Visa Fact Sheet
Our Visa Fact Sheet offers basic visa facts. This area is designed to give you a quick overview of our website focus.
Visa refers to "A permit for a person to apply to enter the United States. A person applies for a visa in the consular section of an American embassy or consulate abroad. Most citizens of foreign countries need visas to enter the United States. Under U.S. law the Department of State has responsibility for issuing visas, and most visas are issued at one of the Department of State embassies and consulates abroad. A consular officer decides whether you are qualified for a visa. A visa doesnÂ’t authorize entry to the U.S., however. A visa simply indicates that your application has been reviewed by a U.S. consular officer at an American embassy or consulate, and that the officer determined youÂ’re eligible to travel to the port-of-entry for a specific purpose. At the port-of-entry and admission to the U.S., an immigration officer decides whether to allow you to enter. The immigration officer tells you how long you can stay for any particular visit, and records this on the Arrival/Departure Record, I-94 (white card), as a date or D/S, (duration of status). Only the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. immigration officer has the authority to permit you to enter the United States."
This fact sheet was last updated Sat Jan 21 8:56:32 PST 2006.
Visa is considered to be a "child subject" of Travel.
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