Diversity Visa Instructions for DV-2026, 79997-80006 [2024-22482]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 1, 2024 / Notices
phone at 1–800–659–2955 for further
assistance.
The following areas have been
Percent
determined to be adversely affected by
For Physical Damage:
the disaster:
Non-Profit Organizations with
Incident: Tropical Storm Debby.
Credit Available Elsewhere ...
3.250 Incident Period: August 4, 2024 through
Non-Profit Organizations withAugust 20, 2024.
out Credit Available ElsePrimary Counties (Physical Damage and
where .....................................
3.250
Economic Injury Loans): Bryan,
For Economic Injury:
Bulloch, Chatham, Effingham,
Non-Profit Organizations withEvans, Liberty, Long, Screven.
out Credit Available Elsewhere .....................................
3.250 Contiguous Counties (Economic Injury
Loans Only):
Georgia: Burke, Candler, Emanuel,
The number assigned to this disaster
Jenkins, McIntosh, Tattnall, Wayne.
for physical damage is 20672B and for
South Carolina: Allendale, Hampton,
economic injury is 206730.
Jasper.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Interest Rates are:
Number 59008)
The Interest Rates are:
Francisco Sánchez, Jr.,
Associate Administrator, Office of Disaster
Recovery & Resilience.
Percent
[FR Doc. 2024–22411 Filed 9–30–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026–09–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
[Disaster Declaration #20543 and #20544;
GEORGIA Disaster Number GA–20010]
Presidential Declaration of a Major
Disaster for the State of Georgia
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This is a Notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for the State of Georgia (FEMA–
4821–DR), dated September 24, 2024.
DATES: Issued on September 24, 2024.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: November 25, 2024.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: June 24,
2025.
SUMMARY:
Visit the MySBA Loan
Portal at https://lending.sba.gov to
apply for a disaster assistance loan.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Vanessa Morgan, Office of Disaster
Recovery & Resilience, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 3rd Street
SW, Suite 6050, Washington, DC 20416,
(202) 205–6734.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that as a result of the
President’s major disaster declaration on
09/24/2024, applications for disaster
loans may be submitted online using the
MySBA Loan Portal https://
lending.sba.gov or other locally
announced locations. Please contact the
SBA disaster assistance customer
service center by email at
disastercustomerservice@sba.gov or by
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ADDRESSES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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For Physical Damage:
Homeowners with Credit Available Elsewhere ......................
Homeowners without Credit
Available Elsewhere ..............
Businesses with Credit Available Elsewhere ......................
Businesses without Credit
Available Elsewhere ..............
Non-Profit Organizations with
Credit Available Elsewhere ...
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere .....................................
For Economic Injury:
Business and Small Agricultural
Cooperatives without Credit
Available Elsewhere ..............
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere .....................................
5.625
2.813
8.000
4.000
3.250
3.250
4.000
3.250
The number assigned to this disaster
for physical damage is 205438 and for
economic injury is 205440.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 59008)
Francisco Sánchez, Jr.,
Associate Administrator, Office of Disaster
Recovery & Resilience.
[FR Doc. 2024–22408 Filed 9–30–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 12558]
Diversity Visa Instructions for DV–2026
Notice of Diversity Visa Program
for Fiscal Year 2026.
ACTION:
This public notice provides
information on how to apply for the
DV–2026 Program and is issued
pursuant to the Immigration and
Nationality Act.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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79997
Program Overiew
The Department of State annually
administers the statutorily created
Diversity Immigrant Visa Program.
Section 203(c) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA) provides for a
class of immigrants known as ‘‘diversity
immigrants’’ from countries with
historically low rates of immigration to
the United States. For Fiscal Year 2026,
up to 55,000 Diversity Visas (DVs) will
be available. There is no cost to register
for the DV program, but selectees who
are scheduled for an interview will be
required to pay a visa application fee
prior to making their formal visa
application where a consular officer will
determine whether they qualify for the
visa.
Applicants who are selected in the
program (selectees) must meet simple
but strict eligibility requirements to
qualify for a DV. The Department of
State determines selectees through a
randomized computer drawing. The
Department of State distributes diversity
visas among six geographic regions, and
no single country may receive more
than seven percent of the available DVs
in any one year.
For DV–2026, natives of the following
countries and areas are not eligible to
apply, because more than 50,000 natives
of these countries immigrated to the
United States in the previous five years:
Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, The
People’s Republic of China (including
mainland and Hong Kong born),
Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic,
El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, India,
Jamaica, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Philippines, Republic of Korea (South
Korea),Venezuela, Vietnam, Natives of
Macau SAR and Taiwan are eligible.
