
The Czech Embassy in Amman has released its updated consular tariff for January 2026, providing welcome budgeting certainty for Middle-East mobility teams. A Schengen short-stay visa now costs €90 (JOD 75), while long-term visas and residence permits are pegged at CZK 2 500—about JOD 86 at the January reference rate. Children aged 6–12 continue to pay a reduced €45.
Prices for ancillary services such as signature verification (CZK 500) and super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) remain aligned with Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into dinars monthly. The embassy will adjust the table again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar.
For organisations routing Jordan-based assignees through Amman for biometrics, the published fees allow clearer cost forecasts at the start of the fiscal year. The mission has also confirmed that all e-mail appointment requests received during the Christmas closure have now been processed and that standard hours resumed on 3 January.
Companies without in-house visa expertise can streamline the process by engaging VisaHQ, whose Czech Republic desk (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) combines real-time fee updates with digital application tracking and on-demand support. The platform’s Jordan-based partners can pre-check documentation, secure appointments at the Amman embassy and organise courier returns, reducing admin time for HR teams already juggling multiple assignee moves.
Applicants should note that only cash in JOD is accepted at the cashier’s window and that super-legalised documents can still take up to seven working days. Mobility managers are advised to schedule appointments at least four weeks in advance and to brief travellers on the embassy’s strict walk-in restrictions.
Visa-service providers report a jump in requests for fee calculators and pre-screening support as companies update internal relocation budgets and traveller checklists.
Prices for ancillary services such as signature verification (CZK 500) and super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) remain aligned with Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into dinars monthly. The embassy will adjust the table again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar.
For organisations routing Jordan-based assignees through Amman for biometrics, the published fees allow clearer cost forecasts at the start of the fiscal year. The mission has also confirmed that all e-mail appointment requests received during the Christmas closure have now been processed and that standard hours resumed on 3 January.
Companies without in-house visa expertise can streamline the process by engaging VisaHQ, whose Czech Republic desk (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) combines real-time fee updates with digital application tracking and on-demand support. The platform’s Jordan-based partners can pre-check documentation, secure appointments at the Amman embassy and organise courier returns, reducing admin time for HR teams already juggling multiple assignee moves.
Applicants should note that only cash in JOD is accepted at the cashier’s window and that super-legalised documents can still take up to seven working days. Mobility managers are advised to schedule appointments at least four weeks in advance and to brief travellers on the embassy’s strict walk-in restrictions.
Visa-service providers report a jump in requests for fee calculators and pre-screening support as companies update internal relocation budgets and traveller checklists.










