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How Much Does a Saudi Arabia Visa Cost from Egypt? (2026 Fees & Hidden Charges)

10 min readΒ·Β·VisitPlane Editorial
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VisitPlane Editorial

Verified by Official Embassy Sources

Updated June 202610 min readEmbassy-verified

✈️ At a glance

Route

πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¦ Egypt β†’ Saudi Arabia

Guide type

Visa Guides

Read time

10 min read

Updated

Jun 2026

Check full Egypt β†’ Saudi Arabia requirements β†’

Overview

For Egyptian travellers, the real cost of a Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa (where eligible) is more than the government fee on the official website. Once you add the service charge, biometrics, insurance, photos, and supporting paperwork, the all-in figure can be noticeably higher. This 2026 guide breaks down exactly what you'll pay β€” headline fee and hidden extras β€” so you can budget accurately.

On VisitPlane, we verify every route against official sources, and our document checklist helps you avoid paying for things twice.

Key takeaway: The headline Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa (where eligible) fee is around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa. But the all-in cost from Egypt is higher once you add service charges, biometrics, insurance, photos, and document costs β€” budget for the full picture, not just the visa fee.

The Headline Visa Fee (2026)

The core Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa (where eligible) fee is around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa. Importantly, the e-visa bundles mandatory medical insurance; sponsored visit, work, and Umrah visas have separate fees handled through a sponsor or agent. So treat the headline number as the starting point, not the total.

The Full Cost Breakdown

A realistic Egyptian applicant's budget includes several layers:

  • The government visa fee β€” around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa.
  • The service charge β€” most applications go through a partner centre or platform that adds its own fee.
  • Biometrics β€” no advance biometrics for the e-visa; checks happen on arrival.
  • Travel insurance β€” built into the Saudi e-visa, and sensible for any trip.
  • Photographs β€” passport-spec photos to the exact requirements.
  • Supporting documents β€” bank statements, any notarisation, translations, and printouts.
  • Courier or passport return β€” where the centre charges to return your passport.

Each layer is small on its own, but together they often add a meaningful amount on top of the headline fee.

The Hidden Charges Most People Miss

The fee that surprises applicants isn't the visa charge β€” it's everything around it. Service-centre fees are charged per application, so a family pays several times over. Premium or priority services are optional but heavily marketed. Insurance, photos and printing, bank-statement charges, and document translation all add up. And agent fees, if you use one, can dwarf the visa itself. None of these are scams β€” but knowing about them lets you decide what you actually need.

Converting to EGP

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Most Saudi Arabia fees are set in the destination's currency, riyals, or US dollars, so what you pay in EGP depends on the exchange rate on the day and any card or conversion fees your bank charges. Because rates move, budget with a small buffer above the headline conversion, and check whether paying by card adds a foreign-transaction fee. Never rely on a fixed local-currency figure you saw months ago β€” confirm the current rate close to when you pay.

A Realistic Total Estimate

Add it up like this: start with the Saudi Arabia visa fee (around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa), then add the service charge, biometrics where applicable, insurance, photos, and document costs. For most Egyptian applicants, the all-in figure lands above the headline fee once these are included β€” and higher still if you choose priority services or use an agent. Building the estimate from all the layers is the only way to avoid a surprise at the counter.

How to Avoid Overpaying

You can keep the cost down without cutting corners. Apply yourself through the official channel rather than a markup-charging agent where the process is straightforward. Skip optional premium services you don't need. Shop around for insurance that meets the requirement. Prepare your own documents and photos correctly the first time. And pay in a way that minimises conversion fees. Small decisions across these layers can save a surprising amount.

Is It Worth Paying for Priority Processing?

Visa centres promote priority add-ons β€” faster decisions, prime slots, courier returns. Whether they're worth it depends on your situation: if you're applying comfortably ahead of your travel date, the standard service is usually fine. Priority earns its cost only when you genuinely need speed. Treat these as optional tools, not requirements, and read exactly what each does before paying.

Do You Get a Refund If You're Refused?

