
A Comprehensive Guide for Nonimmigrant Workers: Maintaining Legal Status in the U.S.
Goel & Anderson regularly counsels businesspeople, their clients, and their employers as to how best to meet their goals, what visas will be the most effective and when a visa can be waived. We also regularly assist individuals in understanding the requirements for a visitor visa and assembling the appropriate documentation to obtain or extend visitor visas. If you’re looking to receive a visitor visa, please don’t hesitate to speak with the knowledgeable Fairfax County visitor visa lawyers here at Goel & Anderson today.
The visitor visa lawyers here at Goel & Anderson have extensive experience representing clients seeking visas for business and tourism here in the United States, and we stand ready to put that experience to work for you. Reach out to our dedicated legal team today so we can get started working on your case.
Business Visitor Visas (known as B-1 visas) are intended for individuals who will be conducting business in the United States for a limited period of time (fewer than 90 days). B-1 visas allow a foreign national to come to the U.S. to do such things as:
Applicants for a B-1 visa must demonstrate that they:
Domestic or personal employees and nannies of foreign national employers may qualify for a B-1 visa if they accompany or join:
Upon arrival in the United States, the B-1 domestic employee can apply to USCIS for employment authorization that permits employment only by the qualifying employer in the U.S.
B-2 Visas are granted to individuals traveling temporarily to the United States for non-business purposes on visits lasting fewer than 90 days. These purposes would include tourism, visiting friends or family, amateur (unpaid) participation in musical or sports events or other types of contests, social service or medical treatment. Goel & Anderson has helped many individuals and their family members travel to the U.S. on visitor visas. There are certain requirements in the process. Specifically, B-2 visitor visa applicants must document that they:
If the reason for the visit is medical care, a visa applicant must also document the details of the medical condition and treatment plan in the form of:
The Visa Waiver Program (VWP) enables nationals of 36 participating countries to travel to the United States for tourism or business visits of 90 days or less without obtaining a visa. The 36 participating countries have been approved by the U.S. government after meeting security requirements and agreeing to share passenger, law enforcement, counter-terrorism, border control and document security data with the U.S.To be eligible for VWP travel, travelers must also meet specific criteria.
For example, VWP travelers must have machine-readable or biometric passports valid for six months beyond their expected stay in the U.S., the purpose of their visit must be for business or tourism lasting no more than 90 days, they must be traveling on an approved air or sea carrier to the U.S. and they must not have been previously refused admission to the U.S. or violated the terms of previous U.S. entries
In addition to the 36 countries above, temporary visitors from Canada, Mexico and Bermuda can also travel to the U.S. without a visa in some cases under other provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act. Because these three countries are not part of the VWP, the requirements for possession of machine-readable or biometric passports do not apply.
Goel & Anderson regularly counsels businesspeople, their clients, and their employers as to how best to meet their goals, what visas will be the most effective, and when a visa can be waived.
Whether you have a B-1 business visitor visa, or are a visitor traveling for pleasure or medical reasons on a B-2 visa, if your trip extends past the last day authorized by your I-94 card and you have failed to file an I-539 extension application with USCIS, then you have overstayed your approved visitor status. This will result in the automatic voiding of your visa, and it could cause you to no longer qualify to return to the United States. For this reason, it is very important to submit an extension application to USCIS before the I-94 card expires – even if you only expect to remain in the U.S. for just one day longer than the I-94 expiration date.
Whether you’re seeking a visitor visa for business, tourism, or medical treatment, the Virginia immigration lawyers at Goel & Anderson can help. Contact us today so we can begin working on your case.
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