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By Richard T. Herman, Esq. — Immigration Attorney, Herman Legal Group

A child fleeing gang violence or abuse now faces a brutal set of choices in Trump’s America:

  • Pay to apply for asylum. Pay again each year the case is pending. Pay to pursue Special Immigrant Juvenile Status.
  • Or take a one-time $2,500 government stipend to “voluntarily” give up their case and go back to danger.

This article follows the money behind three new policies that directly target children:

The financial burden of child refugee asylum fees has become an alarming issue for many families seeking safety.

  • A $100 asylum filing fee for Form I-589, plus a $100 Annual Asylum Fee (AAF) for every year a case is pending

  • A $250 filing fee for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) (Form I-360)

  • A $2,500 “resettlement stipend” for unaccompanied minors who agree to voluntary departure and abandon their protection claims

Together, these changes function as a paywall on child protection — forcing kids and their sponsors to navigate impossible financial and legal trade-offs.

We’ll walk through:

  • What changed under Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” (H.R. 1) and related rules

  • How the $100 asylum fee, $250 SIJS fee, and $2,500 stipend work in real life

  • Why child-advocacy groups call this a coercive “self-deportation” scheme

  • Concrete data you can plug into op-eds, explainers, and policy memos

  • How families, sponsors, and local advocates can respond — and where to get legal help

Along the way, we’ll link to official government notices, advocacy analyses, and news investigations, so this page can serve as a one-stop resource hub for reporters, researchers, and immigrant-youth organizations.

child refugee asylum fees

1. At a Glance — The New “Paywall” on Child Protection

Fast Facts Table: Kids, Fees, and Stipends

Policy / Payment Who It Targets Amount Core Source
Asylum filing fee Any child or adult filing Form I-589 $100 (non-waivable) H.R. 1 and implementation rules; see H.R. 1 bill info and USCIS fee schedule (Form G-1055)
Annual Asylum Fee (AAF) Every pending asylum case, including kids $100 per year, non-waivable (currently paused by court order) H.R. 1 statute; subsequent USCIS and EOIR implementation; ongoing litigation
SIJS fee Children applying for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (I-360) $250, previously $0 H.R. 1 and USCIS fee updates for Form I-360
Voluntary departure “resettlement stipend” Unaccompanied kids (age 14+) in Office of Refugee Resettlement custody who agree to voluntary departure $2,500 one-time payment after they leave Policy directives within DHS and HHS; reported by AP, Reuters, Washington Post, ABC News and others

Key framing for journalists and advocates:

  • Before 2025, kids could apply for asylum and SIJS without a filing fee.

  • After H.R. 1, they face front-end fees to seek protection, annual fees while they wait in backlogs, and a cash incentive if they agree to walk away.

You can think of this as a three-step squeeze:

  1. Charge children to ask for safety.

  2. Charge them again for every year the government delays.

  3. Offer them cash to give up and go home.

 

 

 

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2. How We Got Here: H.R. 1 and the “Kids’ Fee Regime”

Trump’s signature legislation, the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (H.R. 1), doesn’t just pour billions into ICE and border enforcement. It also rewrites how humanitarian protections are funded, shifting costs onto the very people seeking safety — including children.

You can read the bill text and official summaries on Congress.gov’s H.R. 1 page, and detailed fee provisions in the Federal Register’s USCIS immigration fees rule and related updates.

From a child’s perspective, three provisions matter most:

  1. Asylum Fees

    • Minimum $100 initial asylum filing fee (Form I-589)

    • Minimum $100 Annual Asylum Fee (AAF) for each year the application remains pending

  2. SIJS Fee

    • Minimum $250 filing fee for SIJS petitions on Form I-360

  3. Additional Humanitarian Fees

    • New charges on EADs for asylum and parole, and on other protections that children or their caregivers rely on

For a narrative overview of H.R. 1’s enforcement and cost-shifting logic, see Herman Legal Group’s explainer, Will Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” Turbocharge Immigration Enforcement?

Putting a Price Tag on Child Refugees: Asylum Fees, SIJS Charges, and $2,500 to “Self-Deport”

3. The $100 Asylum Filing Fee + $100 Annual Asylum Fee — Now Applied to Kids

3.1 What the law requires

Under H.R. 1 and subsequent rulemaking by USCIS and EOIR:

  • Initial fee — A non-waivable $100 fee is now required when filing Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal.

  • Annual fee — An additional $100 per year Annual Asylum Fee (AAF) is charged as long as the case is pending, regardless of age.

These charges flow from:

  • H.R. 1 fee provisions,

  • USCIS fee regulations published in the Federal Register, and

  • EOIR implementation guidance via DOJ and immigration courts.

