Everything about your SpiceJet (SG) boarding pass: how to get it, re-download a lost one, mobile vs printed, and airport timings.
Verified June 2026You can re-download free from the website. Note: if you need the boarding pass re-issued or check-in handled through SpiceJet Reservations, a facilitation fee of ₹200 per passenger applies (waived for armed-forces and senior-citizen fares and medical/stretcher cases).
SpiceJet does not publish a specific mobile-pass acceptance rule; retain your boarding pass until you leave the destination terminal. On connecting domestic itineraries you are issued both passes at the origin.
A mobile (digital) boarding pass is accepted at Indian airports by the airlines that issue one — there is no official rule requiring a printout, and Delhi Airport markets fully paperless domestic travel. That said, carry a valid government photo ID at all times (it is checked at terminal entry alongside your boarding pass or ticket), and for international departures most airlines still verify your travel documents at the counter before issuing the final pass.
Counter check-in itself carries no published fee; the only related charge is the ₹200 Reservations re-issuance/assistance fee. (A ₹350 domestic / ₹499 international charge applies only to bookings made at the airport ticketing counter — a booking fee, not check-in.)
Counters open 3 hours and close 60 minutes before departure; boarding gates close 25 minutes before departure on both domestic and international. A transit no-show at the 25-minute mark results in offload.
For international flights you need a passport valid at least 6 months plus a valid visa, must fill embarkation forms before immigration, and need a printed itinerary plus ID to enter the terminal; international check-in closes 60 minutes before departure.
Skip the scramble — see the full SpiceJet web check-in guide, or let HappyFares Web Check-in Assist handle it and send your boarding pass to WhatsApp.
Get your boarding pass on WhatsApp →Re-downloading your pass from spicejet.com is free. But if you have SpiceJet Reservations re-issue the boarding pass or handle check-in for you, a facilitation fee of ₹200 per passenger applies — waived on armed-forces and senior-citizen fares and for medical/stretcher passengers.
Go to book.spicejet.com, use Search Web Check-in with your PNR and email, and download the boarding pass again. Re-downloading online is free; only Reservations-assisted re-issuance carries the ₹200 fee.
A passport valid for at least 6 months and a valid visa, plus a printed itinerary and photo ID to enter the terminal. International check-in closes 60 minutes before departure and the boarding gate closes 25 minutes before.
A mobile (digital) boarding pass is accepted at Indian airports by the airlines that issue one — there is no official rule requiring a printout, and Delhi Airport markets fully paperless domestic travel. That said, carry a valid government photo ID at all times (it is checked at terminal entry alongside your boarding pass or ticket), and for international departures most airlines still verify your travel documents at the counter before issuing the final pass.
DigiYatra works with any airline at 38 Indian airports, including for SpiceJet flights — it reads your face instead of checking documents at three checkpoints. DigiYatra is the free, optional facial-recognition system at 38 Indian airports (including Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata and Navi Mumbai). You enrol once with Aadhaar, but you must upload your boarding pass for every flight and share it with the departure airport (the e-gate scans the boarding-pass QR first, then your face). It is domestic-only — international departures are still on the roadmap — and passengers travelling with infants cannot use it. Even DigiYatra users should carry a physical government photo ID.