British High Commission in New Delhi

Embassy of UK in New Delhi, India

Overview

The British High Commission in New Delhi serves as the United Kingdom's principal diplomatic mission in India, located at Shantipath in the diplomatic enclave of Chanakyapuri. As both the UK and India are Commonwealth countries, the diplomatic mission is called a 'High Commission' rather than embassy, and is headed by a High Commissioner rather than Ambassador. British High Commissioner Lindy Cameron leads the mission representing UK government interests across India. The High Commission provides comprehensive consular services to British nationals throughout India, processes visa applications for Indian residents traveling to the United Kingdom, and facilitates bilateral relations between the UK and India across all domains including political cooperation, economic ties, defense and security, development partnership, climate action, education and research, cultural exchange, and people-to-people connections. The UK and India share deep historical ties and maintain a modern, forward-looking strategic partnership characterized as a 'Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.' Both countries are leading democracies, share English language, legal traditions rooted in common law, parliamentary systems, and vibrant civil societies. A historic milestone was achieved on July 24, 2025 when the UK and India signed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), the UK's most significant trade deal since Brexit and India's first comprehensive FTA with a major European economy. This landmark agreement grants duty-free access to 99% of India's exports to the UK, targets doubling bilateral trade from current levels to approximately USD 120 billion by 2030, and commits both countries to enhanced investment, services trade, regulatory cooperation, and collaboration on emerging technologies. Bilateral trade in goods and services reached £44.1 billion (approximately USD 56 billion) in the four quarters to end of Q1 2025, an increase of 10.1% year-on-year. The UK is India's 6th-largest source of Foreign Direct Investment with cumulative FDI inflows of USD 35.8 billion from April 2000 to March 2025. Over 667 British companies operate in India employing more than 500,000 people across sectors including financial services, consumer goods, automotive, pharmaceuticals, technology, consulting, education, and infrastructure. Major British investments include Unilever (Hindustan Unilever is one of India's largest FMCG companies), HSBC, Standard Chartered, Vodafone Idea, British Petroleum, Diageo, Rolls-Royce, BAE Systems, GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, and numerous others. Conversely, 971 Indian companies operate in the UK employing over 100,000 people, making India one of top job creators in UK. Indian companies including Tata Group, Infosys, Wipro, Tech Mahindra, and others have significant UK operations. The UK maintains extensive diplomatic presence in India with Deputy High Commissions in Ahmedabad (serving Gujarat, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu), Chandigarh (serving Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttarakhand), Chennai (serving Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Andaman & Nicobar Islands), Bengaluru (serving Karnataka), Goa (serving Goa), Hyderabad (serving Telangana, Andhra Pradesh), Kolkata (serving West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, Sikkim, northeastern states), and Mumbai (serving Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh). The British diaspora in India exceeds 40,000 registered British nationals plus significant numbers of dual nationals and British Overseas Citizens, including business professionals, teachers and educators, retirees, students, development workers, and families, concentrated in major metros including Delhi NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Pune, Goa, and Kolkata.
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Visa Services

