
Middle-East mobility managers received welcome clarity after the Czech Embassy in Amman released its 2026 consular tariff. A Schengen short-stay visa now costs €90 (JOD 75), matching last year’s EU-wide increase; long-term visa and residence-permit fees are set at CZK 2 500—about JOD 86 at January exchange rates. 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 converted into dinars monthly. The embassy will adjust prices again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar, shielding applicants from currency swings.
To help organisations and individual travellers stay on top of these shifting requirements, VisaHQ offers streamlined Czech Republic visa processing, real-time fee updates, and appointment-booking assistance—see https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/ for details on how their platform can lighten the administrative load.
For organisations routing Jordan-based staff through Amman for biometrics, the detailed table simplifies budgeting at the start of the fiscal year. HR departments should update cost sheets immediately and remind travellers that the embassy still accepts only cash payments.
Operationally, applicants must now book appointments through the Czech MFA’s new reservation portal introduced in December. Anyone holding a legacy Visapoint slot must recreate it in the new system or risk cancellation.
The next scheduled fee review is 1 April 2026, unless major FX volatility triggers an earlier update.
Companies may wish to pre-pay fees in koruna to hedge against further currency movement and avoid reimbursing travellers in multiple currencies.
Ancillary services such as signature verification (CZK 500) and super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) mirror Prague’s global tariff but are converted into dinars monthly. The embassy will adjust prices again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar, shielding applicants from currency swings.
To help organisations and individual travellers stay on top of these shifting requirements, VisaHQ offers streamlined Czech Republic visa processing, real-time fee updates, and appointment-booking assistance—see https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/ for details on how their platform can lighten the administrative load.
For organisations routing Jordan-based staff through Amman for biometrics, the detailed table simplifies budgeting at the start of the fiscal year. HR departments should update cost sheets immediately and remind travellers that the embassy still accepts only cash payments.
Operationally, applicants must now book appointments through the Czech MFA’s new reservation portal introduced in December. Anyone holding a legacy Visapoint slot must recreate it in the new system or risk cancellation.
The next scheduled fee review is 1 April 2026, unless major FX volatility triggers an earlier update.
Companies may wish to pre-pay fees in koruna to hedge against further currency movement and avoid reimbursing travellers in multiple currencies.








