US visa petition fees are set to increase by over 100 per cent this year, impacting international musicians hoping to work in the country.
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The increases are set to go into effect from April 1, and will see the petition-based O and P visas surpass the $1000 (ÂŁ797) for the first time.
O visas apply to those deemed as âextraordinaryâ talent in the business, entertainment, sports and arts sectors, and enable applicants to work in the US for up to three years. This has risen by 129 per cent, originally costing $460 (ÂŁ366) and now totalling $1,055 (ÂŁ841).
P visas, which allow artists to work in the country for a shorter time frame will increase by 121 per cent, from $460 (ÂŁ366) to $1,015 (ÂŁ809).
Although the inflated fees are staggering, initially, the increases were meant to be even higher â with plans to jump fees by a further $600 (ÂŁ478), which would have made it a 250 per cent rise.
The plans to enforce the extreme changes were thrown into question and ultimately delayed, after the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) faced widespread backlash from the National Independent Venue Association. The criticism outlined how the inflated fees would pose âa severe economic and cultural threat to independent live entertainmentâ across the country.
It was also contested by the #LetTheMusicMove campaign, which labelled the changes as âcripplingâ for artists. âIn the midst of the ongoing cost of living crisis and with the live sector still recovering from the impacts of COVID-19, it would make performing in the worldâs biggest music market unaffordable for many emerging and mid-level artists,â they explained last year.

With the change arriving in April, this will be the first increase in visa fees since 2016, and has been implemented to ârecover its operating costs more fully and support timely processing of new applicationsâ according to USCIS.
âUnlike many other federal agencies, we are almost entirely fee-fundedâ it added (via DJ Mag). âApproximately 96 per cent of our funding is from filing fees, and only about four per cent is from congressional appropriations.â
Other changes going into effect on April 1 include a new Asylum Programme Fee of $600 (ÂŁ478) for sponsoring employers filing the I-129 form â a requirement for O and P visas. Nonprofits and smaller employers (25 or fewer full-time employees)
will pay half of the I-129 fee.
Additionally, processing fees for faster responses to applications will jump from $2,500 (ÂŁ1,993) to $2,805 (ÂŁ2,236) on February 26. This arrives as the premium processing window expands from 15 days to 15 business days.
Find a breakdown of all visa fee changes here.
As well as backlash from The National Independent Venue Association and the #LetTheMusicMove campaign, criticism regarding the inflated fees also came from numerous artists, who highlighted the toll it would take on their careers.

Speaking to NME last year, former Easy Life frontman Murray Matravers explained how âbleakâ a picture there already was without the âcripplingâ massive visa price hike.
âWe just couldnât afford it â itâs literally as simple as that,â said Matravers, shortly after the Leicester band were forced to scrap their US tour due to âsome insane costsâ. âWeâve done a proper tour of the US once before with a little pretend tour before that, all pre-COVID. Itâs all changed so much. The cost of visas is crazy, you have to hire a legal representative to do all the forms and their fees have gone right up.â
A similar statement was shared by Simone Marie Butler â DJ, radio host, Featured Artists Coalition patron and bassist for Primal Scream.
Speaking to NME, she said: âThe proposed 260 per cent price increase for work visas will be prohibitively expensive for new and emerging bands, as well as small to medium artists and above too. Many bands simply canât go over because financially it wonât work unless they are prepared to make a loss. The increase of such a large amount seems unprecedented and unrealistic.â
Meanwhile, Music Managersâ Forum Chief Executive Annabella Coldrick told NME that it was already too âexpensive and complicatedâ for artists to tour internationally without adding this to the situation.
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