India Medical Visa for Africans 2026: Cost, Hospitals, Visa Process & What No One Tells You
India treats over 200,000 international patients a year. Cardiac surgery at a tenth of UK prices. But the visa, the hospital letter, and the process trip people up -- here is the complete guide.
SwiftPass Immigration Editorial Team
SwiftPass Immigration Team
98.7% of our clients get approved.
We review your entire file before the embassy sees it — and flag every issue.
ApprovalIQ · by SwiftPass — Free
Will your profile actually get approved?
Requirements tell you what's needed. ApprovalIQ tells you if your profile will pass. Takes 60 seconds.
~$25 USD
KES 3,200 / NGN 40,000 -- applied online, no embassy visit
72 Hours
Online application -- no embassy visit needed for most African countries
Up to 80%
Cheaper for the same procedures vs UK or US hospitals
Required
Get your letter from the International Patient Dept before applying
What This Guide Covers
Why Africans Choose India for Medical Treatment
India has quietly become the world's leading destination for international medical tourism. Every year, more than 200,000 patients from over 150 countries travel to India for treatment. A growing portion of those patients -- and one of the fastest-growing segments -- comes from sub-Saharan Africa. Nigerians, Kenyans, Ghanaians, South Africans, Ethiopians, Ugandans, Tanzanians: the list grows longer every year.
The reasons are not complicated. India offers world-class medical expertise at a fraction of what the same treatment costs in the UK, USA, or even South Africa's private sector. But it is not just about cost. India's top hospitals -- Apollo, Fortis, Medanta, Kokilaben -- use the same technology as leading Western hospitals, staff trained at institutions in the UK, USA, and Germany, and have JCI (Joint Commission International) or NABH (National Accreditation Board for Hospitals) accreditation.
Why India Works for African Patients
- Cardiac surgery costs 80-90% less than in UK or USA
- JCI and NABH-accredited hospitals with international standards
- English is the language of medicine -- no translation barriers
- Dedicated International Patient Departments at every major hospital
- e-Medical Visa available online -- $25, approved in 72 hours
- Direct flights from Nairobi, Lagos, Accra, and Johannesburg
- Caregiver visa (MX) allows one companion to travel with you
Honest Warnings
- Quality varies enormously -- only use JCI or NABH-accredited hospitals
- Unaccredited small clinics can promise cheap treatment with serious risks
- Never pay an Indian agent upfront to "arrange hospital admission"
- Always deal directly with the hospital's International Patient Department
- Budget beyond the procedure: flights, accommodation, food, follow-up
- Some procedures require longer stays than initially estimated
The most common conditions that bring African patients to India include cardiac surgery (bypass grafting, valve replacement), orthopaedic procedures (hip and knee replacement), cancer treatment (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy), IVF and fertility treatment, kidney and liver transplants, eye surgery (including corneal transplant), and neurosurgery. India has developed particular expertise in all of these areas at cost points that are simply unmatched globally.
India e-Medical Visa: Who Qualifies & What It Covers
India's e-Medical Visa (eMV) is a purpose-built visa category for international patients. It is a fully online application -- no embassy visit required for citizens of most African countries -- processed in 72 hours and costing only $25 USD. It is one of the most accessible medical visa systems in the world.
e-Medical Visa: Key Facts
- Official portal: indianvisaonline.gov.in -- this is the only legitimate application site. No third-party site can apply on your behalf without your details.
- Cost: $25 USD (approximately KES 3,200 / NGN 40,000 / GHS 400 / ZAR 450)
- Validity: 60 days from date of first arrival in India
- Entries: Triple entry allowed within the 60-day validity
- Eligible nationalities: Citizens of Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, South Africa, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and most other African countries. Check the official portal for the full list.
- Processing time: Typically 72 hours (3 business days) -- apply at least 4-5 days before travel
- Attendant visa (MX): One accompanying caregiver can apply for the Medical Attendant Visa (eMX) -- same process, same $25 cost, same 60-day validity
- Extension: If treatment extends beyond 60 days, apply for an extension at the FRRO (Foreigners Regional Registration Office) in the city where you are receiving treatment
The e-Medical Visa covers medical treatment at recognized/registered hospitals in India. It does not permit you to work, conduct business, or study. You must carry the hospital invitation letter with you at all times during your stay, as immigration officers at the airport can ask to see it.
