How to Send Elderly Parents to India Alone: The Complete NRI Checklist
Sending an elderly parent on a flight to India alone is one of those things that sounds simple until you start listing everything that could go wrong. The good news: almost all of it is manageable with a bit of planning. This is the checklist we wish every NRI family had — organised by when to do each thing, so nothing gets left to the last minute.
Work through it in order. If you only have a few days before the flight, skip to the "Final 48 hours" section — but ideally start six weeks out.
The one thing most people get wrong
They leave the arrangements too late, then try to fix everything in a panic the night before. The single most useful thing you can do is decide early how your parent will be supported at each airport — because the best options (a good seat, airline wheelchair assistance, a private greeter) need to be booked in advance, not arranged on the day.
4–6 weeks before: the flight itself
- Prefer a direct flight where you can, even if it costs a little more. A connection means a second airport, a second security check, and a real risk of a missed transfer for someone travelling alone.
- If you must connect, book a long layover (3+ hours internationally) — a tight connection is the most common thing that goes wrong.
- Choose an aisle seat near the front so your parent can reach the bathroom easily and disembark without a long wait.
- Request airline special assistance / wheelchair at the time of booking (or at least 48 hours before). It's free and provided by the airline — see how it compares to a private greeter in our guide on private greeter vs airline special assistance.
- Note any dietary or mobility needs in the booking (special meal, wheelchair to the seat, extra legroom if affordable).
2–3 weeks before: documents & paperwork
Put together a single travel folder — physical, not just digital — and pack it in their carry-on:
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Passport | Check at least 6 months' validity from the travel date |
| Visa / OCI card | Print a copy even if it's electronic |
| Flight ticket / e-ticket | Printed, large font |
| ID copies | Photocopy of passport + one Indian ID (Aadhaar/PAN) |
| Emergency contact card | Your name + number, and a relative's in India, in large print |
| Address in India | Written clearly — where they're staying, with a landmark |
| Travel insurance | Especially if they have existing health conditions |
Tip: put a laminated card in their pocket with their name, your phone number, and their destination address. If they get confused or separated from a group, this solves it instantly.
2 weeks before: health & medication
- Doctor check-up. Confirm they're fit to fly; for recent surgery or heart/lung conditions, ask for a "fit to fly" note.
- Medication in the carry-on, never checked luggage — in original packaging, with a copy of the prescription.
- Pack extra days' supply (at least 3–4 beyond the trip) in case of delays.
- Write a simple medical summary card: conditions, current medicines and doses, allergies, and blood group.
- Set a medicine schedule for the new time zone so doses aren't missed on arrival day.
1 week before: staying connected
- Sort out an Indian SIM or eSIM, or activate international roaming before they leave — arranging a SIM on arrival is hard for an elderly traveller alone.
- Install WhatsApp, set a large font, and add them to a family group so updates reach everyone.
- Save the key numbers in their phone with clear names: "Me", "Beta/Beti", the India host, and the airport assistance company if you've booked one.
- Pack a charged power bank and the right charger/adapter.
Money
- A little INR cash for a trolley tip, water, or a taxi — but not large sums.
- One working debit/credit card they know how to use, plus your number to call if a card is blocked.
- Avoid sending them with a lot of cash or valuables.
Airport assistance: the part that removes the real stress
This is where a solo elderly journey is won or lost. Two layers work together:
- Free airline wheelchair assistance — request it at booking (covered above). Good for mobility, but it's shared and ends at the arrivals hall.
- A private greeter — a dedicated person who meets your parent at the aircraft door or gate, handles the porter and fast-track immigration, walks them through the terminal, and stays until they're in their car — with a WhatsApp update to you.
For an elderly parent flying alone, our senior citizen airport assistance is built exactly for this — a complete gate-to-car escort with wheelchair support on request. An arrival needs the full end-to-end service (not a curbside drop), so at Delhi it's covered by our Premium arrival plan — check current pricing for the exact fare at your parent's airport. For airport-specific detail, we have a full guide for Delhi and a step-by-step of what actually happens at Delhi airport.
Book it in advance and note "elderly passenger, travelling alone" plus any language preference in the comments.
The final 48 hours: pack & brief
Carry-on essentials: medication, documents folder, phone + power bank, glasses, a change of clothes, some snacks, and a light jacket (aircraft and airports are cold).
Brief your parent simply: - "Someone will be waiting with a board showing your name — go with them." - "Don't accept help from strangers who approach you; wait for the person with your name." - "Call or WhatsApp me when you land, before anything else." - Show them one photo of what the name board / assistant looks like if you've booked a greeter.
Print the assistance booking confirmation and put it in the folder, with the assistant's contact number.
On the day and on arrival
- See them off at the departure airport, or arrange assistance there too so they're helped from the kerb.
- Track the flight yourself so you know when they've landed.
- The greeter meets them inside — no scanning a crowd, no wrong exit. You get a WhatsApp confirmation once they're in the car.
- A quick call once they reach the house closes the loop.
Quick recap checklist
- [ ] Direct flight (or long layover), aisle seat near the front
- [ ] Airline wheelchair/special assistance requested
- [ ] Documents folder packed in carry-on (passport, visa/OCI, tickets, ID copies, address, insurance)
- [ ] Laminated name + contact card in their pocket
- [ ] Medication in carry-on + prescription copy + extra supply + medical card
- [ ] Indian SIM/eSIM or roaming sorted; WhatsApp ready; power bank packed
- [ ] Some INR cash + one working card
- [ ] Airport assistance / private greeter booked at both ends
- [ ] Parent briefed on the name board and "call me when you land"
- [ ] You're tracking the flight and expecting the arrival update
Frequently asked questions
How far in advance should I arrange everything? Ideally 4–6 weeks, mainly so you can get a direct flight and a good seat. Airport assistance can be booked much later — usually 24 hours is enough — but earlier is safer for peak dates.
My parent needs a wheelchair. Is that separate from a greeter? The airline provides the wheelchair free; a private greeter coordinates with it and handles everything the wheelchair service doesn't (baggage, customs, the car). See wheelchair assistance.
They don't speak much English. Will that be a problem at the airport? No — note the preferred language in the booking. Our assistants at major Indian airports speak Hindi and the main regional languages.
Can I arrange assistance for both departure and arrival? Yes — book each leg separately so your parent is helped from the kerb at the start and met at the aircraft door on landing.
What if the flight is delayed? A booked greeter tracks the flight and adjusts automatically, with no extra charge for the delay.
Get the arrangements in early, book someone to meet them at the airport, and the rest of the trip takes care of itself.
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