Thursday, November 3, 2011

Peru Tourist Visa for Indian Citizens (From San Francisco Consulate)

I knew six friends who recently obtained Peru tourist visas. So armed with the knowledge of their experiences, we went to the Peru consulate around 9.45 AM. You pick a number as soon as you enter, but the number doesn't seem to bear any significance. Someone from the closed office area will walk to the waiting room and talk to you randomly.

It seems like we caught them on a busy morning, so after waiting for a while, they asked us to leave our documents and passports and come back at 1. I asked them if I could give them the passports later as I wanted to make color copies of all pages to drop off at the Chile consulate next door (more here) and the young guy who took our papers agreed.

We returned at 1 pm after lunch and had to wait for some more time. If the door to the office area opens, immediately stand up and walk towards it, and try to attract someone's attention. Eventually we were noticed and our application was picked up by an older lady who seemed senior. She also took a lot of help from Swami during our visit in the morning to fix her computer troubles (that didn't seem to win us any favor though).

The next hour and a half was like living in a slow motion picture on a very laid back island. The lady re-typed our application form on the computer and had a fit when we told her that we plan to stay in Peru for a month without any air tickets (in or out).

"You're going by bus? From Bolivia?" (with shocked expression)

"Yes, but from Ecuador", I said with resignation. Swami has trouble with Ecuador and Bolivia and interchanges them again and again and I just give up.

"Where are your tickets?"

"We dont have bus tickets yet. We plan to get them as we go. But look, we have air tickets in and out South America."

"But what about Peru?"

"Not for Peru. In to Bogota and out of Buenos Aires." Sigh! This was getting really tiring.

"This is Bogota, not Peru. What will you do in Peru for one month?"

"We'll hike the huayhuash circuit and the inca trail". Twice, I almost said.

"Dont you have a job? How will you afford four months?"

This is when we show our bank statement. She looks at a random figure on my salary statement which says $323.50 and goes "Thats all?" How on earth am I supposed to travel with $323.50? I show her the bank statement. Arent they supposed to be reading bank statements all the time?

Finally, after showing the money, she says "$60". I am just thrilled that its over.

Now we get finger printed, thumb impression-ed and photographed and finally step out of the consulate with our visas at 2.30 PM.

Documents to take for EACH applicant:
  • Original passport
  • Application Form
  • Bank Statement
  • (dont give unless asked) Pay statement . It might be mistaken for a bank statement and someone might think your 15 day salary is your bank balance. Or horror, they might think your 401K contribution is your bank balance. Keep it away.
  • $30 per visa in cash
  • copy of US visa
  • hostel reservation (we booked for one day in Cuzco)
  • airline reservation
  • (not asked) photograph
Consulate is at 870 Market Street. Fedex is at 726 Market street for last minute tech/copy needs. Bank of America ATM is at the corner of Market and 4th street.  Form and visa requirements. 

12 comments:

  1. Thanks. It seems quite helpful!

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  3. Great Blog... Keep up the good work.
    You should think about writing a book of your travel experiences

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  4. This was useful, thanks. However, it looks like things have changed with their rules. You now need to show confirmation of hotel reservation or accommodation for *every day* of your stay in Peru. They usually accept email confirmation for this, but the confirmation should have the names of every person traveling on the itinerary. About the bank balance, they will ask you to show the latest balance until the day before you go for the visa interview. The most recent monthly statement is apparently not enough!

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  5. Is the Peru visa a full page sticker in the passport? My passport has no more fully empty pages now but I don't want to apply for a passport reissue right now if I can avoid it.

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  6. Updating with my exp, used FedEx in nearby Marriott to print some of my documents, Chase ATM in nearby Westfield mall to withdraw cash, reached consulate at 10:30, got a sequence number (they call out people in order unless one has some trivial documentation work), my number came at 2:30 (4 hrs !!), lady was very courteous but slow. She asked for my current month bank balance, return tickets, one night accommodation proof, 1 photo & asked some simple questions about my itinerary. I was out of consulate with a visa in hand at 3:15.

    Tips:
    1. as pointed out before, reach super early or be prepared to wait 3-4 hours.
    2. Starting 2 pm, they dont give out any new sequence numbers and only entertain people who have got one already.
    3. Learning a bit of Spanish helps as most of the notices and conversations are in Spanish only.
    4. During interview, dont give any unnecessary info, they can be easily confused, provide only and as little info as asked.
    5. If you get a number, it is ok to leave the consulate and come later.
    6. If you feel the urge, you can ask for restroom key in exchange for an ID.
    7. There is a nice Peru photo book to kill time.

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  7. Thanks for your great update, sprabs. Its much more recent than mine and will hopefully help someone. I love your point #4, so true!

    @ anand M - it is a full page. Its actually one big stamp that occupies about 3/4 the page (not a seperate paper stuck on your passport like Chile).

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  8. @ Adarsh - thanks for your update!

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  9. Thanks Ullasbhai! thats a lovely compliment. :)

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