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Changes in Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025

Tuesday, June 2, 2026
5 min read
Changes in Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025

The Union Home Ministry just rolled out some changes under the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025 .

Remember the old setup? You had fourteen days after you hit that 180-day mark to file everything. That’s what the old rules allowed.

Now? It’s different.

The notification, published in the official gazette on Monday, basically says you need to register “any time before the expiry of the said period of 180 days.”

That phrasing alone changes things.

This revised provision, it specifically targets rule 12, sub-rule (1), in the third proviso. They substituted the old language about "within fourteen days after the expiry of one hundred and eighty days of his arrival in India" with this new concept of acting "any time before the expiry of the said period of one hundred and eighty days."

It’s administrative jargon, sure, but it translates to a real change in expectation. People need to be thinking ahead now.

And this doesn't just affect the short-stay visas. It creeps into the larger stays too.

The rules now apply to foreigners holding visas that are longer than 180 days. But there’s a catch there, a condition built right into it.

That’s where things get murky. The government has added a layer of caution here. Approvals for these registrations, if someone needs them past the standard stay period, they’re now only going to be granted in “emergent circumstances.”

Emergent circumstances. That phrase hangs there. It implies that routine requests for extensions or further registrations are now on hold, waiting for something genuinely urgent. It introduces a deGree of uncertainty into the process. It’s not an automatic right anymore.

Now, let’s pivot to something a bit more personal, something that touches families. This amendment also brings some relief, and I mean relief, regarding children born in India when one or both parents are foreign nationals. It’s a sensitive area, dealing with legal status and lineage.

There was an older system, you know. Earlier provisions demanded a pretty strict timeline for parents. They had to electronically inform the registration officer within 30 days of the child’s birth. This was tied directly to accessing visa services, whether that meant getting a new visa or some kind of exit permission through the online portals or mobile apps.

That older framework was very rigid. It set a hard deadline for parental notification.

The revised framework changes that dynamic significantly. It removes that immediate, strict requirement. Under the new rules, this specific reporting obligation regarding the child’s birth and visa services doesn't apply if one or both parents are Indian citizens and they want to maintain that Indian citizenship for the child. It’s a specific carve-out, acknowledging the complexity of nationality laws.

But wait, there’s another wrinkle, another condition they added right there. This is where things get slightly complicated again. If that child, while residing in India, later happens to acquire the citizenship of another country, something happens then. Either parent must still notify the registration officer within 30 days of that change in foreign citizenship. That part remains. It’s a separate administrative thread that still needs managing.

It’s this constant juggling of timelines and personal circumstances that defines these updates. It’s not just about filling out forms; it’s about navigating a shifting landscape of legal definitions.

And it’s not just about foreigners. The notification wasn’t confined to just the entry and stay rules. It touched other sectors too.

This means there are new administrative layers for medical facilities operating here. It’s another piece of the puzzle, another layer of regulation being added to the administrative structure.

You see, these changes aren't just lines of text.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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