Relocation Budget · Updated June 2026
Document Translation Fees for Relocation
Document Translation Fees for Relocation: the government fee is rarely the cost. The documentation orbit – apostilles ($20–$75/document, FBI checks $18 plus $50 channelers), certified translations ($30–$60/page across 5–10 documents), medical certificates ($150–$400 where required), and compliant insurance – is where relocation paperwork budgets actually go.
Plan $800–$2,500 per adult for a typical European application handled solo, or $2,500–$5,000 with full legal service. Every document needs the right chain: issue → notarise/apostille → translate (sworn translator) → submit within validity windows (FBI checks expire in 3–6 months for most consulates – sequence them last).
Relocation budget calculator · 2026
Total budget range
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Key insights
Key insights
- Government fees: €75–€300; the document orbit: $800–$2,500.
- Apostille chain: issue → apostille → sworn translation → submit.
- Compliant insurance: $600–$2,400/year, often prepaid 12 months.
- Lawyers (€1,000–€3,500) buy calendar access more than law.
- Budget renewals: most permits run 12 months initially.
| Cost component | Range |
|---|---|
| Government application fee | €75–€300 |
| Certified document translations (5–10 docs) | $150–$600 |
| Apostilles (FBI check, birth/marriage certs) | $60–$225 |
| FBI background check | $18–$50 (+channeler $50) |
| Medical exam / certificate (where required) | $150–$400 |
| Compliant health insurance (first year) | $600–$2,400 |
| Immigration lawyer (optional) | $1,500–$3,500 |
The document chain, sequenced correctly
Order matters: (1) gather source documents (birth/marriage certs, diplomas, FBI check last – it expires fastest), (2) apostille each in its issuing state/agency ($20–$75 each; FBI apostille via the US State Department $20 + processing), (3) sworn/certified translation in the destination language ($30–$60/page – and consulates reject non-sworn translators), (4) submit within each document's validity window (90–180 days typically).
The two-pass failure mode: applicants who apostille before checking the consulate's translator list, or whose FBI check ages out during translation, pay the whole chain twice. Build a 6-week buffer and confirm requirements against the specific consulate – they vary by city, not just country.
Where lawyers earn their fee (and where they don't)
Worth paying for: appointment access in backlogged systems (Portugal AIMA, Berlin Ausländerbehörde), regime elections with hard deadlines (Modelo 149), and any file with complications (prior overstays, non-standard income). Not worth paying for: straightforward single-applicant files in e-government systems (Estonia, Czechia) where the portal is the process.
Insurance is the recurring line everyone forgets to price into year one: visa-compliant coverage runs $600–$2,400/year per adult before public-system enrollment, and several consulates demand 12 months prepaid at application.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
What does this actually cost all-in?
Government fees of €75–€300 plus a documentation budget of $800–$2,500 per adult (apostilles, sworn translations, background checks, medicals, first-year insurance). Full legal handling adds €1,000–€3,500.
How long does the process take?
Document gathering: 4–8 weeks (FBI check + apostille is the long pole). Consulate processing: 2 weeks–4 months by country. In-country permit cards: weeks to months more. Start the chain 4–6 months before your intended move.
Do I need a lawyer?
For clean single-applicant files in e-government systems: no. For backlogged appointment systems (Portugal, Berlin), deadline-bound tax elections (Spain's Modelo 149), or complicated files: the €1,000–€3,500 buys real value – mostly calendar access and sequencing.
What gets applications rejected?
Income evidence that doesn't match the stated threshold format (consulates want specific document types), expired background checks, non-sworn translations, and insurance that doesn't meet the coverage floor. All four are sequencing problems, not eligibility problems.
Are these visa costs tax-deductible?
For employer-mandated relocations, fees are often reimbursable (and gross-up rules apply – see the relocation package pages). Self-funded moves: generally not deductible for US filers post-2017, with narrow self-employment exceptions.
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