With the exception of Cuba, which is
not eligible for DV–2026, there were no
changes in eligibility from the previous
fiscal year.
Eligibility
Requirement One: Natives of
countries with historically low rates of
immigration to the United States may be
eligible to enter.
If you are not a native of a country
with historically low rates of
immigration to the United States, there
are two other ways you might be able to
qualify.
• Is your spouse a native of a country
with historically low rates of
immigration to the United States? If yes,
you can claim your spouse’s country of
birth—provided that you and your
spouse are named on the selected entry,
are found eligible and issued diversity
visas, and enter the United States at the
same time.
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• Are you a native of a country that
does not have historically low rates of
immigration to the United States, but in
which neither of your parents was born
or legally resident at the time of your
birth? If yes, you may claim the country
of birth of one of your parents if it is a
country whose natives are eligible for
the DV–2026 program. For more details
on what this means, see the Frequently
Asked Questions.
Requirement Two: Each DV entrant
must meet the education/work
experience requirement of the DV
program by having either:
• at least a high school education or
its equivalent, defined as successful
completion of a 12-year course of formal
elementary and secondary education;
OR
• two years of work experience
within the past five years in an
occupation that requires at least two
years of training or experience to
perform. The Department of State will
use the U.S. Department of Labor’s
O*Net Online database to determine
qualifying work experience. For more
information about qualifying work
experience, see the Frequently Asked
Questions.
You should not submit an entry to the
DV program unless you meet both of
these requirements.
Entry Period
Applicants must submit entries for
the DV–2026 program electronically at
dvprogram.state.gov between 12:00 p.m.
(noon), Eastern Daylight Time (EDT)
(GMT–4), Wednesday, October 4, 2023,
and 12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern Standard
Time (EST) (GMT–5), Tuesday,
November 7, 2023. Do not wait until the
last week of the registration period to
enter as heavy demand may result in
website delays. No late entries or paper
entries will be accepted. The law allows
only one entry per person during each
entry period. The Department of State
uses sophisticated technology to detect
multiple entries. Submission of more
than one entry for a person will
disqualify all entries for that person.
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Completing Your Electronic Entry for
the DV–2026 Program
Submit your Electronic Diversity Visa
Entry Form (E–DV Entry Form or DS–
5501), online at dvprogram.state.gov.
We will not accept incomplete entries or
entries sent by any other means. There
is no cost to submit the online entry
form. Please use an updated browser
when submitting your application; older
browsers (Internet Explorer 8, for
example) will likely encounter problems
with the online DV system.
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We strongly encourage you to
complete the entry form yourself,
without a ‘‘visa consultant,’’ ‘‘visa
agent,’’ or other person who offers to
help. If someone helps you, you should
be present when your entry is prepared
so that you can provide the correct
answers to the questions and keep your
unique confirmation number and a
printout of your confirmation screen. It
is extremely important that you have the
printout of your confirmation page and
unique confirmation number.
Unscrupulous visa facilitators have been
known to assist entrants with their
entries, keep the confirmation page
print out, and then demand more money
or illegal activities in exchange for the
confirmation number. Without this
information, you will not be able to
access the online system that informs
you of your entry status. Be wary if
someone offers to keep this information
for you. You also should have access to
the email account listed in your E–DV
entry. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about
DV program scams.
After you submit a complete entry,
you will see a confirmation screen
containing your name and a unique
confirmation number. Print this
confirmation screen for your records.
Starting May 4, 2025, you will be able
to check the status of your entry by
returning to dvprogram.state.gov,
clicking on Entrant Status Check, and
entering your unique confirmation
number and personal information. You
must use Entrant Status Check to check
if you have been selected for DV–2026
and, if selected, to view instructions on
how to proceed with your application.
The U.S. government will not inform
you directly. Entrant Status Check is the
sole source for instructions on how to
proceed with your application. If you
are selected and submit a visa
application and required documents,
you must use Entrant Status Check to
check your immigrant visa interview
appointment date. Please review the
Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about the selection process.
You must provide all of the following
information to complete your entry.
Failure to accurately include all the
required information may make you
ineligible for a DV.