Indian citizens require a visa to enter the United Kingdom for tourism, business, family visits, study, work, or settlement. The UK operates a points-based immigration system with various visa categories. Visa applications are processed through VFS Global (UK's authorized visa application service provider) and UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI). VFS Global operates visa application centers across India in major cities. Applicants must complete online applications, schedule appointments, provide biometric data (fingerprints and photograph), and submit required documents at VFS Global centers. Standard visitor visas allow tourism, business visits, family visits, and other permitted activities for up to 6 months. Applicants must demonstrate purpose of visit, financial means to support themselves, intention to leave UK at end of visit, and ties to India. Required documents include valid passport, completed visa application, recent passport photographs, proof of funds (bank statements, income tax returns, employment letters), travel itinerary, accommodation bookings, and purpose-specific documents (invitation letters for business or family visits, conference registration, etc.). Processing times typically 3 weeks, though priority and super priority services available for additional fees. Student visas (previously Tier 4) require Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies (CAS) from UK educational institution licensed by UKVI, proof of financial resources (tuition fees plus living expenses - currently £1,334/month for areas outside London, £1,023/month for London for first 9 months), English language proficiency (IELTS or equivalent for most courses), and tuberculosis test certificate from approved clinic. The UK attracts over 100,000 Indian students annually, making India one of largest sources of international students for UK. Popular study destinations include universities such as Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial College London, London School of Economics, University College London, and many others across fields including business, engineering, sciences, humanities, law, and medicine. Student visas allow part-time work during studies and include Graduate Route allowing students to remain in UK for 2 years (3 years for PhD graduates) after completing degree to work or seek employment. Work visas include Skilled Worker visa (previously Tier 2) requiring job offer from UK employer with sponsor license, salary meeting minimum threshold (£38,700 general minimum from April 2025, though lower for shortage occupations, new entrants under 26, or PhD jobs), role on shortage occupation list or meeting skill level requirement, and English language proficiency. Health and Care Worker visa for healthcare professionals offers reduced fees and exemptions from Immigration Health Surcharge. Intra-company Transfer visa allows multinational companies to transfer employees to UK branch. Global Talent visa for leaders and potential leaders in academia, research, arts, culture, and digital technology operates on endorsement basis without job offer requirement. Other visa categories include Family visas (for spouses, partners, children, parents of British citizens or settled persons), Settlement/Indefinite Leave to Remain (after qualifying period on work, family, or other routes), British citizenship (naturalization after holding ILR typically for 1 year, or 3 years if married to British citizen), Business and innovation visas (Innovator Founder visa for entrepreneurs with innovative business ideas; various business visitor categories), and Ancestry visa (for Commonwealth citizens with UK-born grandparent). All visa applications require Immigration Health Surcharge payment granting access to National Health Service (currently £624/year for most visa types, £470/year for students and youth mobility; waived for health and care workers). UK visa fees vary by category, duration, and processing speed. For detailed requirements, fees, and to apply, visit www.gov.uk/browse/visas-immigration or contact VFS Global India. The historic CETA agreement includes provisions for mobility of professionals and business persons, potentially easing business travel and professional movement between UK and India, though specific implementation timelines being finalized.
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Consular Services

The Consular Section provides comprehensive services for British nationals in India including emergency assistance for British nationals in distress (arrest, hospitalization, death, victims of crime, natural disasters, terrorism), emergency travel documents for British nationals who lost, had stolen, or damaged passports (allowing return to UK or onward travel), registration of births for children born to British parent(s) in India, registration of deaths for British nationals who died in India, consular assistance for vulnerable British nationals, provision of official letters (organ transplant letters, no objection letters for child adoption, letters to access Indian archives, university admission introduction letters), limited document certification services (note: UK does not apostille or legalize documents in Commonwealth countries including India; documents for use in India may need to be notarized in UK before travel or certified through alternative procedures), information and support for British nationals affected by serious incidents, liaison with local authorities and hospitals on behalf of British nationals, and referrals to appropriate local services (lawyers, doctors, translators, etc.). Important: British High Commission cannot provide legal advice, pay for services, intervene in legal proceedings, get British nationals out of prison or detention, force local authorities to act, provide banking services, or make travel arrangements (though can assist vulnerable persons). Consular services operate by appointment only; contact via online form at www.contact.service.csd.fcdo.gov.uk/posts/india/british-high-commission-new-delhi. The High Commission charges consular fees for certain services; fee schedule available on gov.uk website. British nationals in India should register their presence, especially for longer stays, to receive travel advice updates and assistance in emergencies. The British community in India exceeds 40,000 registered British nationals plus many dual nationals and British Overseas Citizens. Community includes business professionals and executives (employed by British companies, multinational firms, or Indian companies), teachers and educational professionals (international schools, British curriculum schools, universities employ significant numbers of British teachers), retirees (particularly in Goa, Kerala, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan enjoying India's climate, lower cost of living, and cultural attractions), students (though fewer British students study in India compared to Indian students in UK, numbers growing particularly for yoga, Ayurveda, Indian classical arts, and academic exchange programs), NGO and development workers, journalists and media professionals, hospitality and tourism industry professionals, and families. Major concentrations in Delhi NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Goa, Chennai, Pune, and Kolkata. British clubs and associations exist in major cities providing social and networking opportunities. For emergency consular assistance, British nationals should call +91 11 2419 2100 (New Delhi High Commission) or contact nearest Deputy High Commission. For complex issues or outside India, contact FCDO in London: +44 20 7008 5000 (24-hour switchboard). Travel advice for British nationals visiting or living in India available at www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/india covering safety and security, entry requirements, health recommendations, local laws and customs, and other important information.
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Trade & Export Support

