So, Delhi’s pretty much overrun with “immigration experts” these days. Step outside or hop on Insta, and boom—there’s someone offering to get you to Canada, Australia, Mars (kidding… maybe). The thing is, it’s way messier under the surface than those shiny ads and fake Google reviews let on. Let’s spill some actual tea—here are 10 not-so-Instagrammable truths about Delhi’s immigration consultants, the kind they definitely won’t put on a billboard.
In theory, they’re supposed to guide you through visa chaos—helping out with applications, paperwork, and handing you SOP templates with half your name spelled wrong. They love tossing around words like “PR,” “student pathway,” and, of course, “guaranteed visa!” Sounds pro, right? Just wait.
What do they actually do? Well, sometimes they help sort docs, whip up your SOP if you can’t write more than “Hi, my name is Rahul,” mess with forms, and handle visa filing. Usually.
But the real world isn’t the brochure, friend. Most of these “consultants” are just playing the numbers game—fast-talking you into parting with your cash.
Plot twist: a TON of “consultants” aren’t registered with, well, anyone official. No ICCRC for Canada, no OISC for the UK, nada. If you wouldn’t trust a “doctor” with no licence, why hand your future to just anyone?
Yep. There are folks “processing visas” from their cousin’s dining table. No legal paperwork, just a printed sign and a whole lot of attitude.
You ever hear “100% Job Placement in Canada, bro!”? Run. No consultant can promise you a job or a visa. That’s the embassy’s call, not some guy with a Dell laptop and a landline.
Ever been asked for a lakh up front with zero actual transparency on where it’s going? Same. You’re paying top dollar, only to end up filling half the forms yourself anyway while they blast hold music into your soul.
Some of these consultants have backdoor deals with lower-tier colleges abroad. Translation: You might get pushed into a “university” with 5 students and a broken coffee machine, just so your agent can snag a fat commission.
The pressure is real—phone calls, “Your seat’s almost gone!” manipulations, “Sign NOW!” urgency…all classic signs you’re about to get hustled.
You think you’re getting personalized support? LOL. They copy-paste the same SOP, same recommendation letter, same everything. If immigration officers played bingo, they’d win every time.
“97% Success Rate and counting!”—sure, Jan. Most of the time it’s faked screenshots and bought reviews from people in Uzbekistan. Don’t fall for it.
Yeah, they’ll tell you there’s no fee if you don’t get the visa…except for all those mysterious “admin fees” that somehow never get refunded. Fun.
Consultant got you a visa? Sweet. Now you’re on your own, trying to figure out accommodation, jobs, or even just how to get from the airport to anywhere that isn’t awful.
Ask for the RCIC (for Canada) or MARA (for Australia) numbers. Seriously, check their registration—don’t just take a WhatsApp forward’s word for it.
Make sure the fee structure actually makes sense—clarity means honesty. If they can’t explain the cost breakdown, run.
Find real reviews. Reddit. Google. That cousin who went last year. Not just the consultant’s staged “client feedback” videos.
ICCRC and MARA are the real deal—they keep the sharks from fully taking over the pool.
In India, though, regulation is kinda…meh. No national body = more conmen than traffic in Karol Bagh. Sometimes you get a blacklist or a government notice, but by then your money’s probably gone.
Picking a random consultant is like letting a random cabbie do your surgery. Do the research. Ask uncomfortable questions. If your gut says something’s off, it probably is. No one else cares about your future as much as you do—unless, of course, there’s a fat commission in it for them.
Delhi’s got immigration agents on every corner, but most are more talk than action. Shiny offices mean nothing. Credentials matter. Take every “guarantee” with a truckload of salt, and—please—don’t donate your savings to the first guy with a glossy pamphlet and a fake accent. Trust, but verify. And then double-check.
Ask for proof of registration with bodies like RCIC or MARA and double-check online.
Yes! Many people apply directly via embassy sites or government portals with great success.
Not all, but many cut corners. Due diligence is your best friend.
Fake guarantees, pressure tactics, vague fee breakdowns, and no credentials.
Foreign authorities maintain lists of licensed agents; India does not have a centralized one, so rely on global watchdogs.