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Tourists from the US, Australia, Brazil, Germany and Japan are now able to get visas on arrival in India after its limited scheme was extended.
Visitors from 43 countries no longer have to queue up at local consulates, but can instead apply for their visas online and collect them at airports.
The UK is likely to be included in a later phase, according to Subhash Goyal, president of the Indian Association of Tour Operators, which lobbied the government for the scheme.
The new visa-on-arrival will be available at nine major airports in India at a cost of $60. The country previously offered visas-on-arrival to visitors from only 12 countries.
India received 6.58 million tourists in 2012, far fewer than Asian countries like Thailand and Malaysia.
Tourism minister Mahesh Sharma said the change would be boost to the industry, the BBC reported.
The scheme was “a dream come true for the entire tourism industry of India and is bound to positively impact the economy,” he said.
“The government’s objective is to boost tourism and this scheme’s implementation will send out a clear message that India is serious about making travel to the country easy.”
Prime minister Narendra Modi’s BJP government has pledged to boost tourism since his party won a landslide election victory earlier this year.