In practice:

  • A 16-year-old filing asylum today might owe:

    • $100 at filing

    • $100 per year while the case is stuck in a 3–5+ year backlog

    • Separate fees for work authorization and some motions/appeals

Herman Legal Group’s deep dive, Asylum Fee USCIS Court: New Fee for USCIS and Immigration Court/BIA Causes Chaos and Confusion, maps out how this has played out across USCIS and immigration courts.

3.2 Court pause on the Annual Asylum Fee (but not the initial fee)

Due to litigation (including cases brought by asylum-seeker organizations), a federal court has temporarily stayed collection of the Annual Asylum Fee, leading USCIS to pause AAF billing notices nationwide — though the underlying statute remains on the books.

For a plain-English breakdown of the injunction and what’s paused versus what’s still active, see Annual Asylum Fee 2025: USCIS Court Order & Lawsuit Explained.

For children and families, this creates a confusing split:

  • $100 Initial Asylum Fee — still required, including for kids.

  • Annual Asylum Fee — paused for now by court order, but could resume if the injunction is lifted.

3.3 What this looks like for child refugees

From a child’s point of view:

  • Step 1: Pay to ask for safety.

    • A 17-year-old fleeing gang recruitment in Honduras must now come up with $100 just to file asylum — in many cases, more than a month’s income back home.

  • Step 2: Pay for the government’s delay.

    • If the child’s case drags on for three years, the law says that’s $300 in Annual Asylum Fees — even though the delay is not the child’s fault.

  • Step 3: Pay again to work legally.

    • Under H.R. 1, the initial asylum-based work permit can cost $550, with renewals at $275, according to USCIS’s fee schedule and related fee-rule fact sheets.

The policy message is clear: fighting for asylum is no longer “free” — it’s a pay-to-play system that hits the poorest children hardest.

4. The $250 SIJS Fee — Monetizing Protection for Abused and Abandoned Children

Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) is a humanitarian pathway for children who were abused, abandoned, or neglected by one or both parents and who cannot safely return to their home country.

Historically, SIJS filings were fee-exempt — a deliberate choice recognizing that these kids are among the most vulnerable in the entire immigration system.

H.R. 1 changed that.

4.1 From $0 to $250 — what changed

Under the new fee regime:

In other words, a child who has already gone through:

  • Family court

  • Guardianship proceedings

  • Extensive documentation of abuse

…must now pay to even request a SIJS determination from USCIS.

4.2 Why SIJS fees hit differently

For many SIJS-eligible children:

  • They are already separated from one or both parents, often working low-wage jobs or depending on sponsors just to survive.

  • Their cases frequently intersect with child-welfare systems, trafficking concerns, or juvenile courts.

  • A $250 fee can mean the difference between filing before aging out and losing eligibility forever.

Organizations like the National Immigrant Justice Center, Global Refuge, NILC, and ASISTA have warned that the SIJS fee effectively turns a child-protection remedy into a pay-walled privilege.

For a primer on how SIJS fits within green-card categories, you can see Herman Legal Group’s overview, Am I Eligible for a Green Card? (including the SIJS subsection).

5. The $2,500 “Go Home” Stipend — Paying Kids to Self-Deport

If asylum and SIJS fees are the “front door” of this paywall, the $2,500 stipend is the back door — where the government offers cash to children who agree to voluntary departure.

5.1 What we know about the program

According to a combination of internal memos and national reporting by outlets like the Associated Press, Reuters, the Washington Post, and ABC News:

  • DHS and HHS, working through the Office of Refugee Resettlement, have launched a pilot program offering a one-time “resettlement support stipend” of $2,500 to unaccompanied minors age 14+ in federal custody.

  • The stipend is offered only if the child agrees to voluntary departure, withdraws their asylum or other protection claims, and returns to their home country — with payment after departure and formal approval by an immigration judge.

  • Children reportedly receive as little as 24 hours to decide.

  • Early reports suggest the program targets teens in ORR shelters, starting with 17-year-olds, and excludes children from Mexico.

Advocacy groups like the Children Thrive Action Network and Church World Service have condemned the initiative as coercive, warning that it pressures traumatized children to sign away their rights under the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) and other protections.

For example:

5.2 Why $2,500 is not “free money” for kids

From a legal and ethical perspective:

  • Voluntary departure is a formal legal process under the Immigration and Nationality Act, with long-term consequences for re-entry and future relief.

  • Children in ORR custody are often traumatized, have limited education, and may not fully grasp:

    • The difference between deportation and voluntary departure

    • The impact on any future asylum, SIJS, or family-based petition

    • The risk that traffickers, gangs, or abusive relatives will be waiting on the other side

The TVPRA and related child-protection frameworks were designed specifically to prevent rushed repatriations of minors without robust “best interests of the child” analysis — not to create a cash-for-departure marketplace.

6. “Follow the Money”: How Much Does a Child’s Case Now Cost?

