Adjusted visa refusal rates 2006-2017
Calculation of the Adjusted Visa Refusal Rate for Tourist
and Business Travelers Under the Guidelines of the
Visa Waiver Program
1. What is the Visa Waiver Program?
The Visa Waiver Program enables nationals of certain countries to travel without a visa to the
U.S., when the intended travel is for "B" visa purposes (tourism or business) for stays of 90 days
or less, if the traveler meets certain requirements. For more information, see Visa Waiver
Program section. The Visa Waiver Program is administered by the Department of Homeland
Security.
2. What is a Visa Refusal?
Under U.S. immigration law, a visa must be denied if the applicant cannot establish his or her
eligibility, either because the application does not meet the requirements of an established visa
category, or because there are grounds for ineligibility based on other aspects of the visa case. A
visa refusal is the formal denial of a nonimmigrant visa application by a U.S. consular officer
acting pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act. (More about visa refusals may be found
in the Visa Denials section).
3. What is a Refusal Overcome?
Some visa refusals can be overcome by the presentation of additional information. "Overcomes"
are cases in which an initial decision to deny a visa or suspend processing in a visa case is
overcome by the new information or changed circumstances that establishes an applicant's
eligibility for the visa (and the visa is then issued).
4. What is a Waiver of Ineligibility?
Some visa refusals require a waiver of ineligibility which must be approved by the Department
of Homeland Security before a visa may be issued.
5. How is the Visa Waiver Program Adjusted Visa Refusal Rate Calculated?
The Visa Waiver Program nonimmigrant visitor visa refusal rate is based on the worldwide
number of applicants for visitor (B) visas who are nationals of that country. B visas are issued for
short term business or pleasure travel to the United States. For information about qualifying for a
B visa for business or tourism, please see the Visitor Visa page.
The Department identifies multiple applications from a unique applicant and omits all but the last
action from the calculation. Thus, an applicant is counted only once each year and is assigned the
status in which he or she ended the year. For example, if an applicant who was refused in April
re-applies and is issued in July, he or she will count only as an issuance. Similarly, if an
applicant who was refused in April re-applies and is refused again in July, he or she will be
counted as only one refusal. Rarely, an applicant may end the year in a third category,
“overcome.
” This happens when an officer has the information he needs to overcome a refusal
but has not processed the case to completion.
The adjusted refusal rate equals: [Refusals minus Overcomes] divided by [Issuances plus
Refusals minus Overcomes].
Example:
Determination of B Visa Adjusted Refusal Rate for Country X:
Country X, worldwide, had 305,024 B visa applicants end the fiscal year in the “issuance” status;
20,548 end in “refused” status; and 88 end in “overcome” status.
Refusals minus Overcomes = 20,548 - 88 = 20,460
Issuances plus Refusals minus Overcomes = 305,024 + 20,548 - 88 = 325,484
20,460 divided by 325,484 = 6.3 percent (Adjusted Refusal Rate)
The number of visa applicants who receive waivers of ineligibility is not considered when
calculating Visa Waiver Program adjusted refusal rates.
This is because a visa applicant
requiring a waiver of ineligibility must apply for that waiver and receive approval before
obtaining a visa with the waiver annotated. Therefore, applicants requiring such a determination
would not be eligible to participate in the Visa Waiver Program, because the decision regarding
the application for waiver of ineligibility could not be made at a port of entry.
As a result of the change in methodology, some countries saw an increase in their refusal rates.
The Department of State anticipates such increases will diminish in FY 2013 and be eliminated
by FY 2014.
6. Other Considerations Regarding the Visa Waiver Program Adjusted Refusal Rate.
A country's visa refusal rate is just one of the criteria considered when determining a country's
eligibility for Visa Waiver Program status.
For more information, see "How a Country Qualifies
for the Visa Waiver Program," in the Visa Waiver Program section. It is important to note that
the Visa Waiver Program is administered by the Department of Homeland Security.
Adjusted visa refusal rates for nationals of Visa Waiver Program countries reflect only visa
applications submitted at U.S. embassies and consulates abroad.
They do not take into account
persons who, under the Visa Waiver Program, travel to the U.S. without visas. Visa Waiver
Program country refusal rates therefore tend to be higher than they would be if the Visa Waiver
Program travelers were included in the calculation, since such travelers would in all likelihood
have been issued visas had they applied.
Current visa waiver program refusal rate data
- . FY2017 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2016 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2015 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2014 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2013 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2012 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2011 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2010 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2009 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2008 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2007 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
- FY2006 NIV B Adjusted Refusals by Nationality
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