The United Kingdom and India maintain robust and rapidly expanding trade relations transformed by the historic Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) signed on July 24, 2025. Bilateral trade in goods and services reached £44.1 billion (approximately USD 56 billion) in the four quarters to end of Q1 2025, representing 10.1% growth year-on-year. UK exports to India totaled £17.5 billion (USD 22 billion) comprising £6.8 billion in goods (38.9%) and £10.7 billion in services (61.1%), while Indian exports to UK substantially higher reflecting India's goods export strength and UK's services export strength. The CETA agreement, UK's most significant trade deal since Brexit, grants duty-free access to 99% of India's exports to UK and substantial tariff reductions on UK exports to India, targets doubling bilateral trade to approximately USD 120 billion by 2030, enhances market access for services particularly for Indian IT services and professionals, includes commitments on investment liberalization, intellectual property protection, regulatory cooperation, and establishes framework for collaboration on emerging technologies, green energy, and digital economy. UK exports to India include machinery and mechanical appliances (industrial machinery, construction equipment, manufacturing technology), vehicles and automotive components (British automotive technology, engines, luxury vehicles from Jaguar Land Rover, Rolls-Royce, Bentley, McLaren through local manufacturing or imports), aircraft and aerospace products (Rolls-Royce aerospace engines and technology, BAE Systems defense aerospace), electrical machinery and equipment, organic chemicals and pharmaceuticals (GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca export pharmaceuticals and active ingredients), beverages particularly Scotch whisky and other spirits (CETA significantly reduces tariffs on Scotch whisky, major win for UK), precious metals and stones (UK's gold trading and diamond industry), professional and financial services (British banks, insurance companies, consulting firms, legal services, accounting services provide extensive services to Indian market), educational services (UK universities recruit Indian students, British educational institutions provide services to India), technology and software services, creative industries content (UK film, television, music, gaming industries), and luxury goods. Indian exports to UK include textiles and garments (UK fashion industry sources significantly from India; India major supplier of apparel, home textiles), pharmaceuticals and medicines (India supplies substantial portion of UK's generic medicines and APIs; Indian pharmaceutical companies including Sun Pharma, Dr. Reddy's, Cipla export to UK), cut and polished diamonds (India's diamond cutting industry exports to UK jewelry market), leather goods and footwear, chemicals and chemical products, automotive components (Indian auto parts manufacturers supply UK automotive industry), iron and steel products, engineering goods, IT services and software (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Tech Mahindra, HCL provide extensive IT services to UK businesses), organic chemicals, rice and food products, and jewelry. Services trade particularly significant with UK exporting financial services, insurance, professional services, education, and creative content, while India exports IT services, business process outsourcing, software development, and professional services. The CETA enhances services market access benefiting Indian IT professionals, UK financial services, and both countries' professional services sectors. The High Commission's trade and investment team actively supports bilateral commercial engagement through market intelligence, business matchmaking, trade delegation support, investment promotion, and commercial diplomacy. UK Department for Business and Trade (DBT) offices in India support British exporters and investors. Major trade promotion initiatives include trade missions, ministerial visits, sector-specific events, and participation in trade exhibitions. India is priority market for UK's international trade strategy, while UK is important European partner for India's export and investment goals.
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Investment Opportunities

