the one most Irish operators sell as a package: Delhi for the Mughal capital and the Lutyens' precinct, Agra for the Taj Mahal as a day or overnight, Jaipur as the gateway into Rajasthan's forts and palaces. Add Udaipur, Jodhpur and Pushkar for a second week. The 30-day Tourist e-Visa is sufficient — no special permits.
- South India — Kerala backwaters and Tamil temples: Fly into Kochi for Kerala's backwaters, hill stations and Ayurveda traditions — quieter and more comfortable for first-time Indian travel than the Golden Triangle — then continue east into Tamil Nadu for the great Chola temples, Chennai's classical-music season and Pondicherry's Franco-Tamil coast. Twelve to sixteen days is comfortable; the 30-day Tourist e-Visa covers it.
- Goa heritage and beach — the Konkan loop: Goa in a week pairs the UNESCO churches at Old Goa and the Fontainhas heritage quarter in Panaji with North or South Goa beaches, the Anjuna market and a Dudhsagar Falls day. Extend along the Konkan Railway down into northern Karnataka for Gokarna and Hampi if you have two weeks. The simplest first-India route for Irish travellers who want India without the full sensory load on day one.
- Mumbai gateway and Maharashtra hinterland: Land in Mumbai for the Victorian-Gothic and Art-Deco UNESCO ensemble, the food scene and the Elephanta Caves, then add Maharashtra's Ajanta and Ellora caves out of Aurangabad, Pune as a Maratha-history-plus-vineyard alternative, and the Konkan coast. The 30-day Tourist e-Visa works; pair with Kolkata on the opposite coast for three weeks.
- Bangalore, Hyderabad or Chennai for business: A growing reason for Irish travel to India: the Bangalore (BLR), Hyderabad (HYD) and Chennai (MAA) technology corridors plus Mumbai's financial centre and Gurgaon's consulting hub. For meeting-and-fly trips the 30-day Tourist tier works if there is no paid Indian-employer engagement; for invitation-letter business activity, switch to the Business e-Visa. Frequent quarterly travellers should price the 5-year multi-entry as a one-and-done.
- Wellness, yoga teacher training or Ayurveda retreat: Rishikesh for 200- and 500-hour yoga teacher trainings, Mysore for ashtanga, Kerala for Ayurveda intensives, Bodh Gaya and Igatpuri for Vipassana retreats. The 1-year multi-entry tier is the right fit for stays between 30 and 180 days; longer than 180 continuous days triggers FRRO registration (see below). Pack the ashram or training school's registered address for the application's address-in-India field.
Restricted areas — PAP, RAP and where they apply
Most first-time Irish visitors never encounter a restricted-area permit. The Golden Triangle, the Kerala-Tamil Nadu classical loop, Goa, Mumbai and Maharashtra, Varanasi and the Gangetic plain, Karnataka, and most of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana all sit inside the general e-Visa zone with no extra paperwork. The permit regimes apply at the country's sensitive borders.
Protected Area Permits (PAP) cover foreign-national entry to Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, parts of Sikkim and parts of Ladakh near the China-Tibet border. The Arunachal PAP runs through licensed tour operators with a fixed itinerary; it is not a walk-in application. Nagaland's PAP is easier outside the December Hornbill Festival peak. Restricted Area Permits (RAP) cover parts of the Andaman & Nicobar Islands and a smaller subset of Sikkim and northeastern frontier zones; since 2018, thirty inhabited Andaman islands no longer require an RAP for foreign visitors. From 2026, Sikkim's RAP for foreign nationals is issued through the e-FRRO portal online — no physical permits at the border any more. The Inner Line Permit (ILP) is the parallel regime for Indian citizens in the same regions; foreign nationals follow PAP or RAP instead.
FRRO — the 180-day continuous-stay rule
Irish travellers who stay in India for more than 180 continuous days in a single visit must register with the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) within 14 days of crossing day 180. The rule applies to long-stay tourists on the 1-year or 5-year multi-entry tier just as it does to student and employment visa holders. Most short-trip travellers never trigger it: the 30-day tier rules it out by definition, and most multi-entry tourist trips stay well under six months in any single visit. The threshold is continuous stay, not aggregate days in the year — leaving and returning resets the clock.
What catches people is exactly that continuous-stay reading. If you arrive on a multi-entry e-Visa, stay 100 days, leave for two weeks to Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan or the Maldives and return for another 90 days, the counter resets and FRRO does not trigger. If you stay inside India and only travel between states the day count keeps running. Yoga-teacher trainees in Rishikesh, long-stay digital nomads in Goa or Mysuru, and Vipassana retreatants hit the rule regularly without expecting to. The process is now fully online through the e-FRRO portal — paperless, cashless and usually without an office visit; the office only calls you in if something on the application needs working out. OCI cardholders and children below twelve are exempt. Treat day 175 as the latest comfortable moment to open the application.
