
Middle-East mobility managers received welcome clarity after the Czech Embassy in Amman published its January 2026 consular tariff. A Schengen short-stay visa now costs €90 (JOD 75), in line with the EU-wide increase last year, while long-term visas and residence permits are fixed at CZK 2 500—about JOD 86 at the January reference rate. Children aged 6–12 continue to benefit from a reduced €45 fee.
Ancillary services such as signature verification (CZK 500) and super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) mirror Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into dinars monthly. The embassy says it will adjust prices again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar, protecting applicants from currency swings.
For organisations routing Jordan-based staff through Amman for biometrics, the transparent table simplifies budgeting at the start of the fiscal year. HR teams should update cost sheets and advise travellers to bring exact cash; card payments remain unavailable.
Travellers who prefer to outsource the paperwork can turn to VisaHQ, which provides step-by-step support, current fee information and online document submission for Czech Republic visas—saving both mobility managers and individual applicants valuable time (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/).
Note that the embassy’s appointment system now sits on the MFA’s new portal introduced in December. Applicants with pre-December Visapoint bookings must recreate their slot in the new system or risk cancellation.
The next published fee review is scheduled for 1 April 2026, unless a major FX fluctuation triggers an earlier update.
Ancillary services such as signature verification (CZK 500) and super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) mirror Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into dinars monthly. The embassy says it will adjust prices again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar, protecting applicants from currency swings.
For organisations routing Jordan-based staff through Amman for biometrics, the transparent table simplifies budgeting at the start of the fiscal year. HR teams should update cost sheets and advise travellers to bring exact cash; card payments remain unavailable.
Travellers who prefer to outsource the paperwork can turn to VisaHQ, which provides step-by-step support, current fee information and online document submission for Czech Republic visas—saving both mobility managers and individual applicants valuable time (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/).
Note that the embassy’s appointment system now sits on the MFA’s new portal introduced in December. Applicants with pre-December Visapoint bookings must recreate their slot in the new system or risk cancellation.
The next published fee review is scheduled for 1 April 2026, unless a major FX fluctuation triggers an earlier update.








