• India
  • Jan 22

DGCA puts in place norms for digi yatra

The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has put in place norms for the rollout of the much-awaited digi yatra facility, which will make air travel paperless and hassle-free.

An initiative of the civil aviation ministry and the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security, the facility seeks to minimise paperwork for air travel under a digital system or e-boarding process for airport entry and boarding flights using documents such as Aadhaar number and mobile phone, among others.

In this regard, the DGCA has issued the Civil Aviation Requirement (CAR) on procedures and requirements for the implementation of the e-boarding process (digi yatra).

The airlines will make a provision to collect the digi yatra ID of the passenger for domestic travel as per digi yatra policy at the time of booking irrespective of the channel, according to the norms.

The passenger will have the option to offer any one of the approved identification document (ID) such as passport, voter card, Aadhaar or m-Aadhaar, PAN card, driving licence, service photo identity card issued by the state/Central government, PSUs, local bodies or public limited companies, among others, as per the CAR.

According to the DGCA, the digi yatra ID created will be authenticated during the first travel by the passenger at an airport that offers such a facility.

In the authentication process, the ID of the passenger will be verified and validated by an authorised security officer and this will activate the digi yatra ID.

At the same time, the airline will ensure that e-tickets are issued with a 2D/QR barcode following the ‘one person, one ticket & one code’ rule so that each passenger, even in a group booking, is issued with an individual ticket featuring a unique code.

The airlines will also have to collect the passport number for all international travels.

Notably, Mumbai airport recently introduced a digital boarding process for domestic flights from Terminal 2, thereby eliminating many pre-flight boarding checks. Under the system, security personnel wouldn’t have to stamp the boarding pass.

Instead, commuters verify their boarding pass at the security checkpoint by scanning the pass barcode or QR code on their phones.

“Airlines shall share the passenger data, including digi yatra ID, with biometric boarding system of airport operators at least six hours before the flight on a secure link for the purpose of ticket validation and ID validation, following appropriate agreement for data sharing,” says the norms.

“In case the passenger prefers to use Aadhaar as ID proof, the system shall comply with all regulatory requirement of UIDAI for Aadhaar capturing and authentication. The system shall not collect or store Aadhaar number or Virtual Aadhaar number,” the norms stipulate.

The airline operator and airport operator shall comply with data protection and data privacy requirements as per the applicable regulations, it stated.

“The airline operator and airport operator may follow the detailed procedure for uniform implementation of e-boarding system as per the digi yatra policy, if they plan to operationalise digi yatra for passengers who have voluntarily opted to provide required details at the time of the booking of the air tickets,” according to the CAR.

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