A misspelled name on a passport. The wrong date of birth was printed in the personal details page. A middle name that was accidentally omitted during the original application. An address that reflects a home you left six years ago. These are not rare edge cases — they are among the most commonly reported problems by Indian passport holders, and they cause real consequences: visa rejections, denied boarding at airports, mismatches with airline tickets, and complications at international immigration counters that can unravel carefully planned trips in minutes.
The good news is that the Indian passport correction process has been substantially digitised through the Passport Seva Programme, making it possible to initiate most types of corrections online without visiting a government office until the appointment date. The challenge is that the process varies significantly depending on what type of error needs to be fixed, what documents support the correction, and whether the error originated with the applicant or with the printing authority. This article walks through every type of passport correction available to Indian citizens in 2026, the exact online steps involved, the supporting documents required for each scenario, the fees applicable, and the critical mistakes that turn a straightforward correction into a months-long administrative ordeal.
Categories of Passport Corrections: Understanding What Can Be Fixed and How
Not every error on a passport is corrected through the same process. The Ministry of External Affairs classifies correction requests based on the nature of the change, the source of the error, and the type of supporting documentation available. Getting this classification right before initiating an online application determines both the fee you pay and the processing timeline you should expect.
| Type of Correction | Classification | Initiated By | Fee Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Name spelling error (applicant’s fault) | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Name spelling error (government printing error) | Printing defect | Applicant reporting PSK error | No fee if defect confirmed |
| Date of birth correction | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Gender correction | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Place of birth correction | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Spouse name addition or correction | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Father’s or mother’s name correction | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Address update on passport | Personal particulars change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| ECR to Non-ECR status correction | Category change | Applicant | Reissue fee applicable |
| Visible printing defect or smudged text | Printing defect | Applicant reporting PSK error | No fee if defect confirmed |
The distinction between applicant error and government printing error carries significant financial weight. If the PSK examiner or printing authority made an error that does not match the data on your submitted application form, the correction is treated as a printing defect and processed without charge. If the error originated in the applicant’s form — a typo in the online application, a wrong date entered, or a name submitted differently from how it appears on supporting documents — a full reissue fee is charged.
Steps to Apply for Passport Correction Online
Step 1: Log in to the Passport Seva Portal using your registered email ID and password.
Step 2: Select “Apply for Reissue of Passport” from the dashboard.
Step 3: Choose the correction reason, such as a change in personal details, address, or a damaged passport.
Step 4: Enter the correct information exactly as you want it printed on the new passport.
Step 5: Upload scanned supporting documents for the requested correction.
Step 6: Pay the applicable passport correction fee online using UPI, card, or net banking.
Step 7: Book an appointment at the nearest PSK/POPSK and carry original documents with self-attested photocopies for verification.
Supporting Documents Required for Each Correction Type
The documents needed for passport correction depend on the type of change requested. Submitting incorrect or mismatched documents is one of the main reasons applications are delayed or rejected at the Passport Seva Kendra.
| Correction Type | Main Document Required | Alternative Supporting Document |
|---|---|---|
| Name spelling correction | Aadhaar Card | PAN Card or Voter ID |
| Name change after marriage | Marriage Certificate | Gazette Notification |
| Full name change | Gazette Notification | Affidavit with ID proofs |
| Date of birth correction | Birth Certificate | Class 10 Certificate |
| Father’s name correction | Father’s Aadhaar/PAN | Father’s Passport |
| Mother’s name correction | Mother’s Aadhaar/PAN | Mother’s Passport |
| Spouse name addition | Marriage Certificate | Joint Photograph |
| Spouse name removal | Divorce Decree | Legal Separation Affidavit |
| Gender correction | Government Hospital Certificate | Gazette Notification |
| Place of birth correction | Birth Certificate | School Leaving Certificate |
| Address correction | Updated Aadhaar Card | Recent Utility Bill |
| ECR to Non-ECR change | Educational Certificate | Degree Certificate |
All submitted documents must clearly display the corrected information exactly as it should appear on the passport. Any spelling mismatch, short form, or variation can lead to additional verification or an application hold.
