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| Visa Information The Consular Section of the U.S. Consulate General in Shanghai processes only nonimmigrant visas for travel to the United States. For information on immigrant or fiancee/fiance visas, please contact the U.S. Consulate General in Guangzhou via e-mail at GuangzhouIV@state.gov. You will also find general information about immigrant visas in the State Department's Consular web pages. If you live or work in the Shanghai Consular District and intend to engage in tourist activities, attend an educational institution, attend meetings or conferences, or work temporarily in the United States, you may apply for a visa at the Consular Section of the U.S. Consulate General in Shanghai. The Shanghai Consular District comprises the Shanghai Municipality, and the provinces of Anhui, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang. If your application is approved, your passport with the visa will be returned while you wait. Busniess Visa B-1 Visa: The B-1 visa is intended for temporary business travel. This includes negotiating contracts, attending exhibitions and conferences, short-term training (but not on-the-job training), and consultations with suppliers and customers. The B-1 visa is not valid for employment in the United States. Applicants for B-1 visas may wish to bring to their interviews information regarding their anticipated business activities in the United States. This may include letters from the U.S. business partners indicating the purpose of the trip, and documentation establishing the applicant's personal status, such as marriage certificates, letters confirming employment, bank statements, pay slips, etc. Tourist B-2 Visa: The B-2 visa is intended for tourist activities, such as sight-seeing, visiting friends and relatives, obtaining medical treatment, and attending non-business conferences and meetings. Visitors are not permitted to accept employment during their stay in the U.S. Applicants for B-2 visas may wish to bring to their interviews: letters of invitation from friends or relatives in the United States; information confirming participation in a tour group or conference; and documentation demonstrating the applicant's ability and intention, or that of friends or relatives in the United States, to support his or her travel and other expenses. Documentation establishing the applicant's personal status, such as marriage certificates, letters confirming employment, bank statements, pay slips, etc. is also useful. Student Visa Applicants for U.S. student visas should be aware that they must apply for their visas no earlier than 90 days before the date when they must report to the school in the United States. Student visa applications received more than 90 days before the report date to the new school will not be processed by the Embassy. All applicants for "F-1" and "M-1" visas must present a valid I-20 form from the school which has accepted them. To obtain a visa to study in the United States, applicants must demonstrate that the sole (not just "primary") purpose of their travel is to pursue a program of study; they have the ability and intention to be a full-time student in the United States; they possess adequate funds to cover all tuition, living and anticipated incidental expenses without taking unauthorized employment; they have sufficiently strong social, economic, and other reasons to compel their departure from the United States upon completion of the projected program of studies. Working Visa H. L, O, P, and Q visas entitle the holder to work in the United States. All require the company or other organization in the United States to first submit a petition to the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) for permission to hire a foreign worker. If the petition is approved, the company will be issued a form I-797 enabling you to apply for a visa. "H" VISA: The H visa is intended for temporary employment in the United States. Petitions must first be approved by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) in the United States. Petitions must first be approved by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) in the United States. |
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