At the e-Visa counter
Thirty-three Indian airports operate e-Visa counters, including Delhi (DEL), Mumbai (BOM), Bengaluru (BLR), Chennai (MAA), Hyderabad (HYD), Kochi (COK), Kolkata (CCU) and the major regional hubs, alongside nineteen seaports and four land border crossings (Raxaul, Rupaidiha, Darranga and Jogbani). After disembarking, head to the immigration counter labelled e-Visa, present the printed PDF approval letter or its digital version on your phone alongside the Irish passport and the e-Arrival Card QR code, and submit fingerprints and a digital photograph. Stamping takes five to fifteen minutes depending on the line. Carry the PDF printed and separately from your hand luggage — a phone battery flat at the wrong moment is a small but real risk.
Health and insurance
Travel insurance is not legally required for entry, but private hospitals at the major destinations charge international rates and a serious illness or accident can mean repatriation costs that local hospital cash payments do not cover. The European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) does not extend to India — it is a Europe-only instrument. Take out a dedicated travel-medical policy with cover that includes repatriation. The Yellow Fever certificate is the only mandatory health document at the border, and only on the conditions described above. Routine recommended vaccinations — Hepatitis A and B, typhoid, tetanus boosters, regional Japanese encephalitis for rural northeastern trips — are travel-medicine standard rather than Indian-government rules; book a travel-medicine consultation six to eight weeks ahead at a Tropical Medical Bureau clinic, your GP or one of the HSE travel-vaccination centres.
If things go wrong in India: the Irish Embassy
Ireland has a single diplomatic mission in India: the Embassy of Ireland in New Delhi. Lost or stolen Irish passport. File a police report at the local station first, then book an emergency-passport appointment at the Embassy. Emergency travel documents are typically issued in one to two business days; full replacement passports take longer. There are no Irish consulates in Mumbai, Chennai or Kolkata — for southern or western India, the Embassy in New Delhi remains the contact and may liaise with the Honorary Consul network for in-region support.
Hospitalisation or medical emergency. Contact the Embassy's consular section in New Delhi. They can call your family, coordinate with your travel insurer, transmit medical records and (in extreme cases) facilitate medical evacuation. Arrest or legal trouble. Insist on contacting the Irish Embassy; the mission can provide a list of local English-speaking lawyers, monitor your treatment in custody and notify your family. They cannot post bail or provide legal representation. Death of an Irish citizen abroad. The Embassy helps with paperwork, repatriation logistics and notarial services. The Department of Foreign Affairs Consular Assistance line in Dublin (+353 1 408 2000) operates 24 hours. Registration on the DFA's Travelwise service before you fly is recommended for travel into the Northeast, the Andamans or any restricted-permit zone.
India's Ministry of Home Affairs sets the e-Visa fee in US dollars per nationality, refreshed annually, and the portal shows you the exact figure once your Irish passport is entered. As a current-of-writing reference, the popular Tourist tiers run around USD 25 for the 30-day double-entry tier, USD 40 for the 1-year multi-entry and USD 80 for the 5-year multi-entry; Business and Medical tiers carry separate fee schedules. The EUR charge follows your card's posted USD rate on the booking day. A visa-service partner adds a moderate handling fee on top of the government fee in exchange for document review, status monitoring and family-application coordination. The portal price is authoritative — confirm it when you start the application.
Not under the regular e-Visa tiers. The longest Tourist e-Visa is 5-year multi-entry, with the same 180-day-per-calendar-year stay cap as the 1-year tier. The only routes that effectively give a longer entitlement are the OCI card (lifetime, for Indian-heritage applicants — see the OCI guide) or specific long-term consular visas (employment, student, research) that are not e-Visa categories.
Use the Application Status link on the Indian e-Visa portal. Enter your application ID (sent in the acknowledgement email after fee payment) and your passport number; the current processing stage and any flagged document requests are shown. Status normally moves from Application Submitted → Under Process → Granted within three to five business days. If your application has not moved for more than a week, contact the helpdesk or check with the Embassy of India in Dublin — silence sometimes hides a missing-document flag that did not get emailed out.
DFA Ireland — India travel advice
The Department of Foreign Affairs' official Irish-traveller guidance for India — current entry-and-exit requirements, advisory level, Embassy of Ireland in New Delhi contact and the Travelwise registration link for security alerts and emergency contact.
Incredible India — Official India Tourism Portal
The Ministry of Tourism's official visitor portal — destination guides by state and theme, the experience-led travel calendar and an overview of registered hosts and operators. Available in English and several other languages.
Archaeological Survey of India
The federal body that maintains India's protected monuments — the Taj Mahal, Khajuraho, Ajanta-Ellora, Hampi, Konark and around 3,600 others — with site information, opening hours and the online ticketing portal.
IHR Point of Entry — Yellow Fever vaccination
The Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare's IHR Point of Entry page listing the Yellow Fever endemic countries the border treats as triggering a certificate requirement, the transit rule and the quarantine protocol for travellers without a valid certificate.
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