Confusion and Panic Among Asylum Seekers Over Trump Administration’s $100 Fee
Asylum seekers throughout New York are racing to comprehend a new $100 yearly fee imposed by the Trump administration, amidst a backdrop of significant confusion, misinformation, and technical issues. This fee, which is part of President Trump’s "One Big Beautiful Bill Act", is applicable to all pending asylum applications submitted since October 1, 2024, and is reportedly due by September 30, 2025.
Asylum Seekers in Panic Over Trump’s Unclear $100 Fee
The Trump administration’s lack of clarity about when and how to pay new fees sparked chaos and misinformation among immigrants with pending asylum applications.
By Liv Veazey , New York Focus“Everyone is saying, ‘Only three days left,’ and I have no idea what to do,” said one aslyum seeker. “In the end, you don’t know what’s true or not.” / Illustration: Akash Mehta
Over the weekend, asylum seekers in New York were flooded with messages — some from their lawyers — telling them to pay a $100 fee to the Trump administration by Tuesday or risk deportation.
Moussa, an asylum seeker from Mali who lives in Manhattan, received a WhatsApp message from his lawyer’s office on Saturday instructing him to pay the fee by Tuesday. “Failure to pay and meet this deadline can and will result in Dismissal of your claim of relief and possible order of removal,” the message said.
Moussa didn’t have $100 on hand — “I just paid my rent, so I don’t have any money right now,” he said — so he found work on Sunday at a small demolition site to try to collect it. Still, he wasn’t sure whether he would be able to pull the funds together in time. (New York Focus has changed some names in this article to protect people with active court proceedings.)
Some lawyers have advised people with pending asylum applications not to pay the fee until more information becomes available.
“If it’s true now and I don’t pay, that’s a problem. But if it’s fake, I’m just throwing this money away,” Moussa said in French, speaking on the phone from the demolition site. “I’m scared.”
President Donald Trump’s sweeping July budget package, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, levied new fees on asylum seekers across the country. It mandated that federal immigration agencies collect a one-time $100 fee for new asylum applications and an annual $100 fee for pending applications, including applications submitted since October 1, 2024 that remain pending as of September 30, 2025.
But it’s unclear when and how applicants should pay that annual fee, leaving many panicking amid a surge of rumors and misinformation.
Deborah Lee, lead attorney at the Legal Aid Society’s Immigration Law Unit, said the lack of clarity has sparked confusion among immigration attorneys and thousands of asylum seekers.
The payment portal “currently only seems to allow for paying the initial asylum application fee” and doesn’t account for situations such as applicants who are appealing asylum decisions, Lee wrote in an email.
Fallou, a Senegalese asylum seeker who lives in Manhattan, received a WhatsApp message on Saturday, forwarded by a friend, titled “URGENT.”
“If you don’t pay before the 30th, you risk losing your case,” the message said in French.
Fallou attempted to pay the fee online, but the payment portal crashed when he tried to enter his information, he said. On the advice of his lawyer, he sent the money to his friend over Zelle, and the friend paid for him under the “Initial Fee” option — even though Fallou was not submitting a new application.
“Everyone is saying, ‘Only three days left,’ and I have no idea what to do,” Fallou said. “People say that the site isn’t even finished. We hear a lot of things. In the end, you don’t know what’s true or not.”
Some lawyers have advised people with pending asylum applications not to pay the fee until more information becomes available.
Lee, the Legal Aid attorney, said she’d heard reports of notaries “using this confusion to spread widespread fear amongst noncitizens and charge them exorbitant amounts to purportedly help them pay these fees.”
After spending nearly two years in New York, recent arrivals are accustomed to scams from people posing as immigration lawyers and potential employers, and Fallou had considered the possibility that the message he received was one of them.
“I thought, this is too vague,” said Fallou. “But then I thought that maybe the president is doing this on purpose to dismiss a lot of cases.”
Modou, a Senegalese asylum seeker living in Brooklyn, received a similar message. He said he couldn’t tell if it was a scam or not — but that he plans to pay the fee, because he can’t afford to risk it. He has a hearing in October and is worried that his judge will dismiss his case if he’s late on the payment, he said.
The threat of case dismissal is particularly acute for asylum seekers in New York, where federal immigration enforcement agencies have focused their efforts to arrest people leaving mandatory court hearings.
Online groups of recent arrivals are currently flooded with questions about the $100 fees. Many Senegalese immigrants, for instance, get their information about shifting immigration policies from Senegalese TikTok influencers; those accounts, and others from West Africa, have posted videos explaining to followers how to pay the $100 fee.
New York Focus contacted the White House, the Department of Homeland Security, US Citizenship and Immigration Services, and the Department of Justice. Only one agency responded, and none provided information on what asylum seekers with pending applications should do.
This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.