This is where the story becomes especially “linkable” for journalists and policy analysts: you can literally run the numbers on what it now costs a child to pursue safety.

6.1 Example: 16-year-old asylum seeker, no SIJS

Assume:

  • Files asylum at age 16

  • Case takes 4 years to resolve

  • Needs one work-permit cycle while pending

Approximate government fees under current rules:

  • $100 — Initial asylum filing fee (I-589)

  • $100/year x 4 years = $400 — Annual Asylum Fees if fully implemented

  • $550 — Initial asylum-based EAD (I-765), based on the post-H.R. 1 fee schedule

Just on fees, this teenager could face $1,050 — in a system where the government can still deny asylum, deport them, or offer $2,500 to go home instead.

6.2 Example: 17-year-old SIJS + asylum + stipend offer

Now imagine a child who:

  • Wins a state-court SIJS predicate order

  • Files I-360 (SIJS) and I-589 (asylum)

  • Is held in ORR custody and receives the $2,500 stipend offer

Their decision tree looks like this:

Path A — Fight for protection

  • Pay $250 SIJS fee

  • Pay $100 asylum filing fee

  • Risk Annual Asylum Fees if litigation is resolved against them

  • Wait years in a backlog — potentially with no guaranteed counsel

Path B — Take the $2,500

  • Withdraw asylum / SIJS claims

  • Ask an immigration judge for voluntary departure

  • Return to the same country conditions that made them flee

  • Carry long-term immigration consequences, including potential bars

The brutal math: the government is telling a traumatized child, “If you keep fighting, you may owe over $1,000 in fees. If you give up, we’ll pay you $2,500 now.”

7. Who Is Most Affected? Four Child Populations in the Crosshairs

7.1 Unaccompanied children in ORR custody

  • Teens age 14–17 in ORR shelters are the primary target of the stipend program.

  • Many already experienced kidnapping, trafficking, or gang violence during travel.

  • They often lack independent adult advocates who can neutralize the pressure of a cash offer.

7.2 Children with pending asylum cases

Kids in removal proceedings or affirmative asylum backlogs:

  • Now face $100 filing fees, possible Annual Asylum Fees, and longer delays due to Trump’s nationwide asylum suspension and new vetting rules.

  • May have sponsors who are themselves afraid of ICE raids, making it harder to gather documents and pay fees.

For the broader context, see Herman Legal Group’s Asylum on Hold: Guide to the Nationwide Suspension of Asylum Decisions & What That Means for Applicants.

7.3 SIJS-eligible youth in family or juvenile court

These children:

  • Already navigate state dependency or delinquency systems, guardianship fights, and proof of abuse / neglect.

  • Often have limited access to counsel, especially outside big cities.

  • Are now being asked to add $250 in federal fees on top of state-court costs and attorney fees.

7.4 Kids living with sponsors in “crackdown zones”

In cities facing aggressive enforcement — for example, after highly publicized crimes or political events — sponsors may fear that any contact with the system (including fee payments and court appearances) could trigger enforcement by ICE or CBP.

Herman Legal Group’s guide, Facing a Federal Immigration Crackdown in Your City? What Every Non-Citizen Must Know Right Now, explains how “crackdown geography” intersects with humanitarian cases.

8. Old System vs. New System — From a Child’s Point of View

This section is designed to be easily turned into a graphic or side-by-side chart.

Before H.R. 1 and the 2025–26 rule changes

From a child’s perspective:

  • Asylum & SIJS filings

    • No filing fee to ask for asylum

    • No filing fee for SIJS

  • Backlogs

    • Long waits were still common, but children didn’t get a yearly bill for the government’s delay

  • Return “offers”

    • Repatriation was framed as a last resort after best-interest analysis, with no cash inducement

After H.R. 1 + $2,500 stipend

From a child’s perspective:

  • Asylum & SIJS filings

    • Must pay just to ask for help

    • Poor kids may never file at all

  • Backlogs

    • Every year of delay can come with a new $100 charge

  • Return “offers”

    • Government now offers money to walk away, and it frames departure as a “benefit”

In one diagram, you could show:

Left column: “Fleeing for safety → Apply for asylum / SIJS → Wait for decision”

Right column: “Fleeing for safety → Pay fees → Receive yearly bills → Get $2,500 offer to give up and go home”

9. Why Advocates Call This Coercive and Possibly Illegal

Child-rights and immigration advocates raise several legal red flags:

  1. TVPRA and “best interests of the child”

    • The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act requires careful assessments before repatriating unaccompanied children, especially those fleeing persecution or trafficking.

    • A 24-hour, cash-driven “voluntary departure” decision is hard to square with that standard.

  2. Capacity and informed consent

    • Many teenagers in ORR custody have limited education and no independent counsel.