The visa fee is generally a processing fee, not a deposit β€” it pays for the assessment, so it is not refunded if you're refused. Service charges are likewise non-refundable once the work is done. That's why getting the application right the first time matters financially: a refusal means paying the whole set of fees again to reapply. The cheapest application, in the end, is the one that succeeds on the first attempt.

Budgeting for a Family or Group

If you're applying as a family, remember that most fees are charged per person β€” the visa fee, the service charge, biometrics, photos, and insurance all multiply with each applicant. A trip that looks affordable for one can be a substantial outlay for several, so build your budget per head and then total it. Some routes cap certain charges or reduce fees for children, so check those concessions.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Budgeting only for the headline fee and forgetting the service and insurance costs.
  • Buying premium services you don't actually need.
  • Overpaying for insurance instead of matching the requirement.
  • Using an agent for a simple application that adds a large markup.
  • Ignoring exchange-rate and card fees when paying in EGP.
  • Redoing photos or documents because they didn't meet the spec the first time.

How VisitPlane Helps

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Use the VisitPlane Visa Wizard to confirm exactly what your route requires (so you don't pay for things you don't need), and the VisitPlane document checklist to get your file right the first time. VisitPlane verifies every route against official government and embassy sources.

When and How to Pay

Pay through the official channel at the right stage, and keep every receipt and reference number β€” you'll need them to track your application and, occasionally, to prove payment. Where you can choose a payment method, compare the card and conversion fees your bank applies, since these quietly add to the total when the fee is charged in a foreign currency. Avoid third parties who offer to "handle" payment for an extra cut unless they're an official partner. A little care at the payment step protects both your money and your Saudi Arabia application.

Apply Yourself or Use an Agent?

For a straightforward Saudi Arabia application, you can usually apply yourself through the official channel and avoid an agent's markup entirely. An agent can help organise a complex file or save time, but cannot manufacture genuine funds or ties β€” the things decisions actually turn on β€” and their fee can exceed the visa cost. Whoever prepares it, you are responsible for everything submitted, so never sign off on documents or claims you haven't checked. For most travellers, a careful do-it-yourself application is both cheaper and perfectly achievable.

The Bottom Line

The honest answer to "how much does a Saudi Arabia visa cost from Egypt?" is: more than the headline fee, but rarely as much as agents imply. Start from the official Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa (where eligible) fee of around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa, add the service, biometric, insurance, photo, and document layers, and budget in EGP with a small buffer for exchange rates. Apply yourself where you can, skip the extras you don't need, and you'll pay a fair price β€” and know exactly what each part is for.

Frequently Asked Questions

See the FAQ section below for quick answers on the headline fee, the hidden charges, paying in EGP, and how to avoid overpaying. The short version: the Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa (where eligible) fee is around SAR 535 including mandatory insurance for the one-year multiple-entry tourist e-visa, but the all-in cost from Egypt is higher once service charges, biometrics, insurance, photos, and documents are added β€” so budget for the full picture and confirm current fees before you pay.

Sources

  • Saudi Arabia β€” Official tourist e-visa: https://visa.visitsaudi.com/
  • Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs: https://www.mofa.gov.sa/en
  • Visit Saudi (official): https://www.visitsaudi.com/en

VisitPlane β€” visa requirements, decoded in seconds. Free, accurate, always updated. Fees and exchange rates change constantly; always confirm the current charge with Saudi authorities (MOFA / the official e-visa portal) before paying.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much is the visa fee?β–Ύ

The Saudi Arabia tourist e-visa fee is around SAR 535 including insurance for the tourist e-visa. The all-in cost from Egypt is higher once service charges, biometrics, insurance, and documents are added.

What hidden charges should I expect?β–Ύ

Service fees, biometrics where applicable, insurance, photos, document costs, and courier β€” plus agent fees if you use one.

Do I get a refund if refused?β–Ύ

Generally no β€” the visa fee is a processing fee and isn’t refunded on refusal.

How do I avoid overpaying?β–Ύ

Apply yourself through the official channel, skip optional premium services, and watch card/conversion fees.

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