
Kuwait’s Interior Ministry has rolled out an automatically approved “multiple-trip exit permit” for foreign workers, Gulf News reported on 21 January. The digital document allows expatriates to depart and re-enter Kuwait repeatedly within its validity, eliminating the need to queue for fresh paperwork after every business visit home or to neighbouring GCC states.
Indian engineers, healthcare staff and oil-service specialists—who make up one of the largest professional cohorts in Kuwait—stand to benefit immediately. Frequent flyers previously had to surrender passports for up to three days while single-exit permits were stamped, disrupting project timelines and emergency travel.
To navigate these changes smoothly, Indian professionals and their employers can turn to VisaHQ’s dedicated India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/), which provides up-to-date visa information, application support and courier services for Kuwaiti travel documents. The platform tracks regulatory updates—like the new multiple-trip exit permit—and helps compile the required paperwork, easing the administrative load for both travellers and HR teams.
The permit is part of a wider e-government overhaul that has already digitised residency renewals and driving-licence issuance. Employers can apply through Kuwait’s unified labour-portal; approval is granted once system checks confirm valid residency and clearances.
Mobility managers should update assignment handbooks and advise travellers to carry a downloaded QR code of the permit until airport systems are fully integrated. The reform also reduces the administrative burden on corporate-PRO offices that service large Indian workforces in the Gulf.
Observers expect the simplified framework to enhance Kuwait’s attractiveness vis-à-vis UAE and Saudi Arabia for future Indian project bids—provided parallel reforms on dependent visas and health-insurance costs follow. (m.economictimes.com)
Indian engineers, healthcare staff and oil-service specialists—who make up one of the largest professional cohorts in Kuwait—stand to benefit immediately. Frequent flyers previously had to surrender passports for up to three days while single-exit permits were stamped, disrupting project timelines and emergency travel.
To navigate these changes smoothly, Indian professionals and their employers can turn to VisaHQ’s dedicated India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/), which provides up-to-date visa information, application support and courier services for Kuwaiti travel documents. The platform tracks regulatory updates—like the new multiple-trip exit permit—and helps compile the required paperwork, easing the administrative load for both travellers and HR teams.
The permit is part of a wider e-government overhaul that has already digitised residency renewals and driving-licence issuance. Employers can apply through Kuwait’s unified labour-portal; approval is granted once system checks confirm valid residency and clearances.
Mobility managers should update assignment handbooks and advise travellers to carry a downloaded QR code of the permit until airport systems are fully integrated. The reform also reduces the administrative burden on corporate-PRO offices that service large Indian workforces in the Gulf.
Observers expect the simplified framework to enhance Kuwait’s attractiveness vis-à-vis UAE and Saudi Arabia for future Indian project bids—provided parallel reforms on dependent visas and health-insurance costs follow. (m.economictimes.com)