    • A $2,500 check can look life-changing, even if it means returning to gang death threats or abusive parents.

  3. Unequal bargaining power

    • The government controls housing, food, and legal information.

    • Children are stuck in a system that decides whether they can see their families or leave detention.

    • Adding a financial inducement amplifies this power imbalance.

  4. Discriminatory impact on poor and racialized communities

    • The policies overwhelmingly affect children from Central America, the Caribbean, and parts of Africa and Asia — communities already targeted by broader enforcement priorities.

  5. Due process in immigration courts

    • Many immigration courts are already under fire for due-process failures, politicized decision-making, and mass-deportation pressures.

    • Layering fees and cash-for-departure incentives onto that system only deepens concerns.

For a broader look at structural due-process problems, see Herman Legal Group’s Trump’s War on Immigration Courts 2025: How Due Process Is Being Dismantled from the Inside Out.

10. Real-World Harm: How These Policies Ripple Through Children’s Lives

10.1 School performance and mental health

Research has shown that intense immigration enforcement — including ICE raids and deportation fears — depresses school performance even for U.S.-born kids in affected communities.

Herman Legal Group analyzes this in New Data Show ICE Raids Are Dragging Down School Performance Nationwide — Even for U.S.-Born Kids.

Adding fees and self-deportation offers to that environment:

  • Increases family financial stress

  • Forces kids to work longer hours or skip school to help pay legal bills

  • Fuels anxiety, insomnia, and PTSD symptoms among youth already traumatized by migration

10.2 Community “chill”

When families hear that:

  • Kids owe $100/year just to keep asylum pending, and

  • The government is paying minors to leave

…they may avoid courts, legal service providers, and even schools, fearing exposure to ICE or CBP.

Herman Legal Group’s pieces on national crackdowns and post-crisis enforcement surges describe this chilling effect in detail, including Facing a Federal Immigration Crackdown in Your City? What Every Non-Citizen Must Know Right Now.

11. How This Fits the Bigger Pattern: Pay-to-Stay vs. Pay-to-Leave

The child-focused fees and stipend don’t exist in a vacuum. They’re part of a broader “pay-to-stay vs. pay-to-leave” architecture emerging across the immigration system:

Herman Legal Group has been tracking this pattern in multiple guides, including:

For children, the takeaway is stark: protection is increasingly reserved for those who can pay — or for those willing to risk everything by saying no to a cash-for-departure deal.

12. Practical Steps for Families, Sponsors, and Advocates

12.1 If you’re a parent, sponsor, or relative of a child in ORR custody

  • Get independent legal counsel immediately before any child signs a voluntary-departure form or stipend agreement.

  • Ask the lawyer to explain in simple language:

    • Whether the child has asylum, SIJS, or other relief options

    • What voluntary departure means for future visas or entries

    • Whether the child could safely relocate within their home country (often the answer is no)

12.2 If you’re a teacher, counselor, or community organizer

Herman Legal Group’s resource-heavy posts can help, including:

12.3 If you’re a journalist or policy analyst

  • Use the fee and stipend numbers to illustrate structural pressure points, not just isolated anecdotes.

  • Connect the dots between H.R. 1, USCIS fee schedules, EOIR practices, and the stipend program’s design.

  • Center children’s capacity, trauma, and rights, not just budget savings and “deterrence.”

13. Curated Resource Directory — Follow the Money, Follow the Law

Use this section as a one-stop link bank for further research and coverage.

13.1 Official government sources (law, rules, and fee schedules)

13.2 Advocacy and legal-analysis resources on H.R. 1 fees and children

13.3 Reporting and commentary on the $2,500 stipend program

13.4 Herman Legal Group articles for deeper context

14. If You’re Worried About a Child’s Case, Don’t Navigate This Alone

If a child in your family, school, shelter, or community is facing:

  • A decision about whether to file asylum or SIJS despite the new fees

  • A USCIS or EOIR bill for asylum-related charges

  • An offer of $2,500 to leave under the voluntary-departure stipend program

…they need independent legal advice — not pressure from a budget-driven system.

With over 30 years of experience, Herman Legal Group works with:

  • Unaccompanied minors in ORR custody

  • Youth in SIJS and asylum proceedings

  • Families and sponsors navigating Trump-era enforcement and fee regimes

You can schedule a confidential consultation with me, Richard T. Herman, through our Book Consultation page.

No child should have to choose between paying a government fee and protecting their life.

Written By Richard Herman
Founder
Richard Herman is a nationally recognizeis immigration attorney, Herman Legal Group began in Cleveland, Ohio, and has grown into a trusted law firm serving immigrants across the United States and beyond. With over 30 years of legal excellence, we built a firm rooted in compassion, cultural understanding, and unwavering dedication to your American dream.

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