United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has announced an increase in visa application fee paid by immigrants.
He also said the surcharge paid for the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) by visa applicants by immigrants would “increase significantly.”
The announcement is coming a few weeks after the United States embassy said it is increasing fees for processing non-immigrant visa (NIV) applications.
The US embassy, according to a statement on its website, stated that the new fees for various visa categories would be implemented from June 17, 2023.
Sunak said: “If we’re going to prioritise paying public sector workers more, that money has to come from somewhere else because I’m not prepared to put up people’s taxes and I don’t think it would be responsible or right to borrow more because that would just make inflation worse.
READ ALSO: UK Embassy suspends student, work, family visa applications for Nigerians
“So, what we have done are two things to find this money. The first is, we are going to increase the charges that we have for migrants who are coming to this country when they apply for visas and indeed something called the immigration health surcharge (IHS), which is the levy that they pay to access the NHS.
“All of those fees are going to go up and that will raise over £1 billion. So, across the board visa application fees are going to go up significantly and similarly for the IHS.”
He said the move would have no effect on inflation because there would be no new borrowing or spending to fund the increases.
Tweeting, he said: “I just announced a fair way to end the strikes – and already all teaching unions are backing it. It’s a fair deal for workers. And a fair deal for the British taxpayer. This is a major breakthrough for parents and families across the country.”