1. Name—last/family name, first
name, middle name—exactly as it
appears on your passport, if you have a
passport (for example, if your passport
shows only your first and last/family
name, please list your last/family name
and then first name; do not include a
middle name unless it is included on
your passport. If your passport includes
a first, middle and last/family name,
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please list them in the following order:
last/family name, first name, middle
name). If you have only one name, it
must be entered in the last/family name
field.
2. Gender—male or female.
3. Birth date—day, month, year.
4. City where you were born.
5. Country where you were born—Use
the name of the country currently used
for the place where you were born.
6. Country of eligibility for the DV
program—Your country of eligibility
will normally be the same as your
country of birth. Your country of
eligibility is not related to where you
live or your nationality if it is different
from your country of birth.
If you were born in a country that is
not eligible, please review the
Frequently Asked Questions to see if
there is another way you may be
eligible.
7. Entrant photograph(s)—Recent
photographs (taken within the last six
months) of yourself, your spouse, and
all your derivative children included on
your entry. See Submitting a Digital
Photograph for compositional and
technical specifications. You do not
need to include a photograph for a
spouse or child who is already a U.S.
citizen or a Lawful Permanent Resident,
but you will not be penalized if you do.
DV entry photographs must meet the
same standards as U.S. visa photos. You
may be ineligible for a DV if the entry
photographs for you and your family
members do not fully meet these
specifications or have been manipulated
in any way. Submitting the same
photograph that was submitted with a
prior year’s entry will make you
ineligible for a DV. See Submitting a
Digital Photograph (below) for more
information.
8. Mailing Address—In Care Of
Address Line 1
Address Line 2
City/Town
District/Country/Province/State
Postal Code/Zip Code Country
9. Country where you live today.
10. Phone number (optional).
11. Email address—An email address
to which you have direct access and
will continue to have direct access
through May of the next year. If you
check the Entrant Status Check in May
and learn you have been selected, you
will later receive follow-up email
communication from the Department of
State with details if an immigrant visa
interview becomes available. The
Department of State will never send you
an email telling you that you have been
selected for the DV program. See the
Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about the selection process.
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12. Highest level of education you
have achieved, as of today: (1) Primary
school only, (2) Some high school, no
diploma, (3) High school diploma, (4)
Vocational school, (5) Some university
courses, (6) University degree, (7) Some
graduate-level courses, (8) Master’s
degree, (9) Some doctoral-level courses,
or (10) Doctorate. See the Frequently
Asked Questions for more information
about educational requirements.
13. Current marital status: (1)
unmarried, (2) married and my spouse
is NOT a U.S.citizen or U.S. Lawful
Permanent Resident (LPR), (3) married
and my spouse IS a U.S. citizen or U.S.
LPR, (4) divorced, (5) widowed, or (6)
legally separated. Enter the name, date
of birth, gender, city/town of birth, and
country of birth of your spouse, and a
photograph of your spouse meeting the
same technical specifications as your
photo.
Failure to list your eligible spouse or,
listing someone who is not your spouse,
may make you ineligible as the DV
principal applicant and your spouse and
children ineligible as DV derivative
applicants. You must list your spouse
even if you currently are separated from
them unless you are legally separated.
Legal separation is an arrangement
when a couple remain married but live
apart, following a court order. If you and
your spouse are legally separated, your
spouse will not be able to immigrate
with you through the DV program. You
will not be penalized if you choose to
enter the name of a spouse from whom
you are legally separated. If you are not
legally separated by a court order, you
must include your spouse even if you
plan to be divorced before you apply for
the Diversity Visa, or your spouse does
not intend to immigrate.
If your spouse is a U.S. citizen or
Lawful Permanent Resident, do not list
them in your entry. A spouse who is
already a U.S. citizen or LPR will not
require or be issued a visa.Therefore, if
you select ‘‘married and my spouse IS
a U.S. citizen or U.S. LPR’’ on your
entry, you will not be prompted to
include further information on your
spouse. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about
family members.
14. Number of children—List the
name, date of birth, gender, city/town of
birth, and country of birth for all living,
unmarried children under 21 years of
age, regardless of whether they are
living with you or intend to accompany
or follow to join you, should you
immigrate to the United States. Submit
individual photographs of each of your
children using the same technical
specifications as your own photograph.
Be sure to include:
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Æ all living natural children;
Æ all living children legally adopted
by you; and,
Æ all living stepchildren who are
unmarried and under the age of 21 on
the date of your electronic entry, even
if you are no longer legally married to
the child’s parent, and even if the child
does not currently reside with you and/
or will not immigrate with you. Married
children and children who are already
aged 21 or older when you submit your
entry are not eligible for the DVprogram.
