NONIMMIGRANT
(TEMPORARY) VISAS: A BASIC PRIMER
There is a wide range of temporary visas,
for many different purposes and each lasting from a few days to
several years. Some must be approved in advance by the INS
before being reviewed and issued by the State Department; others
are simply reviewed only by the State Department. Many visa
classifications can be granted not only to the principal
applicant but also to his or her dependents (spouse and minor
children).
There is a difference between a visa and a
status, although both are referred to in the same general way and
with the same alphabetical denomination (based on the section of
the Immigration and Nationality Act where the category is
described). A visa is simply a document in the persons
passport; it acts like a ticket to ensure they get on the
airplane and can show up at the front door of the U.S. A
persons status is granted to the applicant when they show
up at the border; it is initially granted by INS at the port of
entry, and can be changed or extended by INS Service Centers.
- Diplomatic employees and their households
- Business visitors (B-1) or tourists (B-2)
- Transit visa (pass-through at an airport or seaport)
- Crewmember (air or sea)
- Treaty-Investors or Treaty-Traders (from countries where
we have a treaty of commerce and investment)
- Students
- Employees of International Organizations (IMF, OPIC, OAS,
UN, International Red Cross, etc)
- Temporary Workers. Can be professionals (H-1B),
agricultural workers (H-2A),
temporary or seasonal workers (H-2B), or trainees (H-3).
- Representatives of international media
- Exchange visitors (educational exchange students, au
pairs, graduate medical trainees, practical training
students, professors and researchers, short-term
scholars, camp counselors, etc)
- Fiancés and fiancées
- Intracompany transferees (executives, managers, persons
with proprietary knowledge)
- Language and vocational students
- NATO employees
- Extraordinary ability aliens in sciences, arts, business,
athletics, or education, and support personnel
- Athletes, athletic teams, entertainment groups (such as
orchestras) and support personnel
- Cultural exchange visitors (for example, Smithsonian
Folklife Festival)
- Religious workers
- Criminal informants
15AD8006 / Last Updated October 8, 1999