
Everything Indians Need to Know About India’s New Immigration Law
India has completely overhauled its immigration and foreigner management system with the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025. This landmark legislation, which came into full effect on September 1, 2025, replaces decades-old colonial-era laws and brings India’s immigration framework into the modern era.
Whether you are a foreign national living in India, an Indian employer with overseas staff, a hotel or university that hosts foreigners, or simply someone who wants to stay informed about how India manages its borders, this guide will walk you through everything you need to know about the new law in clear, practical language.
What Is the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025?
The Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 is a comprehensive, unified piece of legislation that consolidates four outdated laws into a single, modern legal framework. The Indian Parliament passed it on April 2, 2025, and President Droupadi Murmu gave her assent on April 4, 2025. The Ministry of Home Affairs then notified September 1, 2025 as the official date the law would come into force, along with a supporting set of rules called the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025.
This law is structured into 36 clauses across six chapters and covers everything from entry and exit rules to registration of foreigners, penalties, carrier obligations, and enforcement powers. It is the most significant reform to India’s immigration law since independence.
Why Was This Law Needed?
India’s previous immigration framework rested on four laws, all of which were outdated:
| Old Law |
Year |
Why It Was Outdated |
| Passport (Entry into India) Act |
1920 |
Originally enacted under British rule |
| Registration of Foreigners Act |
1939 |
Designed for wartime surveillance in WWII |
| Foreigners Act |
1946 |
Passed months before Indian independence |
| Immigration (Carriers’ Liability) Act |
2000 |
Lacked digital integration |
These laws had overlapping provisions, were not designed for digital governance, and were inadequate to handle modern immigration challenges such as overstaying, forged documents, human trafficking, and high-volume international travel. The new Act addresses all of these gaps in one consolidated statute.
Key Objectives of the New Law
The Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 was designed with a dual purpose: to make India more welcoming to legitimate travelers, businesses, and investors, while simultaneously strengthening border security and enforcement against violations.
The primary objectives are:
- Consolidating and simplifying immigration law into a single, clear framework
- Digitizing visa issuance, registration, and monitoring through a new technology platform
- Enabling comprehensive tracking of foreign nationals across all entry and exit points including land, sea, and air borders
- Introducing significantly harsher penalties to deter forged documents, illegal entry, and overstaying
- Simplifying visa procedures to attract tourists, students, skilled professionals, and investors
- Strengthening mandatory reporting by hotels, universities, hospitals, and transport carriers
- Empowering the Bureau of Immigration with clearer authority and stronger enforcement tools
Who Does This Law Apply To?
The law applies broadly to:
Foreign Nationals: Any person who is not an Indian citizen, entering, staying in, or departing from India, including tourists, students, business travelers, workers, and long-term residents.
Carriers: Airlines, shipping companies, transport operators carrying passengers to and from India by air, sea, or land.
Accommodation Providers: Hotels, guesthouses, serviced apartments, and any place where foreigners are provided lodging.
Educational Institutions: Universities, colleges, schools, and any institution that admits foreign students.
Medical Establishments: Hospitals, nursing homes, clinics providing indoor treatment to foreign nationals.
Employers and Inviting Organizations: Indian companies or institutions that invite, sponsor, or employ foreign nationals.
Structural Reforms: What Has Actually Changed?
1. The Bureau of Immigration Gets Stronger Powers
The Bureau of Immigration (BOI), headed by a Commissioner and supported by Foreigners Regional Registration Offices (FRROs) and Foreigners Registration Offices (FROs), has been formally confirmed as the nodal body for all immigration functions. The BOI will now manage a centralized national electronic database of all foreign nationals in India, coordinate with state-level authorities, and provide policy guidance on visa and border control protocols.
2. The Integrated Immigration Management System (IIMS)
One of the most transformative elements of the new law is the introduction of the Integrated Immigration Management System (IIMS). This is a new digital platform expected to replace the older IVFRT (Immigration, Visa and Foreigners’ Registration and Tracking) system.
The IIMS will use biometric identification, artificial intelligence-based monitoring, and real-time data integration to track foreign nationals across airports, land border checkpoints, and registration offices. For foreign nationals, this means there is very little room for administrative gaps. Overstaying or violating visa conditions is far more likely to be caught under this system than it was under the previous fragmented setup.
