
In a notice dated 14 January, India’s Consulate-General in Vladivostok set a uniform e-Visa fee of US$75 for Russian applicants and scrapped the long-criticised ‘one application per email ID per month’ restriction. The update brings Russia in line with most European pricing bands and is expected to accelerate post-pandemic traffic on the strategically important Far-East route.
For applicants looking to navigate these refreshed requirements without hassle, online visa facilitator VisaHQ offers step-by-step assistance through its dedicated India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/). The service aggregates the latest fee tables, eligibility notes, and document checklists, and can lodge multiple e-Visa requests in one session—ideal for agencies and corporate travel planners now liberated from the old single-email bottleneck.
The fee consolidation replaces multiple ad-hoc charges that confused both tourists and trade delegations, while the lifted email-cap means travel agencies can now process group applications more efficiently. Repeat visitors may still apply only twice in a calendar year, but the administrative bottleneck that forced business travellers to maintain multiple email accounts has been eliminated.
The Consulate also reminded applicants that Pakistani nationals—even of dual origin—remain ineligible for e-Visas and must use regular consular channels. Diplomatic and official passport holders likewise remain outside the scheme.
Russian corporates active in India’s defence and energy sectors should adjust trip budgets to reflect the higher, but now predictable, fee structure. Meanwhile, Indian outbound MICE planners might leverage the friendlier process to position Vladivostok meetings as a cost-effective alternative to Moscow.
For applicants looking to navigate these refreshed requirements without hassle, online visa facilitator VisaHQ offers step-by-step assistance through its dedicated India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/). The service aggregates the latest fee tables, eligibility notes, and document checklists, and can lodge multiple e-Visa requests in one session—ideal for agencies and corporate travel planners now liberated from the old single-email bottleneck.
The fee consolidation replaces multiple ad-hoc charges that confused both tourists and trade delegations, while the lifted email-cap means travel agencies can now process group applications more efficiently. Repeat visitors may still apply only twice in a calendar year, but the administrative bottleneck that forced business travellers to maintain multiple email accounts has been eliminated.
The Consulate also reminded applicants that Pakistani nationals—even of dual origin—remain ineligible for e-Visas and must use regular consular channels. Diplomatic and official passport holders likewise remain outside the scheme.
Russian corporates active in India’s defence and energy sectors should adjust trip budgets to reflect the higher, but now predictable, fee structure. Meanwhile, Indian outbound MICE planners might leverage the friendlier process to position Vladivostok meetings as a cost-effective alternative to Moscow.










