Uzbekistan Visa Fees for Indians, Explained: Official Costs vs. Services
Updated 11 July 2026 · 4 min read · By the VisaForUzbekistan team
Search for Uzbekistan visa prices and you will find numbers ranging from twenty dollars to several thousand rupees, often on pages that never explain the difference. Here is the complete, honest cost breakdown.
The official government fee
The Government of Uzbekistan charges US$20 for a single-entry tourist e-visa with a stay of up to 30 days. Double-entry and multiple-entry versions cost more, scaling with the number of entries. Two properties of this fee matter more than its size: it is non-refundable once submitted — a refused application does not get its money back — and it must be paid by card, online, in a foreign-currency transaction.
The hidden cost: the payment step
That foreign-currency card payment is where a surprising number of Indian applications die. Reserve Bank rules mean most Indian cards have international online transactions switched off by default, so the US$20 charge simply declines. The fix is enabling international usage in your banking app — easy if you know that is the problem, maddening if you do not. Add the currency mark-up your bank applies, and the “US$20 visa” lands closer to ₹1,800 on your statement.
Short on time?
We verify, submit and track your Uzbekistan e-visa from a fixed ₹4,399 all-in — government fee included. Start your application or message us on WhatsApp.
What visa services charge, and what you get
Assistance services for the Uzbekistan e-visa generally price between roughly ₹3,500 and ₹8,000 all-inclusive. Ours is ₹4,399 per traveller for a single-entry visa (₹5,699 double entry, ₹6,999 multiple entry), and it includes the government fee. The service part pays for things the portal cannot do: your passport details extracted and entered exactly as the machine-readable zone spells them, your photo verified against the official specification before submission, the government fee paid by us so your card never matters, and a human on WhatsApp who answers until the PDF is delivered. If a correctly-submitted application is refused, our service fee comes back to you — the government fee, by the government’s own rule, does not.
Is the service right for you?
If your departure is close, your card is temperamental, you are applying for a family, or you simply want someone accountable for getting it right the first time, that is exactly the job we built this service to do — one fixed all-in price, government fee included, and a human on WhatsApp until the visa PDF is in your hand.
Frequently asked questions
What is the official government fee for the Uzbekistan e-visa?
US$20 for a single-entry tourist e-visa allowing up to 30 days. Double- and multiple-entry visas cost more. The fee is set by the Government of Uzbekistan and is non-refundable once an application is submitted, whatever the outcome.
Why did my card payment fail on the official portal?
Most Indian debit and credit cards ship with international online transactions disabled. The US$20 fee processes as an international payment, so it declines until you enable international usage in your banking app — or use a service that pays the fee for you.
What does the service fee actually pay for?
Verification of your details and photo against the official requirements before submission, error-proof preparation, the government fee paid on your behalf so your card never declines, and WhatsApp support until your visa PDF arrives. If a correctly-submitted application is refused, the service fee is refunded.