The United Kingdom is India's 6th-largest source of Foreign Direct Investment with cumulative FDI inflows of USD 35.8 billion from April 2000 to March 2025. Over 667 British companies operate in India employing more than 500,000 people. Conversely, Indian investment in UK totals billions with 971 Indian companies operating in UK employing over 100,000 people, making India significant job creator in UK. The CETA agreement includes investment protection provisions, liberalization commitments, and frameworks to enhance bilateral investment flows. Major British investments in India span consumer goods and FMCG (Unilever through Hindustan Unilever is one of India's largest and most iconic FMCG companies with extensive manufacturing, R&D, distribution, and brands including Dove, Surf Excel, Lifebuoy, etc.; Diageo has significant presence in spirits including whisky brands; British American Tobacco through ITC has historical presence), financial services (HSBC and Standard Chartered have extensive banking operations in India; insurance companies including Aviva; asset management firms; financial technology), telecommunications (Vodafone Idea, though facing challenges, represents major British investment; UK telecom equipment and services companies), oil and gas (British Petroleum has joint venture with Reliance in exploration and fuel retail; British oil services companies), automotive (Jaguar Land Rover owned by Tata Motors but maintains British engineering and design; various automotive components suppliers and technology companies), aerospace and defense (Rolls-Royce has manufacturing and MRO facilities; BAE Systems engaged in defense partnerships), pharmaceuticals and healthcare (GlaxoSmithKline has manufacturing and R&D; AstraZeneca has operations; British pharmaceutical and biotech companies), professional services (British consulting firms including PwC, Deloitte, KPMG, Ernst & Young have major operations; law firms; accounting firms), education (British universities have partnerships, branch campuses being explored; British curriculum schools; educational services companies), technology and software, retail (British retail brands in India including Marks & Spencer, Tesco through partnership ventures), infrastructure and construction (British engineering firms involved in Indian infrastructure projects), and renewable energy (British companies in India's solar, wind, offshore wind development). Alongside CETA, Indian companies announced over £1.3 billion in new investments in UK across technology, automotive, pharmaceuticals, and other sectors. India offers attractive opportunities for British investors in manufacturing (aligned with Production Linked Incentive schemes, Make in India initiative), financial services (insurance, asset management, fintech - India's digital payments revolution and financial inclusion drive create opportunities), infrastructure (metro systems, railways, airports, ports, highways - British engineering expertise relevant), renewable energy and green hydrogen (British expertise in offshore wind, solar, battery storage, green hydrogen aligned with India's ambitious clean energy targets), automotive and electric vehicles (India's EV transition creates opportunities for British automotive technology, battery systems, charging infrastructure), pharmaceuticals and life sciences (drug development, manufacturing, clinical research - British pharma companies and India's pharmaceutical capabilities create partnership opportunities), technology and digitalization (artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, fintech, edtech, healthtech), education (British universities exploring Indian campuses, partnerships, online education; British educational service providers), retail and e-commerce (British brands and retail technology), defense and aerospace (under Make in India, India's defense modernization creates opportunities for British defense companies with technology transfer and local manufacturing), and professional services. UK offers Indian investors access to European markets (despite Brexit, UK remains gateway), stable regulatory environment, strong financial services sector, innovation ecosystem (particularly strong in fintech, artificial intelligence, life sciences, cleantech), skilled workforce, and English language business environment. High Commission and DBT facilitate bilateral investment through investor services, market intelligence, matchmaking, and high-level engagement. UK-India Business Council and other bilateral business forums support investment flows. CETA provides enhanced framework for investment protection and dispute resolution, reducing investment risks and enhancing predictability for investors from both countries.
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Business Support

The British High Commission actively facilitates UK-India business relations through its trade and investment team working with UK Department for Business and Trade (DBT). British companies exploring Indian markets can contact the High Commission and DBT offices in India for comprehensive support including market intelligence and research (sector-specific market reports, regulatory updates, business environment analysis), business matchmaking and introductions to Indian partners (connecting British exporters and investors with potential Indian partners, distributors, customers), export support (helping British companies navigate Indian import regulations, standards, customs procedures), investment facilitation (supporting British investors entering Indian market with regulatory guidance, site selection, partner identification), trade mission and delegation support (organizing and supporting trade delegations, ministerial visits, sector-specific missions), participation in trade fairs and exhibitions (supporting British companies at Indian trade shows, organizing UK pavilions), sector-specific expertise (DBT sector specialists provide deep expertise in priority sectors), regulatory and compliance guidance, high-level advocacy (High Commission engages with Indian government on behalf of British businesses on market access, regulatory issues, investment climate), and networking events (regular business forums, roundtables, networking events connecting British and Indian business communities). DBT maintains offices across India with teams in New Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Ahmedabad, and Kolkata providing on-ground support. Key sectors for UK-India business cooperation include financial services and fintech (British financial services expertise and India's digital payments revolution, financial inclusion drive, fintech innovation), pharmaceuticals and life sciences (British R&D capabilities and India's manufacturing excellence create partnership opportunities; vaccine collaboration demonstrated during COVID-19), automotive and electric vehicles (British automotive technology and India's large automotive market, EV transition), aerospace and defense (Rolls-Royce, BAE Systems, others engaged in India's defense modernization and civil aviation growth with technology transfer and Make in India partnerships), infrastructure (British expertise in metros, railways, airports, urban infrastructure relevant for India's infrastructure development), renewable energy and green hydrogen (British leadership in offshore wind, solar, battery storage, green hydrogen aligned with India's clean energy targets; collaboration on climate technology), technology and digital (collaboration on artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, quantum computing, semiconductors), education (British universities partnering with Indian institutions, British educational services, English language teaching), professional services (accounting, legal, consulting, management consulting - British firms major presence in India), retail and e-commerce (British brands entering India, retail technology), creative industries (British expertise in film, television, music, gaming, advertising collaborating with Indian creative sector), and sustainable development (collaboration on circular economy, sustainable cities, climate adaptation). The historic CETA agreement provides enhanced framework for business cooperation with reduced trade barriers, enhanced market access, regulatory cooperation mechanisms, and frameworks for collaboration on emerging technologies. High Commission facilitates participation in bilateral business forums including UK-India CEO Forum (top business leaders from both countries providing strategic guidance on economic partnership), UK-India Joint Economic and Trade Committee (government-to-government dialogue on economic cooperation), sector-specific working groups, and business councils. CETA establishes new cooperation mechanisms on regulatory issues, standards, and emerging sectors. For British businesses seeking support in India, contact DBT India team or High Commission trade section. For Indian businesses interested in UK market, High Commission can provide information and connections to UK resources though primary support for Indian exporters comes from Indian government trade promotion agencies.
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Cultural & Educational Programs

