It happens to the best of us. You’re about to check into your flight and then you realise: You’ve got less than six months left on your passport, or even worse, you can’t find the blasted thing! It’s a mad dash to the passport office – which is where!? – to get a new passport – which is how much?!
If you’ve got yours running down the clock, you’re in for a bit of sticker shock when you head in to get it renewed. The cost of securing a new passport has (like everything else these days) gone up as of today (April 11)! The government has introduced new UK passport fees for all applications that see prices rising by almost 10%. Currently, it costs £82.50 for an adult (16 and over) to order a standard passport online, but this has now risen just shy of £90, to a grand total of £88.50.
What are the new fees?
- The cost of an online application from within the UK has risen to £88.50for adults (from £82.50) and £57.50 for children (from £53.50)
- A postal application will now cost £100 for adults (up from £93) and £69 for children (up from £64)
- If applying from overseas, online applications will now cost £101 for adults and £65.50 for children, while paper applications will cost £112.50 for adults and £77 for children
If you need to get a passport urgently, the price might come as a bit of a shock…
According to the Home Office, rising UK passport fees will go towards processing applications, delivering passports, and other associated operations, as well as, the cost of overseas support, such as lost or stolen passports and processing British citizens at UK borders. The Home Office added that, “The government does not make any profit from the cost of passport applications.”
Can I get a new UK passport for free?
Yes, but you need to be 94 years, 6 months and 19 days old or older (as of March 21, 2024). Anyone born on or before September 2, 1929, can get a free passport. The scheme was introduced in 2004. It’s to commemorate the wartime efforts of anyone 16 or older at the end of World War II.