Importantly: Nigerian applicants who prefer in-person applications can apply at the Indian High Commission in Lagos or Abuja. Kenyans can apply at the Indian High Commission in Nairobi. Ghanaians at the Indian High Commission in Accra. South Africans at the Indian High Commission in Pretoria. However, for most applicants, the e-Visa route online is faster, cheaper, and equally valid.
Important: Apply Only on the Official Portal
Numerous scam websites mimic the official Indian e-Visa portal. They charge inflated fees (sometimes $100-200+) and may not actually submit your application. The only legitimate portal is indianvisaonline.gov.in. Any other website charging a premium for "processing" is a third-party service, not the official government portal. If you want professional assistance with your application, use SwiftPass -- not random websites promising "guaranteed approval."
Step-by-Step: How to Apply for India Medical Visa
The process for getting an India e-Medical Visa involves two parallel tracks: securing your hospital invitation letter, and submitting your visa application. The hospital letter must come first -- you cannot apply without it.
Contact the Hospital International Patient Department
Before anything else, contact the International Patient Department (IPD) of your chosen hospital directly. Send your medical records (diagnosis, recent test results, imaging scans), a summary of your condition, and ask for a treatment estimate and invitation letter. Every major Indian hospital -- Apollo, Fortis, Medanta, Kokilaben -- has an IPD team that handles international patients. This is a free service. Do not pay any agent to "introduce" you to a hospital.
Receive Hospital Invitation Letter and Treatment Estimate
The hospital will review your records and send back an invitation letter (also called a Medical Visa Support Letter) addressed to the Indian embassy/consulate or for e-Visa purposes. They will also provide a cost estimate for your treatment. This letter is mandatory for your visa application. It should include: hospital name and registration, your name and treatment required, estimated duration of stay, and a contact person at the hospital.
Gather Your Supporting Documents
Collect all required documents: valid passport (6 months validity beyond your planned arrival), passport photograph, bank statements showing you can fund treatment and stay, hospital invitation letter, medical records in English (translate if needed), and travel insurance if you have it.
Apply Online at indianvisaonline.gov.in
Go to the official portal. Select "Medical" as your visa type. Fill in the online application form -- personal details, passport details, travel plans, hospital details. Upload your passport photograph and pay the $25 USD fee by card. Note your application reference number. The system will generate an online application form that you submit digitally.
Wait for Approval (Typically 72 Hours)
The Indian government processes e-Medical Visa applications within 72 hours for most nationalities. You will receive your approved visa by email. Print it out -- you need the physical printout at immigration on arrival. Do not travel on a screenshot.
Book Flights and Arrange Accommodation
Only book confirmed flights after your visa is approved. Most patients stay in hospital guest houses or nearby serviced apartments. The hospital's International Patient Department can recommend affordable accommodation options near their facility. Budget $50-80/day for accommodation depending on the city.
Arrive in India and Proceed to Treatment
On arrival, present your printed e-Visa, passport, hospital invitation letter, and onward/return ticket. Immigration is straightforward for medical visa holders. Proceed to your hospital -- most major hospitals offer airport pickup services for international patients. Register at the International Patient Department on arrival.
Document Checklist for African Applicants
The India e-Medical Visa application is relatively straightforward compared to UK or US visa applications. However, having the right documents ready prevents delays or rejection. Here is the full checklist:
India e-Medical Visa -- Document Checklist for African Applicants
Valid Passport
Must have at least 6 months validity beyond your planned departure from India. At least 2 blank pages for stamps. e-Passport (biometric) required for most nationalities applying for e-Visa.
Passport-Sized Photograph
Recent photograph (taken within 6 months), white background, face clearly visible. Must meet Indian visa photo specifications: 2 inches x 2 inches, no glasses, full face visible.
Hospital Invitation Letter
Official letter from the International Patient Department of a recognized Indian hospital. Must state your name, treatment required, and estimated duration of stay. This is the most critical document -- your application will not proceed without it.
Medical Records
Recent diagnosis reports, test results, imaging (X-ray, MRI, CT scan), discharge summaries, specialist referral letters. All records must be in English or translated to English. Indian hospitals operating in English -- no translation barriers once you arrive.
