The US Banned Visas For 19 African Countries — Here Is What Still Works

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The US visa suspension 2026 partially closed B-1/B-2, F, M, J and immigrant visa channels for nationals of 19 countries — most of them African — effective 1 January. Six months in, applicants from Nigeria, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Gabon, The Gambia and others have settled into a new normal where the door is narrower but not bolted. The route forward runs through a small set of exemptions, third-country posts that still take affected cases, and a handful of visa categories that the order never touched.

The 19 countries the order touches

The 1 January 2026 proclamation named 19 nationalities for partial suspension. African nationals on the list include citizens of Nigeria, Angola, Benin, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Gabon, The Gambia, Malawi, Mauritania, Senegal, Tanzania, Togo, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The reach of the order varies by category. B-1/B-2 visitor visas are restricted broadly. F, M and J academic and exchange visas have narrower carve-outs for students with full degree-program admission. Immigrant visas — including family preferences and employment-based green cards — are restricted with limited national-interest exemptions.

Diplomatic visas, NATO-related categories, and certain government-to-government exchanges are not affected. The order also leaves untouched dual nationals using their non-listed passport, which is the single biggest planning angle for affected applicants.

Exemptions that are actually being granted

Three categories of exemption are being granted on the ground in 2026. The first is the national-interest exception (NIE), used most often for academic researchers in STEM fields, healthcare workers tied to US employer sponsorship, and athletes or performers with a confirmed engagement. NIE applications are filed with the consular section that would otherwise process the visa and require a written justification from the US sponsor.

The second is the dual-national workaround. A Nigerian citizen who also holds a passport from Ghana, the UK, South Africa or any non-listed country can apply on the non-listed passport — provided they have actually lived in that country or can demonstrate substantive ties. Posts in Accra, Pretoria and London are familiar with these cases.

The third is the F-1 with confirmed I-20 pathway. Students with full degree-program admission at SEVP-approved schools have continued to receive visas, particularly at posts in Accra and Pretoria. Khaya, a Tanzanian master’s admit at Penn State, was interviewed at the US Embassy Pretoria in April and received her F-1 in 11 days.

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Where the consular intake is still flowing

Posts that actively take affected nationals as third-country applicants include Pretoria (South Africa), Accra (Ghana), Nairobi (Kenya), Casablanca (Morocco) and — for North African and Sahel cases — Tunis (Tunisia). The screening criteria are similar everywhere: legal stay in the host country at the time of the visa interview, a clean prior US travel record, and documentation that ties the applicant to the host country (employment, study, family). Walk-in interviews are not available for affected nationalities at any post; everything goes through the standard appointment system with an exemption justification.

Visa categories the suspension did not touch

Not every door is closed. O-1 extraordinary ability petitions for scientists, athletes and artists continue to be approved for nationals of suspended countries. P-1 athletes and P-3 culturally unique performers are similarly outside the proclamation. EB-1A extraordinary ability green cards are still being adjudicated, though final visa issuance still routes through a consulate.

The route most overlooked by Nigerian and Senegalese applicants is the K-1 fiancé visa with a US-citizen petitioner — these cases continue to be processed on national-interest grounds. According to State Department guidance, family-based exemptions are evaluated case-by-case. And as the American Immigration Council notes, the order is structured to allow exemptions where the applicant can show the US national interest is served.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the order apply to dual nationals?

No. A national of a suspended country who also holds a passport from a non-listed country can normally apply on the non-listed passport, provided ties to that second country are genuine.

I have a current US F-1 visa — can I renew?

Yes, with limits. Students with valid I-20s and clean academic records are still being issued renewals, most reliably at US Embassy Pretoria and US Embassy Accra. Build in extra time.

What is a national-interest exception and who qualifies?

An NIE is a discretionary waiver attached to a visa application. Most successful NIEs in 2026 have been for healthcare workers with US employer sponsorship, STEM researchers, athletes and performers with confirmed contracts, and urgent medical-treatment cases.

Are family-based green card cases moving at all?

Yes, but slowly. IR1 spouse-of-US-citizen and IR2 minor-child cases continue to receive interviews, with most issuances happening through Pretoria, Accra and Nairobi after case transfer requests.

Will the suspension be lifted in 2026?

There is no announced end date. The order is reviewed periodically and individual countries may be removed if specific concerns are addressed. Build your plan assuming the suspension stays in force through at least the end of 2026.

The bottom line

  • The 2026 order partially suspends visas for 14 African countries — not a full ban
  • Dual nationals can normally apply on a non-listed passport
  • Pretoria, Accra, Nairobi and Casablanca are the most flexible third-country posts
  • O-1, P-1, K-1 and EB-1A categories continue to be processed
  • Build NIE evidence into your application from day one — do not wait for a denial

Related reads on Travel Explore

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  • Affected by the 2026 US visa suspension? Five categories that still work
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  • Why Pretoria, Accra and Nairobi are quietly clearing African visa cases

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