Why Do Travelers to the U.S. Have To Wait an Average of 247 Days for Their Visa Interviews?
The State Department's network of consulates are keeping tourists and business travelers in limbo.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government's network of consulates around the world shut their doors. They were extraordinarily slow to reopen, with 60 percent of consulates still fully or partially closed as of last October.
The scheduling of interviews for nonimmigrant visas—used by business travelers, tourists, and foreigners traveling to the U.S. for other short-term reasons—ground to a halt. Now that consulates are reopening, they're dealing with massive backlogs and forcing foreigners to endure egregious wait times before they can sit for visa interviews.
Tourists and business travelers are now waiting an average of 247 days for their visa interviews, up from the pre-pandemic wait of 17 days. That's according to data compiled by Cato Institute immigration researcher David J. Bier, who notes that the "astounding 8-month wait" applies to foreigners who want "to visit the United States for a period of at most just 90 days and usually much less than that." According to Bier, "52 percent of consulates were scheduling tourist and business traveler interviews 6 months or more out," while 27 percent were scheduling a year out or longer.
These delays have led to inefficiencies in issuing visas. Though the rate varies by consulate, nonimmigrant visa issuance has dropped significantly at many sites compared to pre-pandemic levels. The issuance rate fell by roughly 50 percent between 2018 and 2022 in Kuala Lumpur, Panama City, Bucharest, Ho Chi Minh City, and many other cities.
Currently, the State Department's Visa Waiver Program "enables most citizens or nationals of participating countries" to come to the U.S. for tourism or business stays of up to 90 days, no visa necessary. But the program applies to just 40 countries, leaving countless would-be travelers in need of visas.
South Africans who want to visit the U.S. are traveling to Namibia, Botswana, and even more distant countries in the hopes of applying for visas at consulates with shorter wait times, according to the Daily Maverick. Hundreds of athletes and officials attending the 2022 track and field world championships in Oregon this month ran into visa snafus and processing delays. Two athletes applied for visas with the U.S. Embassy in Paris on June 8 but were scheduled for interviews on November 9, 2023—16 months after the championships.
New data from the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) and ForwardKeys show that while international travel to the U.S. is recovering, it's lagging behind other major destinations and likely won't reach pre-pandemic levels until 2025. "The spike in inbound bookings validates the U.S. government's decision to ease travel restrictions by scrapping testing for visitors and returning U.S. citizens—something other economies did long ago," said WTTC President and CEO Julia Simpson. Still, inbound bookings might not translate into much if international travelers aren't able to secure the necessary visas.
Government barriers are keeping travelers out of the country and preventing their money from reaching the American economy. The uncertainty brought by long wait times for visa interviews will simply drive tourists and business travelers elsewhere. Some COVID-era restrictions on inbound international travel may have been scrapped, but the government is still keeping travel out of reach for many.
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Immigration courts are kind of filled with that whole illegal immigrant thing.
Immigration courts generally have nothing to do with issuing visas.
Two things at work here: government workers go at their own pace - if you don't like it, take your business elsewhere - and the US is a place where people get in and don't leave. It isn't so hard to get into Romania for instance.
Are we pretending money isn't fungible again? That resources haven't been moved to other priorities?
I really do think this is an aspect of immigration that can and should be handled. Regardless of any question about who and how many people are let into the country, there's no real reason for the process itself to be so shit. That's just classic government bullshit.
Here's a flow chart of the process for residency visas. For some of those paths - eg unmarried Mexican son/daughter of a US citizen - the waiting time is 20 years.
Broken clusterfuck and no one cares.
"Why Do Travelers to the U.S. Have To Wait an Average of 247 Days for Their Visa Interviews?"
Because it's a fed government process.
I blame you, Fiona.
Reason too.
You cancer clumps are awful.
Why Do Travelers to the U.S. Have To Wait an Average of 247 Days for Their Visa Interviews?
Does the spearmint lose it's flavor on the bedpost overnight?
Why bother with visas? All the have to do is walk across the southern border and they can stay as long as they like.
Authoritarians have to authoritate? It's in their nature to slug off work and suck off the teat of the state while not actually doing their job. From first hand experience, there is a "we don't need this information until we get bored and need to call you in the middle of the night and then we absolutely need this information that we specifically said we didn't need previously but we're going to fuck with you because we can, so there's that - M'kay? Tough shit" procedure that they force you through, not that they actually care about the money or logic. It's about control and getting you do obey their wishes at 2 AM and nothing else.
Well gee Fiona, instead of feckless moaning about something that doesn't concern you, why don't you go to work for the State Department? I'm sure you'd have that backlog cleared up in a jiffy, at least if all you had to do was blog about it.
Government employees using Covid as an excuse not to do their jobs? Shocking!
Does Reason and Fiona think that average citizens give a flying crap about this issue when it costs 90 dollars for a tank of gas? 20 damned gallons. The rest of the world can suck it, we have our internal problems much more pressing than this. How elitist and out of touch is this bimbo they are paying to push out this garbage?
Read the damned room Fiona.
Gas prices have nothing to do with Department of State abdicating its duty. Average citizen does not care if International Space Station has enough food either but that does not mean we stop sending food to international space station.
> How elitist and out of touch is this bimbo they are paying to push out this garbage?
Americans are losing their jobs and economic opportunities as a result of this inaction by department of state. When you don't have a job any price is a too damn high price for gas.
Holy shit! I'm a US citizen and went to China. I got my visa in Hong Kong in one day, but it cost extra.
The low IQ comments corner of Reason never fails to disappoint. Looks like most have not even bothered to read the article.
Majority (something like 20:1) of the visas aren't related to "immigration". They are mostly catering to the business needs of American businesses such as tourist visas, artists (actors, singer etc.), sports people, student visas (consumers of edu institutes), lawyers, executives, training and so on. Close to 20% of visas are simply renewal of existing visas granted.
Delays does not just hurt the visa applicants but it disproportionately hurts American businesses and their employees. Canada with 1/10th of US population is now catering more foreign students than USA. Number of tech conferences moved to Europe/China/Singapore purely because of travel delays caused by USA visa system. Auto companies had to setup secondary factories in Mexico and else where to train their foreign staff.
TSMC has been requesting US government to simplify the process of visas so it could bring its key engineers from Taiwan to USA for a short duration so they can train American staff to setup new factories in Arizona. No luck.
Congress is passing $42B CHIPS act which is meant to subsidize the chip manufacturing in USA. Chances are this money will end up going to India as American companies are struggling to get decent manpower in USA.