3. New Visa Categories Being Introduced
While traditional visa categories continue, the new Act signals modern additions:
Business Visa Plus: For long-term business travelers requiring repeated visits, with faster clearance and simplified compliance.
Startup Visa: For foreign entrepreneurs who want to build innovation-driven companies in India.
Skilled Talent Visa: For professionals in priority sectors such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, renewable energy, digital infrastructure, and cybersecurity.
Investor Visa: For foreign nationals committing substantial capital to Indian enterprises, with a pathway toward long-term residency.
Digital Nomad Visa: For professionals who wish to live and work from India while employed by overseas companies.
Transit Visa: Standardized provisions for passengers transiting through Indian airports.
Mandatory Entry and Exit Rules
Every person entering or departing from India must carry a valid passport or travel document. Foreign nationals additionally require a valid Indian visa unless they fall under an exempted category.
Immigration officers at designated immigration posts have the authority to examine documents, detain individuals for further verification, and refuse entry where documents are not in order or where the foreigner is considered a security risk.
One important change is that no aircraft, vessel, or any mode of transport can depart from India until the carrier has obtained clearance from the Immigration Officer by submitting a prescribed General Declaration. This is a significant tightening of exit controls.
Foreigner Registration: New Rules and Obligations
Who Must Register?
All foreign nationals arriving in India are required to register with a designated Registration Officer upon arrival, as per the prescribed timelines under the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025. This is particularly significant for foreign nationals who intend to stay for more than 180 days.
How Does Registration Work?
Registration under the new system is digital-first. Foreign nationals must submit required information and documents to their Registration Officer through an online platform, reducing the need for in-person FRRO visits.
Hotels play a key role. They are now legally required to collect information from foreign guests and report it to the Registration Officer. This Form C reporting is now a legally mandated obligation, not just an administrative guideline.
Institutional Reporting Obligations
| Institution |
Reporting Obligation |
| Hotels and Accommodation |
Must report foreign guest details to Registration Officer |
| Universities and Colleges |
Must report foreign student details upon admission |
| Hospitals and Nursing Homes |
Must report foreign patients receiving indoor treatment and their attendants |
| Airlines and Shipping Companies |
Must submit advance passenger information and crew manifests |
| Employers and Inviting Organizations |
Must maintain records and report to authorities on request |
Penalties Under the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025
This is where the new law marks the sharpest departure from the old regime. The penalties are significantly harsher, and the government has signaled a zero-tolerance approach.
Key Offences and Punishments
| Offence |
Imprisonment |
Fine |
| Entering India without valid passport or visa |
Up to 5 years |
Up to Rs 5 lakh |
| Using or supplying forged passports, visas, or documents |
2 to 7 years |
Rs 1 lakh to Rs 10 lakh |
| Overstaying visa or violating visa conditions |
Up to 3 years |
Up to Rs 3 lakh |
| Transporting foreigners without valid documentation |
Not specified |
Up to Rs 5 lakh + vehicle seizure |
| Abetment (helping someone commit violations) |
Same as main offence |
Same as main offence |
Arrest Without Warrant
Police officers of the rank of Head Constable or above are authorized to arrest without a warrant any individual who has violated or is reasonably suspected of violating the provisions of the Act. This is a significant expansion of enforcement powers.
Compounding of Offences
The law provides a mechanism for compounding certain minor contraventions, meaning some violations can be resolved by paying a prescribed sum without going through full prosecution. This offers a practical relief route for minor compliance failures.
Special Exemptions
Migrants from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan belonging to six minority communities (Hindu, Christian, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, and Parsi) who entered India on or before December 31, 2024, are protected from penal action even without valid documentation, consistent with the Citizenship Amendment Act protections.
Comparison: Old Laws vs. New Act
| Aspect |
Old Laws (Pre-2025) |
Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 |
| Number of laws |
4 separate acts |
1 unified act |
| Penalty for forged documents |
Lower, inconsistent |
2 to 7 years prison, Rs 1 to 10 lakh fine |
| Digital infrastructure |
Minimal |
Integrated Immigration Management System |
| Institutional reporting |
Limited guidance |
Mandatory for hotels, universities, hospitals, carriers |
| Visa categories |
Traditional only |
Startup, Digital Nomad, Investor, and more |
| Arrest powers |
Limited |
Head Constable and above can arrest without warrant |
| Carrier obligations |
Air and water only |
Air, water, and land |
| Registration system |
Manual, FRRO-based |
Digital-first, centralized national database |
What This Means for Foreign Nationals in India
If you are a foreign national currently in India or planning to visit or work here, here is what you need to know practically:
Keep your documents current. Ensure your passport, visa, and any required permits are valid throughout your stay. Do not allow your visa to lapse even by a single day. The new enforcement system will flag overstays automatically.
