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The U.K. government has confirmed the fee for its new Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) will rise from £16 to £20 ahead of the scheme’s launch and stricter enforcement on Feb. 25, 2026.
The ETA is compulsory for visa‑exempt nationals from 85 countries, including the United States and Canada, and grants multiple short stays of up to six months for two years or until a passport expires.
Applications are processed via the official UK ETA app or GOV.UK and are usually decided within minutes, although the Home Office warns processing can take longer in some cases.
The ETA is a digital permission, not a visa, and carriers will refuse boarding to passengers required to hold one who do not.
Officials say the system aligns the U.K. with other countries’ pre‑travel authorisation systems (for example, the U.S. ESTA) and is designed to strengthen border checks.
The government also warned travellers to use official channels to avoid third‑party surcharges or scams.
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Travel Weekly | Voice of the Travel Industry, Hotels & DestinationsPrice goes up for the U.K.'s online travel authorization
Travel Weekly | Voice of the Travel Industry, Hotels & DestinationsThe London cityscape. Photo Credit: Mistervlad/Shutterstock














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