The Schengen Area covers 29 European countries under a single visa framework — but applying "for Schengen" is not as simple as picking any embassy. Each member country's embassy processes and evaluates applications independently, and the rejection rates, processing speeds, and documentation expectations vary significantly between them. For Indian applicants — especially first-timers — choosing the right country to apply through can be the difference between a smooth approval and an expensive refusal.
In this guide, we break down the five easiest Schengen countries for Indian applicants based on historical rejection rates, embassy responsiveness to Indian profiles, documentation flexibility, and processing speed. We also explain the important "main destination" rule that governs which embassy you can legally apply to — because you cannot simply cherry-pick the most lenient embassy for a trip that takes you primarily through France or Germany.
Why the Entry Country Matters for Schengen Visa
The Schengen visa you receive is issued by one specific member country's embassy or consulate — but it grants entry to all 29 Schengen member states. Each embassy, however, has its own processing standards, officer training protocols, and levels of experience with Indian applicants. A Greek embassy officer processes tens of thousands of Indian applications a year; a Belgian embassy officer sees a fraction of that number and may be less familiar with the nuances of Indian financial documents like Form 16, ITR filings, or joint property ownership structures.
The practical result: the same application profile — same travel history, same finances, same documents — can have a 90% chance of approval at one embassy and a 65% chance at another. This is not a flaw in the system; it is an inevitable consequence of decentralized processing.
Key Principle: A Schengen visa issued by Greece gets you into Germany, France, Spain, or any other Schengen country just as easily. The issuing country does not restrict where you travel within the Schengen Area. This makes strategically choosing your application country — within the rules — a legitimate and intelligent approach.
Top 5 Easiest Schengen Countries for Indians in 2026
Based on rejection rate data, feedback from thousands of Indian travelers, and experience processing Schengen applications over 19 years, here are the five countries that consistently offer Indian applicants the most accessible path to a Schengen visa:
Greece
Tourism powerhouse, high approval orientationGreece is the undisputed top choice for Indian applicants seeking a Schengen visa in 2026. The Greek government has made significant investments in growing Indian tourist arrivals — India is one of its fastest-growing visitor source markets — and this political and economic motivation translates directly into more approachable embassy processing.
Greek consulates have officers experienced with Indian financial profiles, including ITR filings, Form 16, business ownership structures, and HUF accounts. They tend to apply financial requirement thresholds with more flexibility than Northern or Western European embassies. For a 10–14 day Greece-focused holiday, a bank balance of ₹4–6 lakh with regular transactions is typically considered sufficient.
Processing times at the Greek consulate in Mumbai and Delhi are usually 10–20 business days, making it one of the faster options as well. Greece also runs a tourist-friendly VFS Global system that makes the application submission process smooth.
Estonia
Low volume, fast processing, high approvalEstonia is one of Europe's most digitally advanced nations and brings that efficiency to its visa processing. The Estonian embassy in India handles a fraction of the application volume that France or Italy does, which means less queue pressure and more thorough individual assessment of each application.
Estonia's lower profile as a Schengen destination actually works in Indian applicants' favour. The embassy staff are accustomed to processing applications where the applicant intends to visit multiple Schengen countries — using Estonia as the primary destination or port of entry and then travelling onwards. This makes Estonia an excellent gateway country for a broader Europe itinerary.
Estonian visa officers tend to appreciate clean, well-organized application packages and are responsive to cover letters that clearly explain the purpose and itinerary. Processing times are frequently under 15 business days, and refusal rates for Indian applicants are consistently among the lowest in the Schengen zone.
Lithuania
Historically lowest rejection rate for IndiansLithuania has, according to Eurostat Schengen statistics, one of the lowest refusal rates for Indian applicants across the entire Schengen Area. The Lithuanian embassy in India is known for straightforward processing and clear communication. If IRCC requests additional documents, officers typically specify exactly what is needed — reducing back-and-forth and uncertainty.