Bank Statements (3-6 Months)
Showing sufficient funds to cover treatment costs and living expenses. The e-Visa application asks about your financial means. Bank statements should show consistent history -- not sudden large deposits. Amount needed depends on treatment cost.
Proof of Funds for Treatment
If your employer, insurance, or a family member is funding your treatment, include their bank statements and a supporting letter. Some patients carry a letter from their health insurer confirming coverage.
Return/Onward Flight Ticket (Optional at Application Stage)
You do not need a confirmed flight before applying for the e-Visa. However, immigration on arrival may ask for evidence of your return plans. Book only after visa approval.
Travel Insurance (Recommended)
Not mandatory for the Indian medical visa, but strongly recommended. International health/travel insurance protects against complications or unexpected extensions of stay. Some hospitals require proof of insurance or a financial deposit on registration.
Medical Attendant Companion Details (if applicable)
If bringing a caregiver, they apply separately for the Medical Attendant Visa (eMX) at the same $25 cost. They need their own passport, photo, and will need to show their relationship to you (family ID, marriage certificate if applicable).
Getting Your Hospital Invitation Letter
The hospital invitation letter -- officially called a Medical Visa Support Letter -- is the document that activates your ability to apply for the India Medical Visa. Without it, there is no medical visa. Here is exactly how to get one.
How to Contact a Hospital International Patient Department
- Go to the hospital's official website (see list in next section)
- Find the "International Patients" section -- every major hospital has one
- Fill in their online inquiry form or email the IPD team directly
- Attach: a brief summary of your condition, recent medical reports, diagnostic images, and any specialist letters you have
- Request a treatment estimate and a Medical Visa Support Letter
- The hospital IPD team will review your case and respond -- typically within 2-5 business days for initial inquiries
- Once they confirm they can treat you, they issue the invitation letter
This service is free. You do not pay anything to get an invitation letter from a reputable hospital. The hospital wants your business -- they will help you. If anyone asks you to pay upfront for "arranging" a hospital invitation letter, that is a scammer. Walk away.
Critical Warning: Medical Tourism Scams Targeting Africans
- Never pay any Indian agent upfront who claims they can "arrange hospital admission" or "get you a better price" at a top hospital. Legitimate hospitals do not work through unofficial middlemen who demand upfront payments from patients.
- Never share your passport or banking details with unofficial agents. Contact hospitals directly through their official websites and verified email addresses.
- Avoid unaccredited clinics that promise treatment at dramatically lower prices than major hospitals. The savings could cost you your health or your life.
Top Indian Hospitals for African Patients
India has hundreds of hospitals, but only a subset meet the international standards you should demand. Stick to JCI-accredited or NABH-accredited institutions. Here are the hospitals that consistently serve African patients at the highest standards:
Apollo Hospitals
Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Bangalore
Cardiac surgery, orthopaedics, oncology, neurology, transplants
JCI & NABH
India's largest private hospital network. Dedicated Africa desk at Chennai and Delhi campuses. Most Nigerians and Kenyans use Apollo Chennai as their primary entry point.
Fortis Healthcare
Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Mumbai
Cardiac, orthopaedics, neurology, oncology
JCI & NABH
Strong international patient programme with dedicated coordinators. Fortis Gurugram (near Delhi) is particularly well-regarded for complex cardiac cases.
Medanta -- The Medicity
Gurugram (near Delhi)
Cardiac surgery, liver transplant, cancer, orthopaedics
NABH
Founded by Dr. Naresh Trehan, one of India's most respected cardiac surgeons. A top choice for complex heart and transplant cases from Africa.
Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital
Mumbai
Cancer (da Vinci robotic surgery), neurology, cardiac
JCI & NABH
Known for robotic surgery and cancer care. Strong international patient department. Mumbai location suits patients from West Africa (Nigerians, Ghanaians).
Tata Memorial Hospital
Mumbai
Cancer treatment (all types)
Government -- nationally accredited
India's premier cancer centre. For cancer patients, Tata Memorial is the gold standard. Costs are significantly lower as it is a government-linked institution. High patient volumes.
NIMHANS
Bangalore
Neurology, neurosurgery, psychiatry
Government -- Institute of National Importance
National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences. India's leading neurology hospital. For complex neurological conditions, epilepsy, and brain surgery cases.
