{"id":7022007,"slug":"india-e-visa-valid-for-land-arrivals-raxaul","status":"published","date":"2025-12-24T09:52:00Z","modified":"2026-06-10 14:02:23","link":"https://www.visamundi.co/en/blog/india-e-visa-valid-for-land-arrivals-raxaul/","title":{"rendered":"India’s e-Visa now valid for land arrivals at Raxaul"},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>India has expanded its e-Visa program to include land crossings at Raxaul, revolutionizing overland travel between India and Nepal.</p>","protected":false},"content":{"rendered":"<p>If you’re the type of traveler who loves putting together “<strong>Nepal-India</strong>” itineraries 🇳🇵🇮🇳 or any overland adventure, you’ve probably run head-first into a frustrating paperwork wall. Until very recently, the e-Visa—so simple to obtain through your agency—had one major catch: <strong>it only worked if you arrived by air or sea</strong>.</p>\n<p>For anyone approaching overland, the process meant endless queues and bureaucracy: a traditional paper visa had to be secured from a consulate. Those days are over. India has just opened the first official land entry point for e-Visa holders: Raxaul.</p>\n<p>Here’s what that means for your next travel dossier.</p>\n<h2>The old catch: e-Visa shut out at land borders</h2>\n<p>It was a fine-print headache agencies had to explain to disappointed clients. The Indian e-Visa was valid only for arrival through 32 international airports (Delhi, Mumbai, Jaipur, etc.) and six seaports.</p>\n<p>Hit the tarmac in <strong>Kathmandu</strong> (Nepal), then hop on a bus or train into India to keep trekking? Your e-Visa counted for nothing. You had to ship your passport off to the embassy for a physical sticker—longer, pricier and far more stressful.</p>\n<h2>Raxaul: India’s first digital land frontier</h2>\n<p>The Indian government has just lifted that restraint. As of now, <strong>Raxaul</strong>, a strategic crossing on the border between India (Bihar state) and Nepal, officially accepts travelers carrying an e-Visa.</p>\n<p>For south-Asia route planners, this is a quiet revolution in logistics: the first land entry point added to the approved list, complementing airports and seaports. It’s tailor-made for trekkers looping through South Asia who want to enter India overland from Nepal without the detour to “Embassy Row.”</p>\n<p><strong>Keep in mind</strong>: once you’ve entered India via Raxaul—or an airport—you’ll also have to respect exit checkpoints, which are far more frequent than entry points. Good news, though: <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener nofollow\" href=\"https://www.visamundi.co/blog/inde-120-jours/\">you can now request an e-Visa up to four months before arrival</a>, stretching stays from 30 days to a full four months.</p>","protected":false},"tags":[42]}