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Plug & Adapter Guides for Other Countries
Tuvalu Plug & AdapterAmerican Samoa Plug & AdapterSaudi Arabia Plug & AdapterCosta Rica Plug & AdapterHungary Plug & AdapterVietnam Plug & AdapterAnguilla Plug & AdapterIraq Plug & AdapterEquatorial Guinea Plug & AdapterBangladesh Plug & AdapterSolomon Islands Plug & AdapterMartinique Plug & AdapterPortugal Plug & AdapterAustralia Plug & AdapterCuraçao Plug & AdapterFinland Plug & AdapterAlbania Plug & AdapterCongo-Brazzaville Plug & AdapterCameroon Plug & AdapterUkraine Plug & AdapterBolivia uses 2 plug types: Type A and C. Of these, Type A are not used in India, so you'll need a travel adapter for those sockets.

Type A: Features two parallel, flat pins.

Type C: Uses two parallel, round pins.
| India | Bolivia | |
|---|---|---|
| Voltage | 230 V | 115 V |
| Frequency | 50 Hz | 50 Hz |
| Voltage Converter needed? | Yes, for some devices | |
Bolivia runs on a main voltage of 115 volts at a frequency of 50 Hz, significantly lower than India's 230V/50Hz. This matters: any single-voltage Indian appliance (typical hair dryers, straighteners, immersion rods, electric kettles) will not run properly at 115V and may not heat up at all. To use them safely, you would need a step-up voltage converter. Dual-voltage devices like almost all phone chargers, laptop adapters and modern cameras are unaffected and only need a plug adapter.
Yes, but it depends on which socket your hotel has. Bolivia uses Type A and C sockets at 115V/50Hz. Your Indian phone and laptop chargers are dual-voltage (the label reads 100–240V), so they handle Bolivia voltage without any issue. The only question is plug shape — your Indian plug fits Type C sockets directly, but will not fit Type A sockets without an adapter. Your charger is dual-voltage and handles 115V safely, but single-voltage devices like hair dryers will not work.
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