Lithuania is an increasingly attractive tourist destination in its own right — Vilnius' old town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the country is experiencing rapid growth in Indian visitor interest, driven partly by direct flights from India to nearby Riga and Warsaw. This rising awareness has made the Lithuanian embassy more attuned to Indian applicant profiles.
Financial requirements are assessed against your trip length and destination cost-of-living, which is lower in Lithuania than in Western Europe — meaning a smaller balance can still comfortably satisfy the financial sufficiency test.
Portugal
Strong ties to India, good approval ratePortugal has a historically warm relationship with India, rooted in centuries of shared history. Portuguese visa officers in India tend to view Indian applicants favourably, and the embassy's experience processing Indian applications is extensive — particularly for Indian IT professionals whose companies have European operations in Lisbon.
Portugal has seen a dramatic rise in Indian tourist arrivals over the past five years. Lisbon and Porto are now firmly on the Indian traveller's Europe itinerary, and the Portuguese consulate has evolved its processing standards accordingly. Financial requirements are reasonable, and the embassy has a well-documented, transparent list of required documents that leaves little ambiguity.
One particular advantage: Portuguese consulate staff have strong familiarity with Indian employment documentation, including offers from Indian IT companies for tech conferences or client visits — making it an excellent choice for professionals travelling for a mix of tourism and business purposes.
Hungary
Less congested embassy, approachable documentationHungary's Schengen visa processing receives far less attention than France, Germany, or Italy — and for Indian applicants, that is an advantage. The Hungarian embassy in India handles significantly lower application volumes, which means individual applications receive more careful attention and appointment slots are easier to get. Budapest has become a popular destination for Indian travellers, both for its stunning architecture and as a budget-friendly gateway to Central Europe.
The Hungarian embassy has a clear and consistent document checklist, and officers are known for being thorough but fair. For applicants with solid financial documentation — 3 months of regular salary slips, 6 months of healthy bank statements, and a confirmed employer NOC — Hungary represents a very achievable Schengen entry point.
Budapest also serves as an excellent hub for exploring Central and Eastern Europe, making it a strategically smart "main destination" for an itinerary that includes Vienna, Prague, Krakow, and Bratislava alongside Hungary itself.
Countries to Avoid for First-Time Schengen Applicants
While every country's embassy applies the same Schengen visa regulation framework in principle, some embassies are significantly stricter in practice when assessing Indian applications. These are not bad choices if your itinerary genuinely requires them — but for first-time applicants with the flexibility to structure their Europe trip differently, they are worth understanding.
| Country | Difficulty for Indians | Primary Reason |
|---|---|---|
| France | Strict | Highest Indian application volume — stricter financial scrutiny, longer queues, more ADRs |
| Germany | Strict | Very detailed financial review, strict employment documentation standards, long appointment wait times |
| Netherlands | Moderate | High volume processing, above-average financial bar, precise documentation expectations |
| Switzerland | Moderate | Non-EU Schengen member with independent processing standards; very high financial threshold per day |
| Belgium | Moderate | Limited embassy experience with Indian-specific document formats; less familiar with ITR nuances |
Important: "Avoid for first-timers" does not mean these countries refuse most Indians. It means their stricter standards create higher risk if your profile has any marginal elements — moderate finances, limited travel history, or a borderline employment letter. After getting your first Schengen visa, subsequent applications to stricter embassies are significantly easier because you have established a track record.
Documents That Matter Most for Any Schengen Application
Regardless of which country's embassy you apply to, certain documents carry the most weight in a Schengen visa assessment for Indian applicants:
- Bank statements (6 months, all accounts): Must show consistent, genuine financial activity. A sudden large deposit immediately before applying is a red flag. The balance should reflect your typical financial pattern with enough funds to cover your trip plus daily expenses (approximately €50–100 per day is a general guideline, though this varies by country).
- Income Tax Returns (last 2–3 years): ITR filings establish your income credibility and are an essential tie-to-India indicator for salaried and self-employed applicants alike.