Fee Structure for Passport Correction Applications in 2026
Since passport corrections are processed as reissue applications, the fee structure mirrors the standard reissue fee schedule. There is no separate “correction fee” category — you pay the same amount as a renewal applicant, regardless of how minor the error being corrected may be.
| Correction Application Type | Booklet Type | Normal Track Fee | Tatkal Track Fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Change of personal particulars (adult) | 36 Pages | ₹1,500 | ₹3,500 |
| Change of personal particulars (adult) | 60 Pages | ₹2,000 | ₹4,000 |
| Change of personal particulars (minor below 15) | 36 Pages | ₹1,000 | ₹3,000 |
| Change of personal particulars (minor 15 to 18) | 36 Pages | ₹1,500 | ₹3,500 |
| Printing defect correction (government error confirmed) | 36 Pages | No fee | No fee |
| ECR to Non-ECR status change | 36 Pages | ₹1,500 | ₹3,500 |
| Address change only | 36 Pages | ₹1,500 | ₹3,500 |
One important nuance: if you are correcting a detail and simultaneously upgrading from a 36-page to a 60-page booklet, the fee applicable is for the 60-page booklet, regardless of your existing passport’s page count. Booklet type is selected fresh at each reissue, not inherited from the previous passport.
Processing Timeline for Correction Applications
The time from application submission to receiving the corrected passport varies depending on the processing track selected, the type of correction involved, and whether police verification is triggered.
| Processing Stage | Normal Track Duration | Tatkal Track Duration |
|---|---|---|
| PSK appointment and document verification | Same day as appointment | Same day as appointment |
| Application approval and dispatch to printing | 3 to 7 business days | 1 to 3 business days |
| Police verification (if required) | 15 to 30 additional days | Post-issuance — does not delay dispatch |
| Passport printing and quality check | 2 to 3 business days | 1 to 2 business days |
| Speed Post delivery to registered address | 3 to 5 business days | 3 to 5 business days |
| Total estimated timeline (without police verification) | 10 to 20 business days | 5 to 10 business days |
| Total estimated timeline (with police verification) | 30 to 60 days | 15 to 25 days |
Police verification is not always triggered for correction applications. When the correction is minor — a single-letter spelling adjustment confirmed by Aadhaar — and the applicant’s address has not changed, many correction cases are processed without police re-verification. However, corrections involving name changes, date of birth revisions, or address updates frequently trigger a fresh verification cycle.
Common Mistakes That Derail Passport Correction Applications
Understanding where correction applications typically fail allows applicants to sidestep the most expensive and time-consuming errors before they occur.
| Mistake | Consequence | How to Avoid It |
|---|---|---|
| Selecting “Fresh Passport” instead of “Reissue” | Creates a duplicate file; complicates the existing passport record | Always select “Reissue” for any correction to an existing passport |
| Entering the corrected name differently across form fields | Inconsistency flags the application for manual review | Copy the exact spelling consistently across every field in the form |
| Submitting a document with a slightly different spelling than requested | PSK examiner holds application; additional proof demanded | Ensure all supporting documents reflect the exact corrected spelling |
| Not carrying the original passport to the PSK appointment | Application rejected on the spot | Existing passport — even if incorrect — must be presented at the counter |
| Applying for Tatkal correction without urgent travel proof | May be questioned; Tatkal surcharge is still non-refundable if rejected | Carry proof of imminent travel when opting for Tatkal correction |
| Assuming correction updates linked Aadhaar or PAN records | Passport correction does not propagate to other ID documents | Update Aadhaar, PAN, and Voter ID separately after passport correction |
| Skipping the grievance route for printing defect errors | Paying the reissue fee unnecessarily for a government-caused error | Report printing defects within 30 days of receipt to claim a fee waiver |
What Happens to Your Existing Passport After Correction
Once a corrected passport is issued and dispatched, the existing incorrect passport is treated as cancelled. The PSK examiner may physically cancel the old passport at the time of the appointment by punching holes through it or stamping it as surrendered. In some cases, the cancelled passport is returned to the applicant alongside the new corrected one, which is useful for applicants who have active visas stamped on the old passport that they need to present to immigration authorities during travel.
If your existing passport holds valid foreign visas, inform the PSK examiner explicitly at the appointment and request that the old, cancelled passport be returned. Most immigration authorities worldwide accept the combination of a valid new passport alongside a cancelled old passport containing the active visa, but this arrangement should be confirmed with the embassy of the destination country before travel.
Correcting a passport error in India is a structured, document-driven process that rewards applicants who approach it with precision and preparation. Every detail — from the service tile selected on the portal to the exact spelling on the supporting document to the presence of the old, incorrect passport at the appointment — determines whether the correction is processed smoothly in a matter of weeks or spirals into a verification cycle that consumes months. Approaching the process with the right information from the beginning is the only strategy that consistently works.