Schengen visa fee for Bangladeshis to go up from 2 Feb

Schengen visa. Photo: UNB
Schengen visa. Photo: UNB

Bangladesh citizens will need to pay a fee of €80 instead of €60 as they did so far while applying for a Schengen visa from Bangladesh effective from 2 February 2020, reports UNB.

Due to the implementation of the Updated Schengen Visa Code, adopted by the European Union (EU) Council in June 2019, all representative missions of the Schengen Countries located abroad are obliged to apply the new rules, including the ones in Bangladesh.

Bangladeshis will be subject to several changes in terms of visa application procedures, rules and benefits, starting from 2 February, said a media release issued on schengenvisainfo.com on Tuesday.

Children too, will have to pay 40 euro instead of 35 euro, as it is currently.

The new rules also permit Bangladeshis to submit an application up to six months in advance of their trip, instead of three as it is now, and foresee a harmonised approach to the issuing of multiple entry visas with lengthier validity to regular travellers with a positive visa history.

Statistics by schengenvisainfo.com show that in 2018, Schengen embassies and consulates in Bangladesh processed 30,573 visa applications, 9,976 of which were rejected at a rejection rate of 32.6 per cent.

Sweden was the top favourite country for visa submission, as 7,025 of the applications submitted in Bangladesh were for Schengen visas to Sweden, followed by Italy with 6,935 and Germany with 5,854 applications.

In terms of expenditures, in 2018, citizens of Bangladesh spent 1,834,380 euro in visa applications to Europe,€598,560 euro of which money was spent by applicants who had their visas rejected.

“Since Regulation (EU) 2019/1155 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 June 2019 amending Regulation (EC) No 810/2009 establishing a Community Code on Visas (Visa Code) is binding in its entirety, and is directly applicable in all EU Member States in accordance with the Treaties, all Schengen countries, including Lithuania, will apply it from 2 February 2020,” an official from the information monitoring and media division of Lithuania explained for schengenvisainfo.com.

According to schengenvisainfo.com, member states that are not represented in Bangladesh in terms of visa admission are now obliged to cooperate with external service providers in order to facilitate visa application for travellers.

The external service providers are allowed to charge a service fee, which cannot be higher than the visa fee.

This means Bangladeshis applying at an external visa service provider may have to pay up to 160 euro per visa application, if the external service providers set the maximum service fee permitted, which is 80 euro.

Besides, the updated Visa Code introduces a mechanism that assesses whether the visa fees should change, every three years.

Another mechanism that will use visa processing as leverage will be introduced in a bid to improve cooperation with third countries on readmission.

According to Gent Ukëhajdaraj from schengenvisainfo.com, due to this mechanism the fees may increase even to 160 euro, if the EU authorities see it necessary.

“A visa fee of 120 or 160 euro will apply to non-cooperative third-countries, in cases when the EU Commission considers that action is needed in order to improve the level of cooperation of the third country concerned and the Union's overall relations with that third country,” Ukëhajdaraj explains, adding that this provision shall not apply to children under 12 years old.

The mechanism may also shorten visa validity, and introduce prolonged visa processing periods, the release added.