How to Verify a Hospital is Accredited
JCI accreditation can be verified at jointcommissioninternational.org. NABH accreditation can be verified at nabh.co. If a hospital is not on either list, it is not internationally accredited. Do not accept a hospital's own claim of accreditation without independently verifying it.
Procedure Cost Comparison: India vs UK vs USA
Numbers tell the story better than words. Here is a direct comparison of major medical procedures across India, the UK, and the USA -- in USD, and converted to local African currencies so you can see the real-world impact on your wallet.
| Procedure | India (USD) | UK (approx. USD) | USA (USD) | India Saving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Bypass (CABG) | $5,000 - $10,000 | $50,000 - $100,000 | $100,000 - $200,000 | Up to 95% |
| Knee Replacement (single) | $5,000 - $8,000 | $23,000 - $32,000 | $30,000 - $60,000 | Up to 87% |
| Hip Replacement | $6,000 - $9,000 | $25,000 - $35,000 | $35,000 - $65,000 | Up to 86% |
| IVF Cycle | $2,000 - $4,000 | $6,500 - $13,000 | $15,000 - $25,000 | Up to 87% |
| Cancer Chemo (per cycle) | $1,000 - $3,000 | $6,500 - $20,000 | $10,000 - $30,000 | Up to 90% |
| Liver Transplant | $25,000 - $40,000 | $104,000 - $195,000 | $300,000 - $500,000 | Up to 92% |
| Kidney Transplant | $13,000 - $20,000 | $45,000 - $78,000 | $150,000 - $300,000 | Up to 93% |
| Spinal Surgery (fusion) | $5,000 - $10,000 | $26,000 - $52,000 | $50,000 - $100,000 | Up to 90% |
| LASIK Eye Surgery (both) | $800 - $1,500 | $3,900 - $5,200 | $4,000 - $6,000 | Up to 80% |
To translate India's costs into your local currency, here are approximate conversions using 2026 exchange rates:
| Procedure | India (USD) | Kenya (KES x130) | Nigeria (NGN x1,600) | Ghana (GHS x16) | S. Africa (ZAR x18) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Bypass | $5,000-10,000 | KES 650K-1.3M | NGN 8M-16M | GHS 80K-160K | ZAR 90K-180K |
| Knee Replacement | $5,000-8,000 | KES 650K-1M | NGN 8M-12.8M | GHS 80K-128K | ZAR 90K-144K |
| IVF Cycle | $2,000-4,000 | KES 260K-520K | NGN 3.2M-6.4M | GHS 32K-64K | ZAR 36K-72K |
| Chemo (per cycle) | $1,000-3,000 | KES 130K-390K | NGN 1.6M-4.8M | GHS 16K-48K | ZAR 18K-54K |
| Liver Transplant | $25,000-40,000 | KES 3.25M-5.2M | NGN 40M-64M | GHS 400K-640K | ZAR 450K-720K |
Honest Note on These Figures
These are indicative ranges from JCI/NABH-accredited hospitals in 2025-2026. Your actual cost will depend on the specific hospital, the complexity of your individual case, your length of stay, post-operative care requirements, and whether complications arise. Always get a written cost estimate from the hospital's International Patient Department before committing. Factor in flights, accommodation, food, and a contingency buffer of 20-30% for unexpected costs.
Practical Guide: Travel, Accommodation & What to Expect
Flights from Africa to India
Getting to India from major African cities is manageable with connecting flights. There are no major direct routes from West or East Africa to India, but several airlines offer well-connected one-stop itineraries:
Nairobi (NBO) to Delhi (DEL)
$600 - $900 return
Airlines: Ethiopian Airlines (via Addis Ababa), Kenya Airways (via connecting hub), Emirates (via Dubai), Qatar Airways (via Doha)
Approx. 10-14 hours total travel time with connections
Lagos (LOS) to Delhi (DEL)
$700 - $1,100 return
Airlines: Ethiopian Airlines (via Addis Ababa), Turkish Airlines (via Istanbul), Emirates (via Dubai), Qatar Airways (via Doha)
Approx. 12-16 hours total travel time with connections
Accra (ACC) to Delhi (DEL)
$700 - $1,050 return
Airlines: Ethiopian Airlines (via Addis Ababa), Emirates (via Dubai), Qatar Airways (via Doha), Turkish Airlines (via Istanbul)
Approx. 13-16 hours total travel time with connections
Johannesburg (JNB) to Delhi (DEL)
$600 - $1,000 return
Airlines: Emirates (via Dubai), Qatar Airways (via Doha), Ethiopian Airlines (via Addis Ababa), Air India (via Mumbai)
Approx. 12-15 hours total travel time with connections
Accommodation Near Indian Hospitals
Most major Indian hospitals have dedicated guest houses or service apartments on or near their campuses -- specifically for international patients and their families. These are significantly cheaper than hotels and are convenient for patients in active treatment.
