What is a U.S. visa bond? The 2026 guide
A U.S. visa bond is a refundable financial guarantee — $5,000, $10,000, or $15,000 — that certain B1/B2 visitor visa applicants must post before their visa can be issued. Post the bond, travel, leave the United States on time, and the bond is cancelled. This guide covers who needs one, how much it costs, and the two ways to post it.
Why visa bonds exist
The bond gives the U.S. government a financial guarantee that a visitor will depart on time. The Visa Bond Program operates under Section 221(g)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and a Temporary Final Rule, and targets countries with elevated visa overstay rates or other screening concerns identified by the State Department.
The program launched on August 20, 2025 with Malawi and Zambia and expanded in waves — reaching 50 countries by April 2, 2026.
Who has to post a visa bond
Citizens of the 50 countries currently in the program who apply for a B-1 (business) or B-2 (tourism) visitor visa and are found otherwise eligible. The consular officer tells you at your interview whether a bond is required — the requirement applies no matter where in the world you apply. Only B1/B2 visas are covered; other visa categories are not part of the program.
Note: some listed countries are also under a separate U.S. partial entry ban. Their citizens generally cannot receive a B1/B2 visa even with a bond — check your country's page for its current status.
How much the bond is
The officer sets one of three amounts at your interview: $5,000, $10,000, or $15,000 — with $10,000 the standard default. This is not a fee: it is a deposit-style guarantee held by the U.S. government for the duration of your trip and returned (or released) when you comply with the bond's terms.
The rules that come with it
- 30-day deadline. The bond must be posted within 30 days of your interview, or your visa application is cancelled.
- Commercial air only. Bond holders must enter and exit the U.S. through commercial airports — no land crossings, sea ports, charters, or general aviation.
- Leave on time. Depart by your authorized date and the bond is cancelled automatically. Overstay and it is forfeited.
Two ways to post the bond
Option 1 — post it yourself. You (or a relative, employer, or sponsor acting as the obligor) deposit the full amount with the U.S. Treasury via Pay.gov under DHS Form I-352. The money is locked up until the bond is cancelled. See our step-by-step Pay.gov guide.
Option 2 — use VisaBond. We act as the obligor and fund the full bond for you, filing typically within one business day. You pay a one-time fee from $999 and your cash stays free for the trip itself. If you leave on time, that's the whole cost — the bond cancels and nothing further is owed.
What happens afterwards
Departing on time through a commercial airport cancels the bond automatically. The bond is also cancelled if you never travel before your visa expires, or if you are denied entry at the border. The only way to lose the bond is to breach its terms — most commonly by overstaying. Full details in our refunds and cancellation guide and the FAQ.
Required to post a bond?
Apply in two minutes and VisaBond posts your bond — your cash stays in your pocket.