Register promptly. If you are staying beyond the prescribed period, register with the local Registration Officer or FRRO promptly.
Comply with all visa conditions. Your visa specifies permitted activities. Engaging in work when on a tourist visa, for example, is a violation that can lead to fines, detention, and deportation.
Ensure your employer or institution is compliant. If you are on a work or student visa, check that your employer or institution is registered and compliant. An institution that fails to report your details faces the same penalties as you do.
Use authorized entry and exit points. Crossing borders at unauthorized points is a serious offence.
Dual citizenship holders should note that they are recognized as citizens of the country whose passport they used to enter India, which affects the visa conditions applicable to them.
What This Means for Indian Employers and Institutions
Maintain detailed records of all foreign nationals working for or studying at your organization, including visa type, validity dates, passport details, and registration status.
Report to authorities as required. Failure to provide accurate or timely information can lead to financial penalties.
Audit compliance regularly. Carry out internal compliance reviews to ensure all foreign national employees have valid documentation and have completed their registration.
Do not assist in violations. If any representative of your organization knowingly helps a foreign employee violate immigration laws, they face the same penalties as the employee.
Practical Checklist for Foreign Nationals in India
- Valid passport with at least 6 months validity beyond your intended stay
- Valid Indian visa appropriate for your purpose (tourism, business, employment, study)
- Registration with the local FRRO or Registration Officer if staying beyond the prescribed period
- Compliance with all visa conditions and permitted activities
- Up-to-date information provided to your hotel, university, employer, or hospital
- Exit from India only through designated immigration posts
- No involvement in facilitating others to violate immigration rules
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: If I am a tourist on a 30-day visa, do I need to register?
Short-term tourists on e-visas typically do not need to register separately if their stay is within the permitted period. If you intend to extend your stay, check with the local FRRO. Specific timelines for mandatory registration are detailed in the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025.
Q: What happens if I overstay my visa by a few days?
Even a few days of overstaying is a violation and can result in a fine, detention, or a ban from re-entering India. The penalty is up to 3 years in prison and a fine of up to Rs 3 lakh. Short overstays may be handled through the compounding mechanism with a financial penalty, but it is strongly advisable not to overstay at all.
Q: My employer has not completed mandatory reporting for my work visa. Am I at risk?
Yes. While the primary obligation rests on your employer, you are also responsible for ensuring your status is properly documented. Proactively follow up with your HR department. Both you and your employer could face consequences for non-compliance.
Q: Are OCI cardholders affected by this law?
OCI holders are not considered foreigners for most practical purposes and enjoy long-term multiple-entry visa facilities under the Citizenship Act framework. Verify current rules with the Indian consulate or FRRO for your specific situation.
Q: What is the status of Nepali nationals entering India?
The historic open-border arrangement between India and Nepal continues. However, new Ministry of Home Affairs rules effective September 1, 2025 mandate stricter monitoring of Nepali nationals in India, including Form C submission and digital data tracking.
Conclusion: A New Era in Indian Immigration
The Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 represents a genuine turning point in how India manages its relationship with foreign nationals. By consolidating four outdated colonial-era laws into a single, technology-enabled framework, the government has created a more coherent and enforceable immigration system.
For legitimate visitors, students, professionals, and investors, the law’s intent is to make India easier to navigate through digital systems and clearer rules. The new visa categories signal that India is actively courting global talent and investment.
At the same time, the significantly tougher penalties, expanded enforcement powers, and mandatory institutional reporting make it clear that India is serious about enforcing its immigration rules. The days of casual non-compliance going unnoticed are coming to an end.
For Indians who interact with foreign nationals professionally, the new compliance obligations carry genuine legal risk. Building proper systems for tracking, reporting, and verifying foreign national documentation is now a legal requirement, not just best practice.
If you have specific questions about your visa status, registration obligations, or compliance requirements, consult a qualified immigration advisor or contact the nearest Bureau of Immigration or FRRO office.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Immigration rules can change, and you should always verify current requirements with official government sources or a qualified immigration professional before making any decisions.