As visa agents in Kolkata, we prepare, review, and organise your documentation so that when your file reaches an embassy, it tells a clear and consistent story. We cannot make the decision for a consulate, and we will never claim to. What we can do is make sure your application is as complete and credible as the facts allow.
We are a team of visa and travel consultants based in Kolkata, West Bengal, working with people who would rather get their paperwork right the first time than learn from a rejection stamp.
Our clients range widely. A garment exporter heading to a trade fair in Germany, a family visiting relatives in Toronto, a retired couple booking their first Schengen holiday, a young professional flying to Dubai for a conference: each needs something slightly different, and each gets guidance built around their actual trip.
As a visa consultant in Kolkata, we handle the parts that make people anxious, from interpreting a checklist that reads like legal fine print to matching every supporting document to the specific expectations of the destination.
We started as a modest travel and visa consultancy handling a handful of applications a month. There was no marketing budget behind our growth. What carried us forward was a pattern we still see today: one traveller has a smooth experience, mentions it to a sibling or a colleague, and that person arrives at our desk a few weeks later already trusting us.
That word of mouth eventually built a consultancy network serving clients across several Indian cities. Kolkata became a natural home for it. This is a city with generations of families settled abroad, a busy export trade, and a genuine appetite for travel, and the demand here for dependable visa services in Kolkata was impossible to ignore.
Opening a dedicated office in the city was less a business calculation than a response to people who kept asking us to be closer.
Our founder, Shaji Kandambeth, grew up in Kerala, where proximity to the sea and a long tradition of working abroad make the wider world feel less distant than it does elsewhere. That environment gave him an early pull toward travel that never faded.
Over the years he has visited more than forty countries. That number matters less than what it taught him. He has personally filled out entry forms in languages he could not read, waited in consular queues, been asked for one more document at the counter, and figured out how immigration procedures shift from one country to the next. He learned the difference between what a checklist says and what an officer actually looks for, and he saw how a single overlooked detail can unravel months of planning.
He carried that hard-won understanding into building a pan-India travel and visa consultancy that now assists clients across multiple cities.