User:USVISASERV/sandbox

THE U.S.A. VISA SERVICE non profit organization of the United States.it provides information regarding U.S. VISA & travel guide. we continues posting on our instagram social media page instagram.com/usvisaserv/ We want people to visit America after seeing our post. we help to visitor if foreign visitor want to travel to, enter, in the United States. Visitors to the United States must obtain a visa from one of the U.S. more info

Travel documents
The U.S. government requires all individuals entering or departing the United States by air, or entering the United States by sea from outside the Americas, to hold one of the following documents:


 * Passport of applicant
 * Foreign passport; for entry, a U.S. visa is also required except for:
 * Nationals of certain neighboring jurisdictions (Canada and Bermuda generally; Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands and Turks and Caicos Islands under certain conditions; and Mexico under limited categories)
 * Citizens of the freely associated states (Marshall Islands, Micronesia and Palau)
 * Nationals of one of the 39 countries in the Visa Waiver Program (or of certain additional countries only for Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands)
 * Travel history if any
 * finance documents

Visas
While there are about 185 different types of U.S. visas, there are two main categories


 * Two type of Visa categories
 * Nonimmigrant visa, for temporary stays such as for tourism, business, family visits, study, work or transit;
 * Immigrant visa: for permanent residence in the United States. At the port of entry, upon endorsement with an I-551 admission stamp, the visa serves as evidence of permanent residence for one year, and the visa holder is processed for a green card. A child with an IR-3 or IH-3 visa automatically becomes a U.S. citizen upon admission and is processed for a certificate of citizenship (N-560).

''A U.S. visa does not authorize entry into the United States or a stay in a particular status, but only serves as a preliminary permission to travel to the United States and to seek admission at a port of entry. The final admission to the United States is made at the port of entry by a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer. For those entering in a nonimmigrant visa status, the admission details are recorded by the CBP officer on a Form I-94 (or Form I-94W for nationals of the Visa Waiver Program countries for short visits), which serves as the official document authorizing the stay in the United States in a particular status and for a particular period of time. In order to immigrate, one should either have an immigrant visa or have a dual intent visa, which is one that is compatible with making a concurrent application for nonimmigrant and immigrant status.''

''Entering the United States on an employment visa may be described as a three-step process in most cases. First, the employer files an application with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services requesting a particular type of category visa for a specific individual. If the employer's application is approved, it only authorizes the individual to apply for a visa; the approved application is not actually a visa. The individual then applies for a visa and is usually interviewed at a U.S. embassy or consulate in the native country. If the embassy or consulate grants the visa, the individual is then allowed to travel to the United States. At the airport, border crossing or other point of entry, the individual speaks with an officer from U.S. Customs and Border Protection to request admission, and if approved, the individual may then enter the United States. ''

In addition to immigration sponsored by a U.S. family member or employer, about 55,000 immigrant visas are available each year to natives of certain countries under the Diversity Immigrant Visa program, also known as the green card lottery.