To get a Look Out Circular cancelled, you first ask the agency that opened it to withdraw it, and if that fails you file a writ petition before the High Court under Article 226 asking the court to quash the LOC. The right to travel abroad is part of personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution, so a court can lift an LOC it finds arbitrary or unsupported by law.
A Look Out Circular, usually called an LOC, is an alert placed with the Bureau of Immigration so that airports flag or stop a named person from leaving India. It is an executive measure, not a court conviction. This guide explains who can open one, how long it lasts, and how to get it removed.
An LOC is an internal government alert issued at the request of an authorised agency and executed by the Bureau of Immigration. It can stop you at the airport, deny you boarding, or simply record your movement. It does not prove guilt. It restricts only your travel, and that restriction can be challenged because it touches a fundamental right.
The framework for LOCs comes from Ministry of Home Affairs office memoranda, not from a single statute. The Ministry issued Office Memorandum No. 25016/31/2010-Imm dated 27 October 2010, which set out who may request an LOC and the conditions for issuing one. That framework was modified by the Office Memorandum dated 5 December 2017 and later consolidated by the comprehensive Office Memorandum dated 22 February 2021, which, in the words of the Delhi High Court, “presently governs the law with respect to the issuance of LOCs.”
Validity is the point most people get wrong. Under the older memoranda an LOC lapsed after one year unless the agency renewed it. The 2021 Office Memorandum removed that automatic expiry. Now an LOC, once opened, stays in force until the originating agency sends a request to delete it. There is no longer any automatic one-year deletion. That is exactly why you cannot simply wait an LOC out, you have to get it actively withdrawn or quashed.
The reason a court can step in is constitutional. The Delhi High Court has held that “the right to travel abroad has been held to be a Fundamental Right under Article 21 of the Constitution of India which cannot be taken away in an arbitrary and illegal manner,” relying on the Supreme Court in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, (1978) 1 SCC 248. Because the freedom to leave the country flows from Article 21, an LOC that is unreasoned, indefinite, or issued without authority can be set aside by the High Court in its writ jurisdiction under Article 226.
This matters for transparency too. You often do not know an LOC exists until you are stopped, and the Right to Information Act, 2005 can be one route to seek records about it, subject to the security exemptions agencies may claim.
Consider a Pune exporter named in a bank loan dispute. A public sector bank had asked for an LOC, and he was stopped at the airport before a business trip. He sent a written representation to the originating agency, and when it was not withdrawn his lawyer filed a writ petition before the High Court. Courts have taken a firm view here. The Bombay High Court, in Viraj Chetan Shah v. Union of India, quashed the clause that let bank chairmen and chief executives seek LOCs against borrowers, holding that mere inability to repay a loan, without a criminal case, “cannot be a reason to deprive a citizen of this country of the fundamental rights envisaged and guaranteed under Article 21.” On such reasoning a person in his position may ask the court to lift the alert.
Only officers authorised under the MHA office memoranda, such as senior police officers, the CBI, the Enforcement Directorate, and certain other agencies, can request an LOC. The Bureau of Immigration then opens and executes it. A private person or a bank cannot directly stop you at the airport.
Until 2021 an ordinary LOC lapsed after one year unless renewed. The Office Memorandum dated 22 February 2021 removed that automatic deletion, so today an LOC stays in force until the originating agency sends a request to delete it. An unchallenged LOC can therefore continue indefinitely, which is why you must get it actively withdrawn or quashed.
There is no public register, and you often learn of an LOC only when stopped at immigration. You can file an application under the Right to Information Act, 2005 to seek records, though agencies may claim security related exemptions. A lawyer can also seek this through court proceedings.
No. A High Court may quash an LOC it finds arbitrary, indefinite, or issued without authority, and courts have done so where the alert had no proper legal basis. But the court decides on the facts of each case, so you may challenge an LOC, not assume it will be removed.
Sometimes. Courts can grant interim permission for a specific trip, often on conditions such as a deposit, sharing your itinerary, or surrendering your passport on return. You must ask for this relief and satisfy the court that you will come back.
If you think an LOC may be open against you, write to the originating agency first, ask it to send a deletion request to the Bureau of Immigration, and speak to a lawyer about a writ petition before the High Court if it is not withdrawn. For a plain-language grounding in citizen rights and how to use information laws to push back on the State, read The RTI Playbook. You can also explore more citizen guides at the Right to Information Wiki homepage.
This article is general information about the law in India and is not legal advice. Look Out Circular cases turn on their own facts. For your situation, consult a qualified advocate.