EU eases norms for Indians to get five-year multiple-entry Schengen visa
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Indian travellers to Europe can have the five-year multiple-entry Schengen visa | Photo: X/@EUAmbIndia

EU eases norms for Indians to get five-year multiple-entry Schengen visa

The new visa 'cascade' regime will provide easier access to visas with multi-year validity for Indian travellers with an established travel history


With the European Commission effecting certain changes in existing rules to provide an easier access to visas with multi-year validity, frequent Indian travellers to Europe can now apply for multiple-entry Schengen visa for a period of five years.

European Union's ambassador to India Herve Delphin described the new visa regime as another step towards enhancing people-to-people contact between the two sides. Hailing the new visa rules, Delphin wrote on X, "New #Schengen #visa regime gives frequent travellers access to multi-year visa (up to 5 y.) Europe delivers on the partnership!”

"On April 18, the European Commission adopted specific rules on the issuing of multiple entry visas to Indian nationals, which are more favourable than the standard rules of the visa code that applied to date," a EU readout said.

Visas with multi-year validity

It said this new visa 'cascade' regime for Indian nationals residing in India who apply for Schengen (short-stay) visas in India will provide easier access to visas with multi-year validity for travellers with an established travel history.

"According to the newly adopted visa 'cascade' regime for India, Indian nationals can now be issued long-term, multi-entry Schengen visas valid for two years after having obtained and lawfully used two visas within the previous three years," the readout said.

"The two-year visa will normally be followed by a five-year visa, if the passport has sufficient validity remaining. During the validity period of these visas, holders enjoy travel rights equivalent to visa-free nationals," it said.

Norms changed under agenda on migration

The changes in the visa norms came in the context of "strengthened" relations under the EU–India common agenda on migration and mobility, which seeks comprehensive cooperation on migration policy between the two sides, it added.

Schengen visas allow the holder to travel freely in the Schengen area for short stays of a maximum of 90 days in any 180-day period. The visas are not purpose-bound, but they do not grant the right to work.

The Schengen area consists of 29 European countries of which 25 are EU states.

The countries are Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Greece, Spain, France, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Hungary, Malta, Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Finland and Sweden, along with Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.

(With agency inputs)

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