However, the Child Status Protection
Act protects children from ‘‘aging out’’
in certain circumstances: if you submit
your DV entry before your unmarried
child turns 21, and the child turns 21
before visa issuance, it is possible that
he or she may be treated as though he
or she were under 21 for visa processing
purposes.
A child who is already a U.S. citizen
or LPR when you submit your DV entry
will not require or be issued a Diversity
Visa; you will not be penalized for
either including or omitting such family
members from your entry.
Failure to list all children who are
eligible or listing someone who is not
your child may make you ineligible for
a DV, in which case your spouse and
children will also be ineligible as
Diversity Visa derivative applicants. See
the Frequently Asked Questions for
more information about family
members.
See the Frequently Asked Questions
for more information about completing
your Electronic Entry for the DV–2026
Program.
Selection of Entries
Based on the allocations of available
visas in each region and country, the
Department of State will randomly
select individuals by computer from
among qualified entries. All DV–2026
entrants must go to the Entrant Status
Check using the unique confirmation
number saved from their DV–2026
online entry registration to find out
whether their entry has been selected in
the DV program. Entrant Status Check
will be available on the E–DV website
at dvprogram.state.gov from May 4,
2025, through at least September 30,
2026.
If your entry is selected, you will be
directed to a confirmation page
providing further instructions,
including information about fees
connected with immigration to the
United States. Entrant Status Check will
be the ONLY means by which the
Department of State notifies selectees of
their selection for DV–2026. The
Department of State will not mail
notification letters or notify selectees by
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79999
email. U.S. embassies and consulates
will not provide a list of selectees.
Individuals who have not been selected
also ONLY will be notified through
Entrant Status Check.You are strongly
encouraged to access Entrant Status
Check yourself. Do not rely on someone
else to check and inform you.
In order to immigrate, DV selectees
must be admissible to the United States.
The DS–260, Online Immigrant Visa and
Alien Registration Application,
electronically, and the consular officer,
in person, will ask you questions about
your eligibility to immigrate under U.S.
law. These questions include criminal
and security-related topics.
All selectees, including family
members, must be issued visas by
September 30, 2026, or prior to issuance
of the approximately 55,000 visas
available each year—whichever is
earlier. Under no circumstances can the
Department of State issue DVs nor can
USCIS approve adjustments after this
date, nor can family members obtain
DVs to follow-to-join the principal
applicant in the United States after this
date. The U.S. government only
authorizes issuance of approximately
55,000 diversity visas each year. Given
the limited number of visas available,
selectees should act promptly in
submitting their materials and pursuing
their application.
See the Frequently Asked Questions
for more information about the selection
process.
Submitting a Digital Photograph
You can take a new digital
photograph or scan a recent (taken
within the last six months) photograph
with a digital scanner if it meets all of
the standards below. DV entry photos
must be of the same quality and
composition as U.S. visa photos. You
can see examples of acceptable photos
at the following link: https://
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/usvisas/visa-information-resources/
photos/photo-examples.html. Do not
submit a photograph older than six
months or a photograph that does not
meet all the standards described below.
Submitting the same photograph that
you submitted with a prior year’s entry,
a photograph that has been
manipulated, or a photograph that does
not meet the specifications below may
make you ineligible for a DV.
Your photos or digital images must
be:
D In color
D In focus
D Sized such that the head is between
1 inch and 13⁄8 inches (22 mm and 35
mm) or 50 percent and 69 percent of
the image’s total height from the
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bottom of the chin to the top of the
head. View the Photo Composition
Template for more size requirement
details.
D Taken within the last six months to
reflect your current appearance.
D Taken in front of a plain white or offwhite background
D Taken in full-face view directly facing
the camera
D With a neutral facial expression and
both eyes open
D Taken in clothing that you normally
wear on a daily basis
D Uniforms should not be worn in your
photo, except religious clothing that is
worn daily.
D Do not wear a hat or head covering
that obscures the hair or hairline,
unless worn daily for a religious
purpose.Your full face must be
visible, and the head covering must
not cast any shadows on your face.
D Headphones, wireless hands-free
devices, or similar items are not
acceptable in your photo.
D Do not wear eyeglasses.
D If you normally wear a hearing device
or similar articles, they may be worn
in your photo.
