US Visa bond
USD 5,000-15,000 bond now mandatory
Desk Report
| Published: Wednesday, January 07, 2026
Collage: Collected.
Bangladeshi nationals must now post bonds between USD 5,000-USD 15,000 per person to obtain United States business and tourist visas,
following Trump administration's new policy effective from 21st January 2026.
State Department added Bangladesh to a list of 38 countries
whose citizens face mandatory financial deposits for B1/B2 visa applications.
Bond amount will be determined by consular officers during visa interviews
based on individual overstay risk assessments.
Policy creates substantial financial barriers for
Bangladeshi travellers. Family of four seeking tourist visas could face
combined bond requirements up to USD 60,000, making travel prohibitively
expensive for middle-income families.
"Any citizen or national travelling on a passport
issued by one of these countries, who is found otherwise eligible for a B1 or B2
visa, must post a bond," State Department website stated. However, posting
bonds does not guarantee visa approval.
Applicants must submit Department of Homeland Security's
Form I-352 and complete payments through US Treasury's Pay.gov platform. State
Department warned against unauthorised payments, stating these will not be
refunded.
Bonds will be automatically refunded if travellers depart
United States before authorised stay expires or if visa applications are
denied. However, bonds may be forfeited for overstays, failure to depart, or
asylum applications.
Successful applicants face additional restrictions including
single entry, maximum 30-day stays, and mandatory use of three designated
airports: Boston Logan International, John F Kennedy International and
Washington Dulles International.
US government justifies the programme as necessary to deter
visa overstays from countries with high violation rates, citing Department of
Homeland Security data.
Source: US State Department, US Embassy Dhaka