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Will British holidaymakers have to pay more than £120 for a passport? Officials say the cost of renewing travel documents should RISE
Will British holidaymakers have to pay more than £120 for a passport? Officials say the cost of renewing travel documents should RISE

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Will British holidaymakers have to pay more than £120 for a passport? Officials say the cost of renewing travel documents should RISE

British holidaymakers could see a major rise in the cost of renewing their passports under plans put forward by government officials. The National Audit Office says that the current £94.50 cost of a new travel document should increase because the Passport Office is losing so much money. The department, which has been credited with reversing a huge backlog of delays in issuing new passports, has racked up a deficit of almost a billion pounds over the past five years, including £223million last year alone. The NAO argued that without increasing the one-off payment made every 10 years taxpayers more generally would have to cover the shortfall. It did not give a figure for the rise but the Telegraph suggested it would have to rise £32 to £126.50 to recoup the lost money. A Home Office spokesperson said there were no 'immediate plans' to increase fees and any changes would almost certainly not come into effect this year. But it would be an additional financial burden for Britons at a time when the cost of living remains high. Gareth Davies, head of the National Audit Office said: 'Government bodies provide important services for the public and businesses, including issuing passports and driving licences, and filing company information. 'But many are not consistently recovering their costs - posing risks to the financial resilience of these services and fairness between users. 'HM Treasury should strengthen how it oversees cost recovery processes and provide more comprehensive guidance to charging bodies.' The cost of renewing passports has already risen significantly in recent years. The department drastically hiked prices for adult passports in February 2023 - from £75.50 to £82.50. Fees then rose again by 7 per cent last year - before an inflation-busting increase of 6.7 per cent in April to the current level for digital renewals. Renewing an adult passport using a paper form already costs £107, while fast track services will get you your passport in a week for £178 or a day for £222. The Home Office previously said the new fees were necessary to ensure the cost of passport operations is met without relying on taxpayer funding. It added that fees help cover passport processing, consular services for lost or stolen passports, and border operations. Nearly seven million new passports were issued last year. Adult passports are valid for ten years, while passports for children are valid for just five. The call for higher passport renewal fees came in a wider report by the National Audit Office into government services. A total £340million shortfall was found across all the services looked at - including UK Visas and Immigration, the Court and Tribunals Service and the Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency. The National Audit Office's report concluded: 'Many government departments rely on charging fees to recover the costs of providing services to people and businesses. 'But none of the services we looked at recovered costs consistently, and the charges for the services may not accurately reflect the costs.' 'The government is missing opportunities to deliver efficiencies and share good practice,' it added. 'This poses risks to the financial resilience of public services, the costs of which are likely to be borne by future fee payers.'

Passport Office urged to raise £95 renewal fee to plug black hole
Passport Office urged to raise £95 renewal fee to plug black hole

Telegraph

time6 hours ago

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Passport Office urged to raise £95 renewal fee to plug black hole

