Nigerians will begin to pay more as UK announces hike in visa fees, health surcharge.
According to Rishi Sunak, the UK prime minister, the surcharge paid for the state-funded national health service (NHS) by visa applicants from around the world will “increase significantly”.
Sunak, who spoke on Thursday during a Downing Street press conference, said migrants will also pay more for visa applications.
The development is set to hit Nigeria with one of the highest numbers of migrants to the UK.
The British-Indian leader, who was under pressure to accept the recommendation of an independent review of pay for teachers, police, junior doctors and other public sector workers, confirmed a hike between 5 percent and 7 percent across the board.
“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,” Sunak said.
“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.”