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Asylum seekers may be deported for unpaid fees
Los Angeles Times
|October 25, 2025
Confusion surrounds the rollout of the new costs, part of Trump's recent budget bill.
MIGRANTS HOPING for U.S. asylum learn how to fill out claim forms in a workshop in Mexico in 2019.
(VERONICA G. CARDENAS For The Times)
Late last month, an immigrant seeking asylum in the U.S. came across social media posts urging her to pay a new fee imposed by the Trump administration before Oct. 1, or else risk her case being dismissed.
Paula, a 40-year-old Los Angeles-area immigrant from Mexico, whose full name The Times is withholding because she fears retribution, applied for asylum in 2021 and her case is now on appeal.
But when Paula tried to pay the $100 annual fee, she couldn't find an option on the immigration court's website that accepted fees for pending asylum cases. Afraid of deportation - and with just five hours before the payment deadline - she selected the closest approximation she could find, $110 for an appeal filed before July 7.
She knew it was likely incorrect. Still, she felt it was better to pay for something, rather than nothing at all, as a show of good faith. Unable to come up with the money on such short notice, Paula, who works in a warehouse repairing purses, paid the fee with a credit card.
"I hope that money isn't wasted," she said.
That remains unclear because of confusion and misinformation surrounding the rollout of a host of new fees or fee increases for a variety of immigration services. The fees are part of the sweeping budget bill President Trump signed into law in July.
Paula was one of thousands of asylum seekers across the country who panicked after seeing messages on social media — from immigration attorneys, as well as the government — urging them to pay the new fee before the start of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1.
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