Ministers have been urged to increase the £95 passport renewal fee in a blow for millions of Britons. The National Audit Office (NAO) said the Passport Office should increase its fees to address a growing black hole in the department's annual budget. The Passport Office had a budget shortfall of £223m last year and a total deficit of £916m over the last five years. The gap is currently covered through taxpayer funds but the NAO said fees should instead be increased to fill the black hole. Higher charges would hit millions of people who renew their passport each year. There were 6.97m passports issued to Britons last year. An adult passport is valid for 10 years while a children's passport is valid for five. The NAO, which scrutinises public spending, said the Passport Office, which is overseen by Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, should raise the cost of services in a 'reasonable time'. It did not give a figure for how much fees should rise by. If it were to have filled its £223m black hole last year, it would have had to charge each applicant roughly £32 more based on the number of requests received. The NAO declined to comment on the estimate. Adults must currently pay £94.50 for a new passport, while a one-day renewal costs £222. The recommendation comes after it emerged that Brussels was considering making it more expensive for Britons to visit the EU. A €7 fee set to come into force could be raised to help the bloc cover its Covid debts, diplomatic sources have revealed. The cost of getting a passport has already risen significantly in recent year. In February 2023, the fee for an adult passport was raised for the first time in five years by 9pc, from £75.50 to £82.50. It rose again by 7pc in 2024 before an inflation-busting increase of 6.7pc in April. While high, Britain's fees are not unusual in Europe and the West. An adult passport costs €86 (£73) in France, €101 in Germany and $130 in the US. The NAO argued that the long gaps between renewing a passport meant it was fairer to charge the full cost of the service upfront, rather than running a deficit and asking central government to cover it. It said: 'Persistent deficits lead to large cumulative losses which are difficult to recover and risk creating high fees for service users in later years. 'This can create generational unfairness where services are used only periodically, such as adult passport renewals which happen every 10 years.' The call for even higher fees came in a report by the NAO into government services, including UK Visas and Immigration, the Court & Tribunals Service and the Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency. Gareth Davies, the head of the NAO, warned that some government services 'are not consistently recovering their costs – posing risks to the financial resilience of these services and fairness between users'. The NAO found a budget shortfall of £340m across all services it looked at, with the Passport Office accounting for the lion's share. The official audit watchdog said the department had made 'significant operational improvements' over the last few years but warned that it had not covered its costs since the 2017/18 financial year. Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, the chairman of the Public Accounts Committee, said: 'Cost recovery is an important mechanism to reduce the tax burden, but imbalances between fees and costs are creating risks for the resilience of public services, falling unfairly on the taxpayer to pay these differences.' 'Correct charging requires accurate data on costs and users, but the system is being hampered by a lack of monitoring and reporting from some departments, the time consuming legislative process to change fees and limited checks from HM Treasury. Better guidance and a more consistent approach on setting and amending fees and charges is also needed across government.' A Home Office spokesman said there were 'no current plans to increase passport fees.'

Passport prices could rise AGAIN in another blow for British holidaymakers
Passport prices could rise AGAIN in another blow for British holidaymakers

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Passport prices could rise AGAIN in another blow for British holidaymakers

The cost of a new passport could rise by a whopping £32 in the latest blow for millions of British holidaymakers. Ministers have been urged to increase the current £95 renewal fee to address a growing black hole in the Passport Office's budget. The department recorded a budget shortfall of £223million last year and a £916million deficit over the past five years. The National Audit Office, which scrutinises public spending, has recommended that the Passport Office increase the cost of its services to address the issue. It did not, however, give a figure for how much the passport renewal fees should increase by. According to The Telegraph, the Passport Office, would need to charge each applicant £32 more to overcome last year's shortfall. The cost of renewing passports has already risen significantly in recent years. The department drastically hiked prices for adult passports in February 2023 - from £75.50 to £82.50. Fees then rose again by 7 per cent last year - before an inflation busting increase of 6.7 per cent in April. The Home Office previously said the new fees were necessary to ensure the cost of passport operations is met without relying on taxpayer funding. It added that fees help cover passport processing, consular services for lost or stolen passports, and border operations. Adults must currently pay £94.50 for a new passport, while a one-day renewal costs £222. Nearly seven million new passports were issued last year. Adult passports are valid for ten years, while passports for children are valid for just five. A Home Office spokesperson said there were no 'immediate plans' to increase fees. Meanwhile, the National Audit Office declined to comment on the estimated price hike. The call for higher passport renewal fees came in a wider report by the National Audit Office into government services. A total £340million shortfall was found across all the services looked at - including UK Visas and Immigration, the Court and Tribunals Service and the Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency. The National Audit Office's report concluded: 'Many government departments rely on charging fees to recover the costs of providing services to people and businesses. 'But none of the services we looked at recovered costs consistently, and the charges for the services may not accurately reflect the costs.' 'The government is missing opportunities to deliver efficiencies and share good practice,' it added. 'This poses risks to the financial resilience of public services, the costs of which are likely to be borne by future fee payers.' Gareth Davies, head of the National Audit Office said: 'Government bodies provide important services for the public and businesses, including issuing passports and driving licences, and filing company information. 'But many are not consistently recovering their costs - posing risks to the financial resilience of these services and fairness between users. 'HM Treasury should strengthen how it oversees cost recovery processes and provide more comprehensive guidance to charging bodies.'