Accommodation Budget Guide
- Hospital guest house: $30-60/night -- basic but convenient, often the best option during active treatment
- Serviced apartment near hospital: $40-80/night -- more space, kitchen facilities, suitable for longer stays
- Budget hotel (2-3 star): $25-50/night -- good for patients in outpatient/follow-up phase
- Overall daily budget (patient + 1 companion): $80-150/day covering accommodation, food, local transport
- Cities to note: Chennai and Hyderabad tend to be slightly cheaper than Delhi and Mumbai for accommodation
Practical Tips for African Medical Tourists in India
Bring all medical records in English
Indian hospitals operate in English for medical purposes. If your records are in French, Portuguese, Swahili, or other languages, have them translated before you travel. Your doctor in India will need them to plan treatment.
Register with your country's embassy in India
Nigerian, Kenyan, Ghanaian, and South African embassies are in New Delhi. If your treatment is long-term, register with your embassy so they can assist if anything goes wrong.
Use the FRRO app if you need to extend your stay
The Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) has an online portal and app for visa extensions. If your treatment runs longer than 60 days, apply for an extension before your visa expires -- not after.
Carry sufficient cash on arrival
India has ATMs everywhere, but having USD 200-300 in cash on arrival is useful for airport expenses, SIM card, initial medication purchases, and the first day's transport. Exchange at the airport or use authorised money changers.
Get a local SIM card on arrival
A local Indian SIM card (Airtel or Jio) is essential for communication, maps, and staying in contact with the hospital. You will need your passport to register a SIM. Very affordable -- around $5-10 for a month of data and calls.
Understand the tipping culture
Tipping hospital attendants is common but not mandatory. Budget small amounts for ward helpers and drivers. Hospital fees themselves should be paid through official channels -- never cash to individuals.
How SwiftPass Helps
The India e-Medical Visa application is one of the more accessible visa applications in the world -- but it still trips people up. The most common points of failure are: applying on the wrong portal (scam sites), incorrect photograph format, incomplete medical documents, and not understanding the hospital letter requirement.
SwiftPass Immigration helps African patients navigate the India medical visa process from start to finish. Our team checks every document before submission, ensures your application is complete and consistent, and guides you through the process so your visa arrives without delays -- giving you one less thing to worry about when you are already dealing with a medical situation.
What SwiftPass Does for You
- Full document review before you submit anything
- Application form preparation and quality check
- Photograph compliance check (Indian visa specs)
- Guidance on hospital letter -- what it needs to say
- Medical records checklist and translation advice
- Application submission support and tracking
- Extension guidance if treatment runs longer than expected
- Companion (MX visa) application support
Why It Matters
- A rejected visa delays urgent medical treatment -- sometimes critically
- Scam portals take your money and may not submit your application at all
- Incorrect documents are the most common cause of Indian visa rejection
- Photograph format mistakes alone cause delays in hundreds of cases yearly
- Peace of mind when you are managing a health crisis is genuinely valuable
- SwiftPass flat-fee pricing -- no hidden costs, no surprise charges
Ready to Start Your India Medical Visa Application?
SwiftPass helps patients from Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, South Africa and across Africa navigate the India e-Medical Visa process. We review your documents, prepare your application, and make sure everything is correct before you submit -- so your treatment is not delayed by a preventable visa issue.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are African passport holders eligible for the India e-Medical Visa?
Yes. Citizens of Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, South Africa, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and most other African countries are eligible for the India e-Medical Visa (eMV). The full eligible country list is available on the official portal at indianvisaonline.gov.in. A small number of nationalities are not eligible for e-Visa and must apply at their local Indian High Commission instead -- check the official list before assuming eligibility.
How do I get a hospital invitation letter?