The United Kingdom and India maintain vibrant cultural and educational exchange characterized by shared language (English), historical connections, and contemporary partnerships across arts, education, research, sports, and people-to-people ties. The British Council, UK's organization for cultural relations and educational opportunities, maintains extensive operations in India with offices across major cities promoting UK education, facilitating educational exchange, teaching English, supporting arts and culture exchange, and building connections between UK and Indian people and institutions. Educational cooperation is particularly strong with over 100,000 Indian students studying in UK universities and educational institutions, making India largest source of international students for UK (surpassing China in recent years). Popular fields of study include business and management (MBA programs at UK business schools highly valued), engineering (mechanical, electrical, civil, computer science, aerospace), computer science and information technology, life sciences and medicine, social sciences, law, arts and humanities, and finance and economics. Leading UK universities attracting Indian students include Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial College London, London School of Economics (LSE), University College London (UCL), University of Edinburgh, King's College London, University of Manchester, University of Warwick, and many others across UK. UK offers attractive features for Indian students including world-class universities (UK has 4 universities in global top 10, over 20 in top 100), shorter course duration (3-year undergraduate degrees, 1-year master's programs compared to longer durations elsewhere), Graduate Route allowing 2 years (3 years for PhD) post-study work rights (introduced in 2021, significant attraction for Indian students), English language instruction, multicultural environment, and pathway to skilled employment or further opportunities. Academic collaboration includes over 800 partnerships between UK and Indian universities, joint degree programs, student and faculty exchanges, joint research projects, collaborative PhD programs, and branch campuses (several UK universities exploring India presence following India's liberalization of foreign university entry). Major research collaboration areas include science and technology (UK and Indian research institutions collaborate on physics, chemistry, biology, engineering), medical research (vaccine development demonstrated by Oxford-AstraZeneca and Serum Institute of India partnership producing billions of COVID-19 vaccine doses), climate science and environmental research (UK's climate research expertise and India's climate challenges and clean energy transition), social sciences, arts and humanities, and innovation and technology. British Council offers scholarships including GREAT Scholarships for Indian students and Chevening Scholarships (UK government's prestigious scholarship program for future leaders from around world; hundreds of Indians selected annually). Cultural cooperation is rich with British Council promoting British arts, film, literature, theater, music in India and supporting Indian artists and cultural practitioners in UK. Major programs include film festivals showcasing British cinema, literature festivals (British authors participating in Indian literary festivals like Jaipur Literature Festival), music exchanges (collaborations between British and Indian musicians across classical, contemporary genres), theater and performing arts, visual arts exhibitions, and creative industries collaboration. English language teaching is major activity with British Council teaching English to thousands of Indians and providing English proficiency tests including IELTS. Sports connections are strong with cricket being passion in both countries (UK-India cricket matches among most watched sporting events globally), football (Premier League has huge Indian following), Commonwealth Games participation, and sports exchanges. People-to-people ties reinforced by Indian diaspora in UK (over 1.6 million people of Indian origin in UK making it largest ethnic minority group; significant Punjabi, Gujarati, and other communities) and British community in India. Indian culture has major presence in UK with Indian restaurants, Bollywood cinema, yoga and wellness practices, Indian festivals celebrated, and Indian arts appreciated. Conversely, British education system, English language, football, music, and cultural products have major following in India. The historic and contemporary connections create unique cultural affinity despite political independence. Both governments support cultural diplomacy recognizing cultural and educational ties strengthen overall bilateral relationship and create foundation for economic and political cooperation.
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Service Area