- Employer NOC / Employment Letter: Must be on official letterhead, signed by HR or a senior officer, stating your position, salary, leave approval dates, and your confirmed employment continuity after your travel. This is the most important "ties to India" document for salaried professionals.
- Travel itinerary: A day-by-day itinerary showing which Schengen countries you will visit, how long in each, and which has the most nights — this confirms your "main destination" and justifies your embassy choice.
- Hotel bookings and flight reservations: These should be confirmed bookings (not actual tickets purchased) or clearly marked as provisional reservations. Most embassies accept proof of hotel reservation and a flight itinerary from a travel agent rather than full-fare purchased tickets.
- Cover letter: Underestimated by many applicants but highly influential. A clear, concise cover letter explaining your trip purpose, itinerary, financial position, and ties to India reduces officer uncertainty and demonstrates a well-prepared applicant.
The "Main Destination" Rule — What It Means and Why It Matters
The Schengen Visa Code establishes a clear principle: you must apply for your Schengen visa at the embassy of the country that is your main destination — defined as the country where you will spend the most nights. If your trip involves equal nights across multiple countries, you apply at the embassy of your first port of entry.
This rule exists precisely to prevent applicants from "shopping" for the most lenient embassy when their actual travel is primarily in a different country. A German embassy officer reviewing an application where the applicant clearly plans to spend 12 out of 14 days in Germany would rightfully question why the application came through the Lithuanian embassy.
How to use this legitimately: If you have flexibility in structuring your Europe trip, design an itinerary where you genuinely spend the most nights in your target "easy" country. A 15-day Europe trip with 6 nights in Greece, 3 in Italy, 3 in France, and 3 in Spain is a perfectly valid Greece-primary application. The visa officer will see a genuine itinerary supporting your embassy choice.
Misrepresenting your itinerary to apply at an easier embassy is a form of visa fraud and can result in a permanent ban from the Schengen Area. The approach to follow is always to structure a genuine trip that justifies your embassy choice — and then make the most of the full Schengen Area once your visa is approved.
Tips to Maximize Schengen Approval Chances for Indians
Regardless of which embassy you apply through, these practices consistently improve approval outcomes for Indian applicants:
- Build your travel history first. If you have never travelled internationally, applying for Schengen is a harder road. A Dubai, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, or Southeast Asia trip first gives you a visa stamp and travel history that significantly strengthens any subsequent Schengen application.
- Apply well in advance. Most Schengen embassies can accept applications up to 6 months before travel and at minimum 15 days before. Applying 6–8 weeks before your trip gives you buffer for any additional document requests.
- Never show large, unexplained cash deposits. Banks statements that spike sharply just before the application date raise fraud concerns. Your financial documents should tell a consistent story over 6 months.
- Ensure all documents are in English or accompanied by certified translations. IRCC-authorized translations for regional language documents (property papers, family documents) are mandatory. Do not submit original documents in Marathi, Hindi, or other languages without a certified English translation.
- Be accurate and consistent. Every date, name, and number across your DS-160 equivalent application form, cover letter, and supporting documents must match precisely. Discrepancies — even minor ones — trigger additional scrutiny.
- For self-employed applicants: Include audited balance sheets, 2 years of ITR filings, GST registration certificate, and a CA-certified income letter. Self-employed applicants face more scrutiny than salaried employees and need to establish income credibility with greater documentation.
Nirbhay's 83%+ Rule: We have maintained an 83%+ first-attempt Schengen visa approval rate for our clients over 19 years. The consistent factor across approved applications is not income level — it is the quality and completeness of documentation, plus a well-reasoned cover letter. A person earning ₹40,000/month with a perfect document file often does better than someone earning ₹1.5 lakh/month with a careless application.
Planning a Europe Trip? Get Your Schengen Visa Right.
With 83%+ approval rates and 19 years of Schengen visa experience, we know what works for Indian applicants. WhatsApp Nirbhay now for a free profile assessment — we will tell you exactly which embassy to apply through, what documents you need, and what your realistic approval chances are.
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