No US visa guarantee despite bond payment
Desk Report
| Published: Wednesday, January 07, 2026
File photo.
Bangladeshis face financial uncertainty as United States
confirms visa bonds up to USD 15 thousand do not guarantee visa approval,
creating significant risk for applicants starting January 26.
State Department explicitly stated that posting required
bonds between USD 5,000-15,000 does not assure B1 or B2 visa issuance, leaving
Bangladeshi travellers vulnerable to losing substantial deposits without
obtaining travel authorization.
“Posting a bond does not guarantee visa issuance”, State
Department website clarified, highlighting that applicants must pay bonds
upfront during visa interviews whilst facing potential rejection based on standard
eligibility criteria.
Trump administration added Bangladesh to an expanded list of
38 countries whose citizens must post financial bonds for business and tourist
visas. Bond amounts will be determined by consular officers assessing
individual overstay risks using Department of Homeland Security data.
Applicants must complete Form I-352 and process payments
through official platform Pay.gov. State Department warned against unauthorised
payments, stating they will not be refunded under any circumstances.
Visa application fees remain non-refundable and
non-transferable separately from bond requirements. Rejected applicants face
delayed bond refunds through separate administrative processes, creating
extended financial uncertainty.
Bonds are refunded only if Department of Homeland Security
records timely departure, if traveller never visits United States before visa
expiration, or if admission is denied at port of entry. However, refund
processing timelines remain unspecified.
Human rights organisations criticised the policy as
discriminatory, arguing it creates disproportionate barriers for middle-income
families whilst providing no certainty of visa approval despite substantial
financial commitments.
Source: US State Department, US Embassy Dhaka