US May Ask B1/B2 Visa Holders to Pay Bond

MySandesh
3 Min Read

Travelling to the United States on a tourist or business visa is becoming more expensive—and stricter—for citizens of several countries.

Under a new rule, many travellers will now have to pay a large refundable deposit before entering the US.

This move is part of a tighter immigration policy aimed at reducing visa misuse.

Here’s a simple breakdown of what’s happening.

What Is the New Visa Bond Rule?

The US government has introduced a Visa Bond Pilot Program for people applying for B1/B2 visas (tourist and business visas).

Under this rule:

Applicants from selected countries must pay a bond of $5,000, $10,000, or $15,000

The exact amount is decided during the visa process

The money is refundable after you leave the US on time

This program applies only to short-term visitor visas and not to work or student visas.

More Countries Added to the List

Earlier, this rule applied to 38 countries.

Now, from April 2, 2026, 12 more countries have been added, taking the total close to 50.

The newly added countries include:

Cambodia

Ethiopia

Georgia

Mongolia

Tunisia

And several others

This means more travellers will now need to pay this bond before getting a visa.

Why Do You Have to Pay Up to $15,000?

The main goal is simple: to stop people from overstaying their visas.

A visa overstay happens when someone stays in the US longer than allowed.

The bond acts like a security deposit:

If you follow the rules and leave on time, you get your money back

If you don’t, you risk losing the bond

The program mainly targets countries with:

High visa overstay rates

Weak background verification systems

Citizenship-by-investment programs

When Will You Get Your Money Back?

The good news is that the bond is fully refundable.

You will get your money back if:

You leave the US within your allowed stay

You don’t travel after getting the visa

You are denied entry at the airport

The refund is processed automatically once the conditions are met.

Key Things to Remember

This rule applies only to B1/B2 visas (tourism and business)

The bond amount can go up to $15,000

It is not permanent—it’s part of a pilot program running until 2026

The final decision is taken by a visa officer on a case-by-case basis

Final Takeaway

The new visa bond rule makes travelling to the US more costly upfront for many people—but it doesn’t mean you lose the money.

Think of it as a security deposit to ensure rule compliance.

If you follow the visa conditions, your money comes back. But if you don’t, the financial loss could be significant.

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