Immigration Platform
How Much Does an Immigration or Visa Platform Cost to Build?
Cost breakdown for AI visa tools, document service sites, and immigration information platforms — what's included and what moves the price.
Immigration platforms are high-stakes products where accuracy matters more than almost any other niche. The content has to be current, the search has to understand complex bureaucratic queries, and the user experience has to work for people who are stressed and reading in their second language. Here is what it costs to build one that actually works.
Typical price range
What's included
Standard build scope
Structured visa knowledge base
Database schema for visa types, requirements, fees, processing times, and required documents — structured by nationality × visa type × purpose. Admin update workflow with version history and 'last verified' timestamps visible to users.
AI-powered Q&A
RAG (retrieval-augmented generation) chat interface trained on the knowledge base. Answers complex visa questions instantly with source citations. Positioned clearly as an information tool, not legal advice.
Programmatic SEO
Visa type pages, nationality × visa combination pages, and procedure guides — each as a real indexed URL. Every visa type and common question becomes a crawlable page that ranks for long-tail immigration queries.
Multilingual support
Server-side i18n with locale-aware URLs and per-language content fields. Standard builds support 2–3 languages. Immigration platforms typically need at least the primary language of the target immigrant population.
Document service workflow
For platforms offering apostille, notarisation, or translation services: guided document type selection, requirement checklist, service request form, and order management dashboard. Stripe integration for service payments.
Admin content management
Non-technical interface for updating visa rules, fees, and document requirements. Designed so a team member can keep content current as regulations change — without developer involvement.
What moves the price
Cost variables
Number of visa types covered
Medium impactCoverage of 10–20 visa types is standard scope. Comprehensive coverage across 50+ visa types significantly increases the content structuring and knowledge base work, adding $1,500–$3,000 to the project.
Number of nationalities
Medium impactA platform covering requirements for 5 nationalities is very different from one covering 50. Each additional nationality × visa type combination adds to the knowledge base and the pSEO page count — which is valuable for SEO but adds content setup time.
Document service integration
Medium impactAdding a service layer (apostille, certified translation, notarisation) with guided workflows, payment, and order management adds $2,000–$4,000 depending on the number of service types and document categories.
Appointment booking with agents
High impactIf the platform connects users with licensed immigration lawyers or agents for paid consultations, a booking and payment system is required — similar scope to an on-demand platform. Adds $4,000–$7,000.
Real-time regulatory monitoring
High impactAutomated monitoring of official immigration sources (government RSS feeds, official announcements) to flag when rules may have changed is a custom integration — adds $2,000–$4,000 and requires ongoing maintenance.
Multi-country coverage
High impactA platform covering visa requirements for one destination country is standard scope. Adding a second country nearly doubles the knowledge base scope. Each additional destination country is treated as a significant scope addition.
Scope clarity
What's not included
- Legal review — the platform provides information, not legal advice; a licensed immigration lawyer should review content claims
- Ongoing hosting (typically $25–$60/month)
- Content population — sourcing, verifying, and entering visa requirements for each nationality × visa type combination
- Translation of content into target languages (machine translation available; human review recommended for legal accuracy)
- Government API access — most immigration data is not available via API and must be manually maintained
FAQ
Common questions about cost
- Is there legal liability for providing immigration information online?
- Providing immigration information (how the process works, what documents are typically required, what fees apply) is generally permissible as long as it is clearly positioned as information rather than legal advice. Every immigration platform I build includes clear disclaimers, 'last verified' timestamps, and links to official government sources. For content that touches on specific legal outcomes (will I be approved? can I appeal?), the platform should direct users to a licensed practitioner rather than attempting to answer.
- How do you keep visa requirements up to date?
- The knowledge base is stored as structured, versioned content in the database — not hardcoded. The admin panel makes it fast for a non-technical team member to update specific rules, fee schedules, or document requirements. The AI layer queries the database, not a static document, so updates take effect immediately without a code deployment. I also build a 'last verified' timestamp system so users can see how recent each piece of information is.
- What is a RAG-powered visa tool and why is it better than a standard FAQ page?
- RAG (retrieval-augmented generation) means the AI retrieves relevant information from your structured knowledge base and uses it to answer the user's specific question — rather than generating an answer from general training data. The practical difference: a user can ask 'I have a D-10 visa, can I switch to an E-7 without leaving Korea?' and get a specific answer sourced from your knowledge base, rather than a generic paragraph about Korean visas. It's the difference between a search bar and an immigration advisor.
- How long does an immigration platform take to build?
- An AI-powered visa information platform with a structured knowledge base, RAG chat, multilingual support, and pSEO pages typically takes 6–8 weeks. Adding a document service layer (apostille, translation) extends the timeline by 2–3 weeks. Adding agent booking and payment adds another 2–4 weeks.
- Do you offer payment plans?
- Yes — 40% at kickoff, 30% at staging delivery, 30% at launch.
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