India OCI photo requirements
The India OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) registration photo is 2×2 inches (51×51 mm), in colour, with a full frontal face, eyes open, the head centred and measured 1 to 1‑3⁄8 inches (25–35 mm), on a plain light-coloured background. The expression must look natural and clear (non-tinted) glasses are allowed if there is no glare. Verified against India's OCI services photo specification.
The essentials
- Photo size
- 51×51 mm (2.01×2.01 in)
- Head height
- 49–65% of the photo (chin to crown)
- Eye line
- 55–69% up from the bottom
- Background
- Plain light colour (not pure white)
- Expression
- Neutral, mouth closed
- Output resolution
- 600×600 px @ 300 dpi
- Max file size
- 200 KB (JPEG)
Every rule, sourced
Head size, shape & position
Source ↗The photograph must be 2×2 inches (51×51 mm), in colour, showing the full face in front view with the head centred in the frame. It should present the full head from the top of the hair to the bottom of the chin, with the height of the head measuring 1 inch to 1‑3⁄8 inches (25–35 mm).
Expression
Source ↗The expression on the face should look natural. For children and infants, a neutral expression with the mouth closed is required.
Glasses
Source ↗Eyeglasses may be worn, but there must be NO tinted or dark glasses. Avoid glare on the eyeglasses with a slight upward or downward tilt of the head, and the eyes must not be covered by the eyeglass frames. Dark/tinted lenses and flash reflection on the lenses are not accepted.
Head coverings (religious / medical)
Source ↗Head coverings are not permitted except for religious reasons. If a religious head covering is worn, the facial features from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead and both edges of the face must be clearly shown, with no shadows across the face.
Hats & caps
Source ↗Hats and other head coverings are not permitted except for religious reasons. A non-religious hat or cap must be removed.
Lighting
Source ↗Use even, balanced (three-point) lighting so facial features are clearly evident. There must be no over-exposure or under-exposure that makes the photo unusable. Diffuse light sources, such as umbrella lights, are preferable to point sources, and colour should reproduce natural skin tones.
Shadows
Source ↗There should not be any distracting shadows on the face or on the background. The background behind the face must be properly illuminated to avoid shadows behind the head or across the face.
Background
Source ↗The background should be a plain, light-coloured background (not pure white), free of distracting shadows or objects.
Red-eye & flash
Not specified by authorityNot specified by India's OCI services; ICAO/best-practice default applies — avoid red-eye by using diffused lighting or repositioning the flash so the eyes appear clear and natural.
Hair & face obstruction
Source ↗The photo must show both edges of the face clearly. The eyes must be open, level and clearly visible, and must not be covered by hair or eyeglass frames.
Gaze & eyes
Source ↗The head should face the camera directly and must not be tilted or turned (no portrait-style angle). The eyes must be open, level and clearly visible — not looking away.
Babies & children
Source ↗Babies under one year of age do not have to have their eyes open. For children under ten, the requirements on height of the face and position of the eyes can be relaxed; for babies and infants the position of the face, facial expression, eyes and line of sight can also be relaxed. A frontal photograph with clarity is still required, showing the child alone (no chair backs, toys or other people visible), looking at the camera with a neutral expression and the mouth closed.
India OCI photo requirements, in plain English
India's OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) registration photo follows ISO/ICAO travel-document conventions: a full frontal face, eyes open and level, head centred in the frame. Every rule below comes straight from India's official OCI services photo specification.
Size, head height, and position
The photo must be a 2×2 inch (51×51 mm) square, in colour. It should present the full head from the top of the hair to the bottom of the chin, with the head height measuring 1 to 1‑3⁄8 inches (25–35 mm), and the head centred within the frame. Both edges of the face must be clearly shown, and the photo must have a clear, continuous-tone quality.
Expression
The expression on the face should look natural. The spec does not grant a smiling allowance, so a relaxed, natural neutral expression is the safe choice. For children and infants, a neutral expression with the mouth closed is required.
Glasses — clear lenses only, no glare
Unlike some countries, OCI permits ordinary prescription eyeglasses. The rules are about clarity, not removal:
- No tinted or dark glasses (no sunglasses).
- Avoid glare on the lenses — a slight upward or downward tilt of the head
helps eliminate flash reflection.
- The eyes must not be covered by the eyeglass frames.
Head coverings and hats
Head coverings are not permitted except for religious reasons. When a religious covering is worn, the facial features from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead and both edges of the face must be clearly shown, with no shadows across the face. A non-religious hat or cap must be removed.
Lighting, shadows, and exposure
Use even, balanced lighting — three-point, with diffuse sources such as umbrella lights preferred over point sources — so the facial features are clearly evident. There must be no distracting shadows on the face or background, and the background behind the head must be properly illuminated. Avoid over- or under-exposure, and ensure colour reproduces natural skin tones.
Background
A plain, light-coloured background — explicitly not required to be pure white. Snapassport standardizes your background to the exact compliant colour automatically, so a slightly off-colour or busy wall is corrected for you.
Eyes, gaze, and obstruction
The head should face the camera directly and must not be tilted or turned into a portrait-style angle. The eyes must be open, level and clearly visible, and must not be covered by hair or eyeglass frames.
Children and infants
The OCI spec relaxes some rules for the youngest applicants:
- Babies under one year do not have to have their eyes open.
- For children under ten, the height of the face and the position of the
eyes can be relaxed; for babies and infants, the position of the face, the facial expression, the eyes and the line of sight can also be relaxed.
- A frontal photograph with clarity is still required, showing the **child
alone (no chair backs, toys or other people visible), looking at the camera with a neutral expression and the mouth closed**.
Print and format
Print on thin photo paper or stock with a clear, continuous-tone quality. Do not retouch, enhance, or soften the photo. Both conventional and digital photography (and printing) are acceptable; digital photos should be high- quality colour, free of visible pixels or dot patterns.
Frequently asked questions
- Can you wear glasses in an India OCI photo?
- Yes — ordinary clear prescription eyeglasses are allowed for the OCI photo. You must avoid glare on the lenses (a slight upward or downward tilt of the head helps), and the frames must not cover your eyes. Tinted or dark glasses are not accepted.
- What size is an India OCI photo?
- 2×2 inches (51×51 mm), in colour, with the full head shown from the top of the hair to the bottom of the chin and the head height measuring 1 to 1‑3⁄8 inches (25–35 mm), centred in the frame.
- Can the OCI photo background be white?
- The OCI spec asks for a plain, light-coloured background — not necessarily pure white. Snapassport standardizes your background to a compliant light colour automatically.
Sources, verified 2026-06-15: OCI Services — Requirement of photograph for OCI Registration
Rules change. Final acceptance is always determined by the issuing authority — Snapassport validates against the published requirements, it doesn’t adjudicate.
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