Indian Passport Fees Raised From July 1st- First Hike in 14 Years

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The Indian government has revised passport fees effective July 1st, 2026 and this is the first major increase in nearly 14 years. The revision as notified by the Ministry of External Affairs through the Passports Amendment Rules 2026, applies to all categories. That includes fresh applications, renewals, Tatkal services, and lost or damaged passport replacements. Here is the complete new fee structure.

At Cover Page Media, we bring you the latest news pieces, let’s dive into this headline!

If you are planning to apply for a new or renew an Indian passport, this July 1st marks a significant change. The Central Government has announced a revision in passport application fees through the Passports Amendment Rules 2026 and this is the first major revision in passport fees in over a decade.

The timing matters as any application submitted on or after July 1st will be charged at the new, higher rates. So if your passport is expiring soon and renewal is on your to-do list, submitting before the end of June locks in the old charges, which right now is a very short deadline.

The New Fee Structure For Indian Passports

Applicants seeking the standard 36-page ordinary passport under the normal scheme will now pay ₹2,500 which is up from ₹1,500. But here’s where the change is significant, the Tatkal fee for the same passport rises to ₹5,000. Compared to the current ₹3,500, this is a higher increase. And lastly a 60-page passport will cost ₹3,500 under normal processing, but with a Tatkal fee of ₹6,000.

The increases apply across every category that is fresh applications, renewals, reissues, lost or damaged replacements, Police Clearance Certificates, and other passport-related services. Replacement fees for lost or damaged passports are now equivalent to new Tatkal processing rates. This makes it significantly more expensive to replace a passport in an emergency.

A 10% concession continues for children below 8 years and senior citizens above 60 years in certain categories. But fees at Indian missions abroad will also increase accordingly. This means NRIs renewing through consulates overseas will also be facing the same higher charges.

The revision is driven by rising operational costs, enhanced security features being introduced into new Indian passports, and as well as the ongoing modernisation of the Passport Seva system. This 14-year gap since the last revision is unusually long by any benchmark, considering most governments review passport fees every three to five years in order to keep pace with administrative costs.

The fee hike also arrives alongside a notable legal clarification from the MEA that has generated considerable public attention. The fact that the Indian passport fees are being revised amid the Ministry of External Affairs’ recent statement syaing “a passport is a travel document and not proof of citizenship”. This is a distinction with important implications for NRIs, OCI applicants, and anyone using their passport as identity documentation in legal or residency matters.

Passport validity remains unchanged despite the fee revision. It is only the cost of holding one has simply gone up and that too for the first time in 14 years.

How did you take the news? Do you think it is justified?

Editorial Disclaimer: All fee details and regulatory information in this article are sourced from the Indian Eagle, Sunday Guardian, VisasUpdate, and the Ministry of External Affairs Passports Amendment Rules 2026. Cover Page Media has not independently verified all figures. Readers should confirm current fees at passportindia.gov.in before applying.

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