The British High Commission in New Delhi has overall diplomatic oversight for India. For consular services, British nationals should contact the High Commission or appropriate Deputy High Commission based on location: High Commission in New Delhi (serving Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, and areas not covered by Deputy High Commissions), Deputy High Commission in Ahmedabad (serving Gujarat, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu), Deputy High Commission in Chandigarh (serving Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttarakhand), Deputy High Commission in Chennai (serving Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Andaman & Nicobar Islands), Deputy High Commission in Bengaluru (serving Karnataka), Deputy High Commission in Goa (serving Goa), Deputy High Commission in Hyderabad (serving Telangana, Andhra Pradesh), Deputy High Commission in Kolkata (serving West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, Sikkim, northeastern states including Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh), and Deputy High Commission in Mumbai (serving Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh). For visa applications, applicants throughout India can apply through VFS Global centers in their city; applications processed by UK Visas and Immigration. For emergencies, British nationals should contact nearest High Commission or Deputy High Commission during office hours or call FCDO in London +44 20 7008 5000 (24 hours).
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Appointment Information

Public access to the British High Commission and Deputy High Commissions is by appointment only. For consular services, emergency assistance, or general inquiries, contact via online form at www.contact.service.csd.fcdo.gov.uk/posts/india/british-high-commission-new-delhi. The online form is primary contact method. For visa applications, apply online at www.gov.uk/browse/visas-immigration and schedule appointment at VFS Global center through VFS online booking system. VFS Global operates visa application centers across India in major cities. For emergency consular assistance affecting British nationals in India (serious situations including arrest, hospitalization, death, natural disasters, terrorism), British nationals or family members should call relevant High Commission or Deputy High Commission during office hours or FCDO in London +44 20 7008 5000 (24-hour switchboard) outside office hours. Travel advice for British nationals in India available at www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/india.
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Special Notes

The British High Commission is located at Shantipath, Chanakyapuri, New Delhi 110021, in New Delhi's diplomatic enclave. Note that both UK and India are Commonwealth countries, hence the mission is called 'High Commission' headed by 'High Commissioner' rather than 'Embassy' and 'Ambassador.' Current British High Commissioner is Lindy Cameron. The location is accessible by Delhi Metro, taxis, and app-based ride services. Public access is by appointment only; all visitors must have confirmed appointments. Visitors must present valid photo identification and pass security screening. The High Commission observes both UK and Indian public holidays. British National Day is celebrated with the King's Official Birthday reception (typically June) with events attended by Indian officials, British community, business leaders, and friends of UK. The historic CETA agreement signed July 24, 2025 marks transformational moment in UK-India economic partnership with commitments to double bilateral trade to USD 120 billion by 2030, enhanced market access, investment flows, and cooperation on innovation and emerging technologies. For Indian travelers to UK, information on visa requirements, travel insurance, health recommendations (no specific vaccinations required for UK but travel insurance recommended), accommodation, and travel planning available at www.gov.uk/browse/visas-immigration and www.visitbritain.com. UK attractions include London (iconic landmarks including Big Ben, Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, British Museum, West End theaters), historic cities (Edinburgh, Oxford, Cambridge, Bath, York), Scottish Highlands, Lake District, Cotswolds, Stonehenge, Windsor Castle, Harry Potter locations, Premier League football, West End shows, British museums (free entry to most national museums), shopping, British countryside, and cultural experiences. Business travelers visit London (global financial center), attend conferences, visit British companies, and explore business opportunities. UK's historic universities, financial services strength, innovation ecosystem, cultural institutions, and democratic traditions attract Indian students, investors, tourists, and professionals. For comprehensive travel advice, visa information, and details on UK-India cooperation, consult gov.uk websites and British High Commission website. CETA creates new opportunities for Indian businesses accessing UK market and British businesses accessing Indian market with reduced barriers and enhanced cooperation frameworks.
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