Immigration Overhaul: No More Visas for 75 Countries Until Public Charge Rules Are Strengthened
By Hotspotnews
On January 14, 2026, the Department published a guidance update titled “Immigrant Visa Processing Updates for Nationalities at High Risk of Public Benefits Usage” on its official website (travel.state.gov).
This announcement, last updated that same day, declares that effective January 21, 2026, the Department is pausing all issuances of immigrant visas to applicants who are nationals of the listed 75 countries. The policy stems from a reassessment of procedures to enforce the “public charge” grounds under U.S. immigration law (INA Section 212(a)(4)), which bars admission to those likely to become primarily dependent on government assistance for subsistence.
The State Department also announced the measure via its official X account (@StateDept) on January 14, stating that immigrant visa processing from these 75 countries—whose nationals are seen as taking welfare at “unacceptable rates”—will remain paused until procedures ensure new immigrants “will not extract wealth from the American people.” Spokesperson Tommy Pigott reinforced this in follow-up statements, emphasizing financial self-sufficiency.
This is an internal operational guidance update/directive issued by the Department of State under existing statutory authority (primarily INA § 212(a)(4) on public charge grounds), rather than a new numbered rule or executive order.
– It’s referenced simply by its full title in official State Department channels, news releases, and secondary sources (e.g., Fragomen, Boundless, immigration law firms).
– The announcement was first shared via the @StateDept X account (post dated January 14, 2026) and then posted as a news item on the Visas News section of travel.state.gov.
– Related context includes ties to prior Presidential Proclamations (e.g., 10998 from December 2025 on security-related suspensions for ~39–40 countries), but the 75-country public charge pause is a distinct administrative action without its own dedicated proclamation or policy #.
Key Details of the Measure
– Scope: Applies only to **immigrant visas** (for permanent residency/green cards), including family-sponsored, employment-based, diversity lottery, and other categories processed at U.S. embassies/consulates abroad.
– What continues: Applicants from affected countries can still submit applications (e.g., DS-260 forms), pay fees, and attend scheduled visa interviews. Consular officers will conduct interviews and process cases up to the final decision point—but no visas will be issued during the pause.
– Exceptions: Dual nationals using a valid passport from a non-listed country are exempt. Existing valid immigrant visas are not revoked (though admission decisions at ports of entry fall under DHS/CBP authority). Nonimmigrant visas (e.g., tourist B-1/B-2, student F-1, work H-1B) remain unaffected.
– Duration: Indefinite, until the Department completes its review and implements updated screening/vetting to prevent public charge risks.
Effects of the Measures
This policy creates widespread disruption for legal immigration pathways, particularly for family reunification and skilled worker migration.
– For affected applicants and families
– Thousands of approved petitions (I-130, I-140, etc.) face indefinite delays in visa issuance, stranding spouses, children, parents, and fiancés abroad—even after lengthy waits and interviews.
– Emotional and financial strain: Families already separated may face years more apart; applicants incur ongoing costs (medical exams, travel for interviews) with no resolution.
– Uncertainty: No clear timeline for resumption means planning (housing, jobs, schooling) becomes impossible.
– For U.S. employers and businesses
– Employment-based green card backlogs worsen dramatically for nationals from listed countries (e.g., many in tech/engineering from India/Pakistan aren’t directly hit if India is absent, but others like Brazil, Nigeria face blocks).
– Companies relying on foreign talent for permanent roles face recruitment challenges, potential talent loss to other nations, and higher turnover as workers remain in temporary nonimmigrant status longer (if they qualify).
– Broader immigration system impacts
– Backlogs at consular posts could grow as interviews continue without issuances, tying up resources.
– Reduced legal immigration inflows: Critics argue it disproportionately affects lower- and middle-income applicants from developing nations, while supporters see it as protecting taxpayer resources amid tightened public benefits rules (e.g., recent restrictions on food stamps/Medicaid for immigrants).
– Humanitarian concerns: Family-based cases (often the majority) suffer most; diversity visa winners from listed countries lose pathways entirely during the pause.
– Economic and demographic ripple effects
– Slower population growth in certain communities; reduced remittances to origin countries.
– Potential court challenges: Advocacy groups may argue the country-specific pause lacks sufficient individualized assessments or exceeds statutory authority, though it builds on existing public charge enforcement.
Affected Countries (75 Total)
The official list spans Africa, Asia, Latin America/Caribbean, Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Oceania:
– Africa: Algeria, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Libya, Morocco, Nigeria, Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda.
– Asia/Middle Eas: Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, Georgia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Kyrgyz Republic, Laos, Lebanon, Moldova, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Syria, Thailand, Uzbekistan, Yemen.
– Europe/Balkans Albania, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Russia.
– Latin America/Caribbean: Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, Dominica, Fiji, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana (implied in some reports), Haiti, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Uruguay.
– Other: Various small island nations and additional entries as detailed in the guidance.
This move marks a major expansion of immigration restrictions in early 2026, building on prior travel/security proclamations while focusing explicitly on economic self-sufficiency. Affected individuals should monitor travel.state.gov for updates, consult immigration attorneys, and consider alternatives like adjustment of status inside the U.S. (if eligible) or nonimmigrant options in the interim.

