
US and Japan Overhaul Visa Charges in Synchronised Mid-Year Push
Washington launches a premium interview service while Tokyo enacts its first visa fee hike in 48 years, both citing administrative pressures.
On 1 July, two of the world’s largest migrant-receiving states will transform their visa fee structures, with the United States introducing an optional premium service for business and tourist applicants and Japan implementing its first across-the-board visa fee increase since 1978. From that date, the US Department of State will activate a pilot programme allowing B1/B2 visa seekers to pay a surcharge of $750 on top of the existing $185 fee to secure a consular interview within 10 days. The initiative, which runs until 31 December 2026, does not guarantee approval but aims to curb growing interview backlogs that Washington attributes to heightened vetting requirements introduced during the Trump administration. Simultaneously, Japan’s cabinet-approved revision will lift a single-entry visa from ¥3,000 to ¥15,000 and a multiple-entry visa from ¥6,000 to ¥30,000, with the new rates applicable to applications lodged from 1 July onwards.
Viewed from Washington, the premium service is a pragmatic by-product of a tightening migration apparatus. According to Associated Press reports cited by La Nación, the Trump administration’s layered security demands—including financial deposits for certain nationalities and extended personal data collection—have heaped new administrative burdens on consulates, lengthening wait times and eliciting complaints from applicants worldwide. The $935 total fee (comprising the $185 base and $750 premium) is framed as an optional bypass rather than a entitlement to entry, but its pilot status means the department will scrutinise demand and the effect on processing times before deciding whether to make it permanent or expand it to more diplomatic posts.
Tokyo’s decision, the first adjustment in nearly five decades, responds to a different set of pressures. Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, quoted by multiple Indonesian outlets and the Nigerian Tribune, states that the 1978 fee levels no longer reflect inflation and exchange-rate shifts. Japanese officials stress that they do not anticipate an immediate impact on inbound tourism, though independent analysts in Southeast Asia note that the fivefold jump—particularly the ¥30,000 multiple-entry fee—may alter cost-benefit calculations for frequent travellers. The revenue, the government says, will support the management of a record 4.13m foreign residents, fund Japanese-language education programmes and strengthen enforcement against overstayers. For permanent residency applications, ceilings will rise from ¥10,000 to ¥300,000, a thirtyfold increase, with full implementation expected before the end of the fiscal year in March 2027.
Both moves reflect a global recalibration of migration costs. Japanese officials draw explicit comparisons with Western peers: US visa renewals cost $420–$470 and German counterparts €93–€98, a bracket Tokyo now closer approaches. In Washington, the premium surcharge represents a user-pays mechanism to expedite a specific administrative step without altering fundamental eligibility criteria. The next concrete steps are the launch of both systems on 1 July, with the US pilot under review until late 2026 and Japan’s broader residency fee increases slated for legislative follow-through within the current fiscal year.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Starting July 1, the US will launch an optional premium service allowing B1/B2 visa applicants to pay an extra fee to drastically reduce interview wait times. This pilot is framed as a long-awaited benefit that will ease the process for millions of travelers and business visitors.
Japan will raise visa fees for foreign nationals for the first time in 48 years, with single-entry costs jumping fivefold from ¥3,000 to ¥15,000 starting July 2026. Indonesian media convert the hike to rupiah, warning travelers to prepare for significantly higher expenses.
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