New Amateur Radio License Applications Fee To Become Effective April 19, 2022
A Public Notice released by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on March 23, 2022, in MD Docket No. 20-270,  announced that new application fees for Wireless Telecommunications  Bureau applications will become effective on April 19, 2022. The new  fees, mandated by Congress, apply to applications for Amateur Radio  licenses including those associated with filing Form 605, the Amateur  Operator/Primary Station Licensee Application.
Effective  April 19, 2022, a $35 fee will apply to applications for a new Amateur  Radio license, modification (upgrade and sequential call sign change),  renewal, and vanity call signs.
Anticipating the implementation of the fee in 2022, the ARRL Board of Directors, at its July 2021 meeting, approved the "ARRL Youth Licensing Grant Program."  Under the program, ARRL will cover a one-time $35 application fee for  license candidates younger than 18 years old for tests administered  under the auspices of the ARRL Volunteer Examiner Coordinator (ARRL  VEC). Qualified candidates also would pay a reduced exam session fee of  $5 to the ARRL VEC. ARRL is finalizing details for administering the  program.
ARRL had filed comments in opposition to imposing a  fee on Amateur Radio license applications. The FCC initially proposed a  higher, $50 fee. In a Report and Order (R&O), released on December  29, 2020, the amount was reduced -- the FCC agreeing with ARRL and other  commenters that its proposed $50 fee for certain amateur radio  applications was "too high to account for the minimal staff involvement  in these applications."
ARRL Volunteer Examiner  Coordinator (ARRL VEC) Manager Maria Somma, AB1FM, explained that all  fees are per application. "There will be no fee for administrative  updates, such as a change of mailing or email address. The fees will be  the responsibility of the applicant regardless of filing method and must  be paid within 10 calendar days of FCC's receipt of the application.  For applications filed by a VEC, the period does not begin until the  application is received by the Commission, a ULS file number assigned,  and an email sent by the FCC directly to the applicant."
VECs  and Volunteer Examiner (VE) teams will not collect the $35 fee at  license exam sessions. New and upgrade candidates at an exam session  will continue to pay the $15 exam session fee to the ARRL VE team as  usual, and pay the new, $35 application fee directly to the FCC by using  the CORES FRN Registration system (CORES - Login).
When  the FCC receives the examination information from the VEC, it will  email a link with payment instructions to each successful candidate who  then will have 10 calendar days from the date of the email to pay. After  the fee is paid and the FCC has processed an application, examinees  will receive a second email from the FCC with a link to their official  license or explanation of other action. The link will be good for 30  days.
Somma also explained that applications that  are processed and dismissed will not be entitled to a refund. This  includes vanity call sign requests where the applicant does not receive  the requested call sign. "The FCC staff has suggested that applicants  for vanity call signs should first ensure the call signs requested are  available and eligible for their operator class and area, and then  request as many call signs as the form allows to maximize their chances  of receiving a call sign."
Further information and instructions about the FCC Application Fee are available from the ARRL VEC at www.arrl.org/fcc-application-fee. Details for the ARRL Youth Licensing Grant Program will be similarly posted there, when available.
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