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Congratulations. You need to surrender your Indian passport first at HCI london. Which is whole one day process. You go back after couple of days and waste another day to collect your surrender certificate. Once you done with this either you can apply for a Indian visa or OCI card. Visa's are dealt by VFS these days at different locations. I applied for 5 years long visa and costed my £180 all together. Dont forget that you will also be ripped off with a passport surrender fee of £90 when you surrender your passport.ukbalaji wrote:Apologies if it is the wrong forum.
I got naturalized as a British citizen couple of weeks ago, and have now applied for a British passport. My British passport should hopefully arrive in the next few weeks, after which I guess I am supposed to surrender my Indian passport. I am not clear on the proper sequence of steps to be followed : getting Indian visa / surrender old Indian passport / obtaining PIO/OCI card.
Right now I cannot travel to India (legally) since I am awaiting my British passport and automatically lost my Indian citizenship. But I wish to get my papers organized soon, so that I can travel to India at short notice if necessary. I would like to get the OCI card, but I am not sure how long it is taking these days to get it at the Indian embassy in London. If it takes 3 months, I am not sure I want to stay that long without being able to travel to India if necessary. Altho I dont have any immediate travel plans, I want to keep the travel option open.
My friend in the US was advising me to go ahead and get the PIO card soon (which apparently takes only 1 week in the US), and then apply for the OCI card, the advantage being that I will not need to hand over my passport to the Indian embassy until the very end of the OCI application process. Not sure if this is true, tho'. Is this a good idea ?
By the way, will I still need an Indian visa stamp even if I get the PIO / OCI card ?
Thanks a lot in advance.
Cheers
No.ukbalaji wrote:By the way, will I still need an Indian visa stamp even if I get the PIO / OCI card ?
Reading this topic should give you an idea on timelines.ukbalaji wrote:Any idea how long the PIO / OCI card process takes these days ? That might help me make a decision.
One day!! Remember you are dealing with an Indian govt. dept.ukbalaji wrote:The latter might be preferable if I can get the visa in a day.
Reading this and this should help you understand the application process.ukbalaji wrote:How does it work tho', if one has obtained a visa, and then their OCI application is being processed, but they need to travel urgently to India ? Will the consulate return the passport quickly so the person can travel ? where is the passport held ? Is it in the U.K or in Delhi ? do they keep it for the entire duration of the OCI application process ? does it make a difference if one already has a PIO card ? As I mentioned above, my friend was suggesting that if you apply for an OCI after getting the PIO, then you hand over your passport only at the last step of the OCI application process, apparently. I am not sure where to verify this, tho'.
You have to surrender you Indian passport to either HCI London or one of the Consulate generals depending on which county you live in.ukbalaji wrote:Thanks for the response, everyone.
Any idea how long the PIO / OCI card process takes these days ? That might help me make a decision.
If I want peace of mind, there doesnt seem to be much difference cost-wise. A PIO card (£215) followed by OCI (£18) would cost a total of £233. A 6-month "entry visa" (http://in.vfsglobal.co.uk/visa-fees.aspx) (£55) followed by OCI (£165) would set me back £220. The latter might be preferable if I can get the visa in a day.
How does it work tho', if one has obtained a visa, and then their OCI application is being processed, but they need to travel urgently to India ? Will the consulate return the passport quickly so the person can travel ? where is the passport held ? Is it in the U.K or in Delhi ? do they keep it for the entire duration of the OCI application process ? does it make a difference if one already has a PIO card ? As I mentioned above, my friend was suggesting that if you apply for an OCI after getting the PIO, then you hand over your passport only at the last step of the OCI application process, apparently. I am not sure where to verify this, tho'.
Cheers.
I had applied for OCI and it took 10 weeks to finally get into our hands. Our application was without any issue.ukbalaji wrote:Thanks for the response, everyone.
Any idea how long the PIO / OCI card process takes these days ? That might help me make a decision.
If I want peace of mind, there doesnt seem to be much difference cost-wise. A PIO card (£215) followed by OCI (£18) would cost a total of £233. A 6-month "entry visa" (http://in.vfsglobal.co.uk/visa-fees.aspx) (£55) followed by OCI (£165) would set me back £220. The latter might be preferable if I can get the visa in a day.
How does it work tho', if one has obtained a visa, and then their OCI application is being processed, but they need to travel urgently to India ? Will the consulate return the passport quickly so the person can travel ? where is the passport held ? Is it in the U.K or in Delhi ? do they keep it for the entire duration of the OCI application process ? does it make a difference if one already has a PIO card ? As I mentioned above, my friend was suggesting that if you apply for an OCI after getting the PIO, then you hand over your passport only at the last step of the OCI application process, apparently. I am not sure where to verify this, tho'.
Cheers.
Why are youukmalayalee wrote:Can you travel with PIO after Dec 31? This is what Indian High Commission & India Govt said
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