Tag Archives: US visa appointment

The US Will Sell You a Faster Visa Interview — for $750

If a US trip is on your calendar this year, the rules just shifted in a way your wallet will feel. From 1 July 2026, the State Department is piloting a new option many applicants have quietly wished for: pay extra and skip the back of the line. The US expedited visa interview fee lets B-1/B-2 applicants at certain consulates lock an interview within 10 business days — instead of waiting in a queue that, at some posts, still stretches past a year. It is optional, capped, and time-limited. It also does nothing for your odds of approval. Here is how it really works.

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How the US expedited visa interview fee works

On 9 June 2026 the State Department published a temporary final rule creating a $750 add-on fee for an expedited B-1/B-2 interview appointment. It sits on top of the standard $185 visa application fee, so the all-in cost reaches $935. In return, eligible applicants at participating posts are offered an interview slot within 10 business days. The pilot runs from 1 July to 31 December 2026, is offered at only a limited number of overseas posts, and is capped at roughly 25,000 expedited requests. One thing it is not: a shortcut to a “yes.” It buys you an earlier date on the calendar, not a faster decision or a softer adjudication.

Is $750 worth it for your trip?

The honest answer is: only if time is genuinely the constraint. Take a Brazilian founder racing to close a funding round who needs to be in New York for an investor week three weeks out — for her, $750 to guarantee an interview inside 10 business days is cheap insurance against a missed deal. For a family planning a holiday eight months ahead, it is money burned, because the normal queue will clear long before they fly. The State Department itself flagged events like the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics as the kind of last-minute, fixed-date travel the pilot is built for. If your travel date is soft, your money is better kept.

Free ways to beat the queue first

Before reaching for your card, exhaust the no-cost routes. Consular managers at every post — pilot or not — can still expedite interviews at no charge for urgent humanitarian or genuinely time-sensitive travel, so a well-documented emergency request can work without the fee. Booking the moment your DS-160 is ready, checking nearby posts with shorter waits, and confirming whether you qualify for an interview waiver can each save weeks. The paid lane should be your last resort, not your first instinct.

Weighing up a US trip or a bigger move abroad? Map your options before you pay a cent — start at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

The short version

  • A new $750 fee buys a B-1/B-2 interview within 10 business days at select posts, from 1 July to 31 December 2026.
  • Total cost becomes $935 ($185 standard + $750 expedite); it does not speed processing or improve approval odds.
  • The pilot is capped near 25,000 requests and offered at limited consulates only.
  • Free expedite for urgent or humanitarian travel still exists — try it before paying.

Quick questions, quick answers

Does the $750 fee guarantee my visa is approved?

No. It only secures an earlier interview appointment. The decision still rests entirely on the consular officer’s assessment.

Which consulates offer the expedited appointment?

The State Department has said it will run at a limited, unspecified set of posts in limited quantities — check your local embassy’s appointment system from 1 July 2026.

Is the fee refundable if I am refused?

No. Like the standard application fee, the $750 expedite charge is non-refundable regardless of the outcome.

Will this fee become permanent?

It is a pilot scheduled to end on 31 December 2026. Whether it is extended depends on how the trial performs.

Related reads

Share this story

  • The US just put a $750 price tag on jumping the visa queue. Worth it?
  • Need a US visa interview fast? From July you can pay $750 to skip the wait.
  • $185 to apply, $750 to be seen in 10 days — the new US visa fast-track explained.

Before you book that appointment

A faster interview is only useful if the rest of your application is airtight. Get the full picture on US and global visa routes, document checklists and timelines in one place at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Sources

  • Federal Register — Schedule of Fees for Consular Services (temporary final rule, 9 June 2026): https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/06/09/2026-11513/schedule-of-fees-for-consular-services-department-of-state-and-overseas-embassies-and (T0)
  • Fragomen — Starting July 1, certain consular posts may offer expedited B visa appointments for a fee: https://www.fragomen.com/insights/united-states-starting-july-1-certain-consular-posts-may-offer-expedited-b-visa-appointments-for-an-additional-fee.html (T1)

America Is Closing Visa Windows Across Africa — Move Fast

The map of where Africans can apply for an American visa is about to shrink fast. Reporting on 1–2 June 2026 confirms that US embassy visa cuts will reduce the roughly 50 embassies and consulates across the continent that currently process visas down to about 20 regional hubs, under a directive approved by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. For millions of applicants, the change is less about new rules and more about geography — and the clock is already running.

