Current armed forces IET membership and professional registration fees by category including the qualified and registered member fee and current Engineering Council fees.
| Fellow (FIET) | £150 |
| Member with designatory letters (MIET) | £129 |
| Member with designatory letters (TMIET) | £80 |
| Apprentices and students | £20 |
| Apprentices and students (for duration of course) | £50 |
See also service leaver package for up to date information on membership and professional registration fees
Fees must be submitted with the application form and are non-refundable
| Chartered Engineer (CEng) | £176 |
| Incorporated Engineer (IEng) | £176 |
| Engineering Technician (EngTech) | £0 (fee waived for armed forces personnel) |
| ICT Technician (ICTTech) | £0 (fee waived for armed forces personnel) |
If you are professionally registered with the Engineering Council, you are required to pay the IET qualified and registered member fee.
This rate includes the standard IET membership fee.
| IET registered Fellows: Chartered Engineers, Incorporated Engineers | £180 |
| IET registered Fellows: Engineering Technicians, ICT Technicians | £163 |
| IET registered members: Chartered Engineers, Incorporated Engineers | £159 |
| IET registered members: Engineering Technicians or ICT Technicians | £80 (special armed forces rate) |
If you are professionally registered with the Engineering Council, you are required to pay the IET qualified and registered member fee plus the Engineering Council registration fee below.
| Chartered Engineer (CEng) | £32.50 |
| Incorporated Engineer (IEng) | £27.50 |
| Engineering Technician (EngTech) | £15.80 |
| ICT Technician (ICTTech) | £15.80 |
All IET membership fees and Engineering Council fees are effective from 1 January to 31 December 2012.
Membership of the IET runs for 12 consecutive months from date of payment (e.g. an individual joining the IET in March 2012 would receive a renewal notice in April 2013).
Members who are employed, pay UK income tax and pay for their own membership subscription may claim tax relief on subscriptions to periodicals and their membership fees as expenses of their profession.