How It Works
The US maintains embassies in most countries and consulates in major cities. Every US visa requires an in-person interview at one of these locations. You generally interview in your country of citizenship or residence.
Finding Your Embassy
The authoritative directory is at travel.state.gov. Click "US Embassies and Consulates." Each embassy has its own website with local instructions, fees (in local currency), and scheduling links.
Appointment Wait Times
Wait times vary dramatically by location. Check the State Department's wait times page for current data. Some examples (April 2026):
| Country | Tourist B1/B2 Wait | Most Frequent |
|---|---|---|
| India (Mumbai) | ~450 days | Slow; try Emergency/interview waiver |
| Mexico (Monterrey) | ~700 days | Slow |
| Brazil (Sao Paulo) | ~100 days | Moderate |
| UK (London) | ~30 days | Most UK citizens use ESTA |
| Nigeria (Abuja) | ~120 days | Slow |
| Philippines (Manila) | ~30 days | Fast |
What to Bring
- Valid passport (6+ months)
- DS-160 confirmation page with barcode
- Appointment confirmation
- Visa fee receipt ($185 MRV)
- Photo meeting specs (2x2 inch, white background)
- Proof of employment (letter, pay stubs)
- Bank statements (3-6 months)
- Proof of ties (property, family, business)
- Previous visa history in your passport
- Invitation letter (if visiting family)
- Travel itinerary (optional, helpful)
Interview Tips
- Arrive 30 minutes early
- Speak confidently and directly
- Answer briefly — do not volunteer extra info
- Have specific travel plans ready
- Dress neatly (business casual is fine)
- Do not joke
- Interview lasts 2-5 minutes
See our B1/B2 visa guide for more detail.
If Denied
Most denials cite Section 214(b) — insufficient ties to home country. You can reapply immediately but without new circumstances the result is usually the same. Many applicants wait 6-12 months and build a stronger case.