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From nearly 50 posts to 20 hubs

The core of the US embassy visa cuts is consolidation. Consular sections in non-hub countries will not all close — they will stay open for American citizen services, passport renewals, emergencies and a narrow band of special national-interest and diplomatic cases. What they will largely stop doing is routine immigrant and non-immigrant visa interviews. Those move to roughly 20 designated regional posts, meaning an applicant in a non-hub country may have to fly to a neighbouring capital simply to attend an appointment.

This sits on top of restrictions already biting in 2026: travel-ban designations on several countries, a freeze affecting a large list of mostly African, Asian and Middle Eastern nationalities, and disruptions tied to a regional health emergency. The hub model is the structural layer underneath all of it.

Which Africans feel this first

If your nearest embassy is in a smaller or politically sensitive country, you are most exposed. Students with autumn intake dates, workers on employer deadlines, and families with approved petitions waiting on an interview slot will feel the squeeze immediately, because demand at the surviving 20 hubs will spike while capacity does not.

Take Aïcha, a paediatric nurse in Yaoundé with a US job offer. If Cameroon becomes a non-hub post, her interview could shift to a regional hub hundreds of kilometres away, adding flights, a hotel, and a second set of travel risks to an already tight timeline. Multiply that by every applicant in her city and you see why early action matters more than panic.

Need a second pair of eyes on your consular plan before slots vanish? Start here → https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Three moves before your interview

First, check your assigned post now and book the earliest appointment you realistically can — an existing slot at your current embassy may be honoured even as the transition unfolds. Second, keep your DS-160 or immigrant-visa paperwork complete and photographed, so a sudden reassignment to another country does not catch you missing a document. Third, budget for cross-border travel and build a paper trail (employer letter, admission letter, funds) that survives a venue change. Applicants who treat their file as portable will lose the least time.

The short version

  • Africa’s US visa-processing posts drop from about 50 to roughly 20 regional hubs.
  • Non-hub embassies stay open for citizen services but largely stop routine visa interviews.
  • Applicants in smaller countries may need to travel abroad to be interviewed.
  • Book early, keep your file portable, and budget for a possible venue change.

Common questions

Will my embassy close completely? Most non-hub posts stay open for emergencies and citizen services, but routine visa interviews move to a regional hub.

Does an existing appointment still count? Often yes — keep it, and confirm status regularly rather than cancelling on rumour.

How many hubs will serve Africa? Reporting points to around 20 designated posts continent-wide, down from nearly 50.

Can I switch to a third country to apply? Third-country processing is possible but discretionary; confirm the hub accepts your case type first.

Related reads: US visa suspension and the routes that still work · Adjustment of status vs consular processing for Africans

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  • LinkedIn: “Africa’s US visa map just shrank from 50 posts to 20. If you have a pending case, read this before you book travel.”
  • Twitter/X: “The US is cutting Africa’s visa-processing embassies to ~20 hubs. Move your appointment up. 👇”
  • Facebook: “Fewer US embassies in Africa will process visas in 2026. Here’s how to protect your interview slot.”

Plan your route before the gates narrow

The applicants who come out ahead will be the ones who booked early, kept every document portable, and planned for a possible cross-border interview. Get a personalised checklist and the latest hub list from the Travel Explore team at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Sources

  • AP via PBS NewsHour, “US to drastically slash the number of embassies in Africa that can process visas,” 1 June 2026 — T1. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/ap-report-u-s-to-drastically-slash-the-number-of-embassies-in-africa-that-can-process-visas
  • Euronews, “US to slash number of embassies in Africa processing visas,” 2 June 2026 — T1. https://www.euronews.com/2026/06/02/us-to-slash-number-of-embassies-in-africa-processing-visas