In view of the emergence of a new variant, India has, so far not taken any new steps in terms of closing its borders. However, heightened testing is now a requirement on arrival. The new rules are effective December 1, 2021, and here are the details.
India to require on-arrival testing for those arriving from Countries at Risk effective December 1, 2021
India has now mandated that all travellers, irrespective of their Covid-19 vaccination status, arriving in India from countries on the at-risk list, will now need to undergo post-arrival Covid-19 testing on arrival in India.
For reference, India has the following countries on its list of at-risk countries as of November 30, 2021.
- Countries in Europe including The United Kingdom
- South Africa
- Brazil
- Botswana
- China
- Mauritius
- New Zealand
- Zimbabwe
- Singapore
- Hong Kong
- Israel
- Tanzania (Added December 6, 2021)
- Ghana (Added December 6, 2021)
For passengers found positive in these tests, they will be isolated and treated as per the clinical management protocol besides their samples also taken for Genome Sequencing. The passengers found negative can depart the airport but have to undergo home quarantine for 7 days, followed by repeat testing on day 8 of their arrival in India, followed by 7 days of self-monitoring.
There is a long list of approved tests to prove you are infected or not, and apart from RT-PCR, rapid PCR tests are also going to be accepted. Remember, they are going to be much more expensive though.
These tests will have to be paid for by the passengers themselves, and they won’t be able to leave the airport or catch a connection till their results don’t come back. Passengers can book and pay for the test before arrival, or they can also pay for them via credit cards or Indian currency once they land.
Random Testing for everyone
Further, the Government of India has also decided that 5% 2% of the travellers arriving from countries that are not in the at-risk category, will also be tested on a random basis at the airport for Covid-19. These 2% passengers will be identified by the airline at random and they will be sent to the testing area on arrival. In this case, the cost of the test will be borne by the passengers themselves.
Transit Passengers
Post-arrival testing can be exempted if a person is travelling from a ‘not at risk’ country and has a transit (without leaving immigration) in an at-risk country before taking the destination flight. However, if the person has travelled to any at-risk country in the last 14 days, they will be asked for post-arrival testing and other additional restrictions.
Here is a flowchart that helps you discover where do you lie in this new scheme of things.
Bottomline
Those arriving from Europe, South African nations, Hong Kong, Singapore, Israel and all the other at-risk countries, will be hereon subject to an on-arrival test in India. They won’t be able to leave the airport where they arrive at until their test results come back negative. In case they are discovered to be positive, they will be moved to an isolation facility. Incase they are negative, they will need to make a Day 8 test as well while quarantining at home. Even other passengers not covered by this statute might be randomly tested on arrival in India (2% per flight).
India has yet not banned flights so to say in the country, but has increased the screening at airports for arrival in India. What do you make of this new requirement for arriving in India?
Liked our articles and our efforts? Please pay an amount you are comfortable with; an amount you believe is the fair price for the content you have consumed. Please enter an amount in the box below and click on the button to pay; you can use Netbanking, Debit/Credit Cards, UPI, QR codes, or any Wallet to pay. Every contribution helps cover the cost of the content generated for your benefit.
(Important: to receive confirmation and details of your transaction, please enter a valid email address in the pop-up form that will appear after you click the ‘Pay Now’ button. For international transactions, use Paypal to process the transaction.)
We are not putting our articles behind any paywall where you are asked to pay before you read an article. We are asking you to pay after you have read the article if you are satisfied with the quality and our efforts.
Hi Ajay, could you please share any changes to the scenario at Mumbai Airport? I am flying from US to BOM via connection in CDG and trying to decide whether I should be driving to Gujarat as final destination or just take a connecting flight there. Thank you for your help.
Idiots. Completely useless, and, besides the tests conducted on arrival are a total farce.
@deepak, why do you say so?
There will be a rush of tourists in India LOL !!!
I am so happy that I cancelled all my reservations in India for Christmas and New Year and made instead a one month reservation in Mexico with NO “health” requirements AT ALL.
I am full of compassion for my beloved India.
So a tourist will have to isolate alone in a hotel room for 8 days and not be allowed out nor have visitors ? Am I reading this right ?
@Basanti, yes.
And remember that the visa is a ONE (!) month visa.
And my costly five year visa is suspended!
Hi Ajay, Any idea how much transit time fpr a connecting flight at Delhi has to be planned for such post arrival tests?
Regards
Ak
@AK, I’d say given the initial confusion at the airport, maybe 6-8 hours is a good idea for now. The other piece of advice I can offer you is to book your connection on the same ticket as the international ticket, so that the airline can give you a free reschedule incase your report has not come back by then.