Contact the International Patient Department (IPD) of your chosen Indian hospital directly through their official website. Send a summary of your medical condition, recent test results, and diagnostic images. Ask for a treatment estimate and a Medical Visa Support Letter (the invitation letter). This service is free -- you should never pay anyone to "arrange" an invitation letter for you. Reputable hospitals respond within 2-5 business days.
Can I bring a family member or caregiver with me to India?
Yes. One accompanying person can apply for the Medical Attendant Visa (eMX) -- the same online process, the same $25 USD cost, and the same 72-hour processing time as the e-Medical Visa. The attendant must apply separately. Additional companions would need to apply for a regular tourist e-Visa if they are not serving as your medical attendant.
What happens if my treatment takes longer than 60 days?
The India e-Medical Visa is valid for 60 days from your first arrival, with triple entry allowed. If your treatment extends beyond 60 days, you must apply for a visa extension before your current visa expires. Extensions are processed through the FRRO -- the Foreigners Regional Registration Office -- in the city where you are receiving treatment. Most major Indian cities have an FRRO office. The hospital's International Patient Department can guide you through this process. Do not overstay your visa.
Is India safe for African patients? What is the experience like?
India's top hospitals are internationally accredited and have extensive experience with African patients. Staff at major hospitals like Apollo, Fortis, and Medanta are accustomed to working with patients from Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and South Africa. English is the language of medicine across all these institutions -- you will not face a language barrier in a clinical setting. India has a significant African student population in cities like Delhi and Bangalore, so African patients are not uncommon visitors. Take standard travel precautions, stay in reputable accommodation, and use hospital-recommended transport.
What documents do I need for the India e-Medical Visa application?
The core documents are: a valid passport (minimum 6 months validity), a recent passport photograph meeting Indian visa specifications, the hospital invitation/support letter, your medical records in English, and evidence of funds to cover your treatment and stay. Bank statements from the last 3-6 months are sufficient for the financial evidence. You do not need a confirmed flight ticket at the application stage, though you will need return travel evidence on arrival at the airport.
How much should I budget for medical treatment in India as an African patient?
Your total budget should include: the procedure cost (get a written estimate from the hospital), flights (approximately $600-1,100 return depending on your city), accommodation ($50-80 per day), food and daily expenses ($20-40 per day), and a contingency buffer of 20-30% for unexpected costs or an extended stay. For example, a knee replacement procedure at Apollo Chennai costing $6,000, with a 3-week stay including flights, accommodation, and daily expenses, might total $8,500-10,000 all-in -- compared to $30,000-60,000 for the same procedure in the USA.
Can I combine medical treatment with tourism in India?
The Medical Visa is granted for medical purposes, and you are expected to be in India primarily for treatment. However, if your health permits and your treatment schedule allows, there is no rule against spending a day or two sightseeing after your recovery period. What you cannot do is use a Tourist e-Visa for the purpose of receiving medical treatment -- that is a mismatch of visa category that could cause problems. If you are coming for medical treatment, apply for the Medical Visa. If you want to add a brief tourism leg after treatment is complete, discuss this with your doctor and ensure your visa status is appropriate for your stay duration.
Continue Reading
Kenya Visa Guide 2026: UK, US, Canada, Schengen & More
Complete visa guide for Kenyan citizens covering every major destination.
UK Medical Treatment Visa for Africans 2026
Harley Street, private hospitals and the Standard Visitor Visa for African medical tourists.
USA Medical Treatment Visa for Africans 2026
Mayo Clinic, Johns Hopkins and the B-2 visa process for African patients.
Nigeria Visa Guide 2026: UK, US, Canada, Schengen & More
The complete visa guide for Nigerian citizens covering every major destination.
Ready to start your visa application?
Join 15,000+ approved travelers. Get started with our intelligent visa application platform—no payment required to begin.
About the Author
The SwiftPass Immigration Team consists of visa specialists with 10+ years of experience in immigration services. We've helped 15,000+ travelers secure visas for UK, USA, Canada, Schengen, Australia, and New Zealand with a 98.7% approval rate.
Disclaimer
This article is based on publicly available information, user reviews, government statistics, and our platform capabilities. We encourage readers to conduct their own research and compare multiple providers. Visa approval is ultimately decided by immigration authorities. SwiftPass Immigration is operated by SwiftPass Global LLC (EIN: 98-1841660, 131 Continental Dr Suite 305, Newark, DE 19702, USA). We are not affiliated with any government agency or embassy.