- Applicants from the four nations will have to pay the visa integrity fee of $250 in addition to their other required fees
The new U.S. Visa Integrity Fee will be important to know about for any of your relatives, friends, or business associates planning to visit the United States in the coming months. Starting in late 2025, the U.S. government will begin charging a $250 “Visa Integrity Fee” to most foreign nationals applying for a U.S. visa. This fee was established under the One Big Beautiful Bill, signed into law on July 4, 2025, and is likely to affect millions of travelers.

Who Has to Pay The U.S. Visa Integrity Fee?
The fee applies to almost all nonimmigrant visa categories: tourist and business (B-1/B-2), student (F/M), work (H-1B/H-4), and exchange visas (J). Applicants from non-waiver countries—such as China, India, Nigeria, and Brazil—will have to pay the visa integrity fee of $250 in addition to their other required fees. Most tourists coming from Africa, Latin America, and South America as well as select countries in Asia and the Middle East, will also be subject to the new $250 levy. On the other hand, visitors from Visa Waiver Program countries—such as the UK, France, Germany, Japan, and South Korea—won’t be affected. Most Canadians and Bermudians will also be exempt from paying the fee. Diplomats in parts of the Middle East, as well as official visa holders, may qualify for special waivers.
What about Other Processing Fees?
This new charge will be added to the existing visa application fees, including the Machine Readable Visa (MRV) fee, reciprocity fees, and anti-fraud charges, meaning that a single tourist visa application may now cost several hundred dollars or more. The policy, still being fine-tuned, is scheduled to take effect by October 1, 2025, and will be managed jointly by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of State.
What It Means for Your Friends And Loved Ones Abroad
The idea is that this $250 acts like a compliance bond. If a visitor departs the U.S. on time or legally changes their status (for example, switching to a work or student visa making arrangements in a timely manner) then the rebate should be available. However, the refund process remains unclear, and immigration lawyers warn it could involve months of paperwork, delays, or even denials if technicalities aren’t followed. If you’re helping a family member plan a visit—perhaps to attend a wedding, meet a newborn, or explore university options—you should know they will have to pay the new Visa Integrity fee upfront, along with their visa application. They may never see that money again, depending on how the refund rules are implemented. If they breach any visa condition—even accidentally—they forfeit the refund. That results in higher financial risk and extra paperwork for otherwise simple visits.
Why will this U.S. Visa Integrity Fee Really Reduce Overstays?
According to DHS, the policy aims to reduce visa overstays—a long-standing issue in U.S. immigration enforcement. Hundreds of thousands of travelers each year remain in the country beyond their authorized period of stay, according to government data. By requiring a financial incentive for departure or status compliance, the government hopes to deter such violations.
However, critics argue that the fee is misguided and counterproductive. Geoff Freeman, President and CEO of the U.S. Travel Association, has warned that the charge acts like a “self-imposed tariff” on international travelers. He notes that it could discourage legitimate visitors, including students and tourists, from choosing the U.S. altogether, as other countries compete for global travelers and aim to offer more friendly and affordable systems.
@Forbes, excluding the headline