Rochdale grooming gang leaders may finally be deported to Pakistan
Rochdale grooming gang leaders may finally be deported to Pakistan

Times

time11 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Times

Rochdale grooming gang leaders may finally be deported to Pakistan

Pakistan may finally take back two grooming gang ringleaders if the UK restores direct flights between the two countries, officials from the country's foreign office have said. Ministers have been attempting to persuade Pakistan to drop its block on the deportation of Qari Abdul Rauf and Adil Khan, two of the worst offenders in the Rochdale grooming gangs. They are among at least seven of nine members of the Rochdale grooming gang who remain living in the UK. Rauf and Khan held dual British-Pakistani citizenship but were stripped of their British nationality after being found guilty of being members of the gang. A judge ordered both men to be deported to Pakistan nearly a decade ago but both men renounced their Pakistani citizenship days before a court appeal against the Home Office order.

Brazen Albanian drug dealer who posed flaunting £250k cash from heroin sales is allowed to stay in UK
Brazen Albanian drug dealer who posed flaunting £250k cash from heroin sales is allowed to stay in UK

The Irish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Brazen Albanian drug dealer who posed flaunting £250k cash from heroin sales is allowed to stay in UK

AN ALBANIAN drug dealer who flaunted £250,000 in cash made from selling heroin has been allowed to stay in the UK. 4 An Albanian drug dealer has been allowed to stay in the UK Credit: SWNS:South West News Service 4 Olsi Beheluli brazenly posed with huge stacks of cash Credit: SWNS:South West News Service The Albanian national, who arrived in England when he was nine-years-old, was caged after cops found him with eight kilograms of high-purity heroin. Beheluli, 33, played a "senior role" in the drug ring but, The Home Office and National Crime Agency (NCA) were informed he has to stay in the UK, as reported by Officials were trying to deport the former model just eight months before his arrest in 2015. The National Crime Agency found a picture of him surrounded by an estimated £250,000 after raids in London. Read More Beheluli was later found guilty of conspiring to supply class A drugs and sentenced at Blackfriars Crown Court. He appeared alongside fellow gang members Besim Topalli, then 29, and Azem Proshka, then 23. It was previously reported Proshka and Topalli would be deported after they serve ten years in prison. The duo admitted conspiring to supply drugs, money laundering and possessing fake ID documents. Most read in The Sun National Crime Agency branch commander Oliver Higgins said: "Beheluli seemed to enjoy the high life and gambling with the money he made from drug dealing, but in the end his luck run out. "These men were involved in supplying significant quantities of high-purity class A drugs, as demonstrated by the value of the cash, cocaine and heroin we have seized from them. "But they were unaware that they were being watched by the NCA, and their arrest and subsequent conviction should have the wider criminal fraternity looking over their shoulders." Home Office officials as well as the NCA, previously argued must Beheluli have been operating high up within the criminal organisation to be trusted with such large sums of cash. But a lower-tier tribunal judge threw out this allegation due to a lack of physical evidence or witness testimony. Beheluli arrived in the UK in November 2000, when his father claimed asylum. His father's applications were originally rejected, but in 2006 they were granted discretionary leave to remain - which later became indefinite leave to remain. Beheluli was granted British citizenship in April 2014, but caught with the drugs and wads of cash by October. The Home Office tired to deport him and argued he had lied on his citizenship forms when he stated there was nothing 'which reflected adversely on his character'. They claimed Beheluli must have held a "senior role" within the drug dealing enterprise. The court was told by the Home Office: 'It is beyond logic to accept that [he] would be trusted with such a consignment of drugs if [he was] not already involved in the supply of Class A drugs.' However, the lower tier tribunal ruled that there was insufficient evidence to reach such a conclusion. The tribunal ruled: 'There is, for example, no surveillance or other evidence from the NCA and there is no opinion evidence from a police officer, for example, to support the suggestion that only a senior and trusted member of an organised criminal gang would be entrusted with such a quantity of drugs. 'There was no evidence of sufficient cogency to establish that the appellant had been involved in criminality at the time that he said that there was nothing adverse to declare about his character.' However, the upper tribunal rejected this and has scheduled a re-hearing. It ruled: 'Whether or not there was a statement from a police officer, and whether or not there was further evidence from the NCA, that view was deserving of respect and was capable of supporting the common-sense stance of the Secretary of State.' 4 Fellow drug dealer Ardi Beshiri also showed off wads of cash 4 Human trafficker Luan Plakici relaxed on a sofa with a handful of bills Credit: PA:Press Association

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