Review the Photo Examples at this
link: https://travel.state.gov/content/
travel/en/us-visas/visa-informationresources/photos/photo-examples.html
to see examples of acceptable and
unacceptable photos. Photos copied or
digitally scanned from driver’s licenses
or other official documents are not
acceptable. In addition, snapshots,
magazine photos, low quality vending
machine, and full-length photographs
are not acceptable.
You must upload your digital image
as part of your entry. Your digital image
must be:
• In JPEG (.jpg) file format
• Equal to or less than 240 kB
(kilobytes) in file size
• In a square aspect ratio (height must
equal width)
• 600 x 600 pixels in dimension
Do you want to scan an existing
photo? In addition to the digital image
requirements, your existing photo must
be:
• 2 x 2 inches (51 x 51 mm)
• Scanned at a resolution of 300 pixels
per inch (12 pixels per millimeter)
Taking photos of your baby or
toddler—When taking a photo of your
baby or toddler, no other person should
be in the photo, and your child should
be looking at the camera with his or her
eyes open. Tip 1: Lay your baby on his
or her back on a plain white or off-white
sheet. This will ensure your baby’s head
is supported and provide a plain
background for the photo. Make certain
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there are no shadows on your baby’s
face, especially if you take a picture
from above with the baby lying down.
Tip 2: Cover a car seat with a plain
white or off-white sheet and take a
picture of your child in the car seat.
This will also ensure your baby’s head
is supported.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Eligiblity
1. What do the terms‘‘native’’, and
‘‘chargeability’’ mean?
Native ordinarily means someone
born in a particular country, regardless
of the individual’s current country of
residence or nationality. Native can also
mean someone who is entitled to be
charged to a country other than the one
in which he/she was born under the
provisions of Section 202(b) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act.
Because there is a numerical
limitation on immigrants who enter
from a country or geographic region,
each individual is charged to a country.
Your chargeability refers to the country
towards which limitation you count.
Your country of eligibility will normally
be the same as your country of birth.
However, you may choose your country
of eligibility as the country of birth of
your spouse, or the country of birth of
either of your parents if you were born
in a country in which neither parent
was born and in which your parents
were not resident at the time of your
birth. These are the only three ways to
select your country of chargeability.
Listing an incorrect country of
eligibility or chargeability (i.e., one to
which you cannot establish a valid
claim) may make you ineligible for DV–
2026.
2. Can I still apply if I was not born in
a qualifying country?
There are two circumstances in which
you still might be eligible to apply.
First, if your derivative spouse was born
in an eligible country, you may claim
chargeability to that country. As your
eligibility is based on your spouse, you
will only be issued an immigrant visa if
your spouse is also eligible for and
issued an immigrant visa. Both of you
must enter the United States together,
using your DVs. Similarly, your minor
dependent child can be ‘‘charged’’ to a
parent’s country of birth.
Second, you can be ‘‘charged’’ to the
country of birth of either of your parents
as long as neither of your parents was
born in or a resident of your country of
birth at the time of your birth. People
are not generally considered residents of
a country in which they were not born
or legally naturalized. For example,
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persons simply visiting, studying, or
temporarily working in a country are
not generally considered residents.
If you claim alternate chargeability
through either of the above, you must
provide an explanation on the E–DV
Entry Form, in question #6.
Listing an incorrect country of
eligibility or chargeability (i.e., one to
which you cannot establish a valid
claim) will make you ineligible for a DV.
3. Why do natives of certain countries
not qualify for the DV program?
DVs are intended to provide an
immigration opportunity for persons
who are not from ‘‘high admission’’
countries. U.S. law defines ‘‘high
admission countries’’ as those from
which a total of 50,000 persons in the
Family-Sponsored and EmploymentBased visa categories immigrated to the
United States during the previous five
years. Each year, the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) counts the
family and employment immigrant
admission and adjustment of status
numbers for the previous five years to
identify the countries that are
considered ‘‘high admission’’ and
whose natives will therefore be
ineligible for the annual Diversity Visa
program. Since DHS makes this
calculation annually, the list of
countries whose natives are eligible or
not eligible may change from one year
to the next.
4. How many DV–2026 visas will go to
natives of each region and eligible
country?
The Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) determines the regional
DV limits for each year according to a
formula specified in Section 203(c) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA). The number of visas the
Department of State eventually will
issue to natives of each country will
depend on the regional limits
established, how many entrants come
from each country, and how many of the
selected entrants are found eligible for
the visa. No more than seven percent of
the total visas available can go to natives
of any one country.
5. What are the requirements for
education or work experience?
U.S. immigration law and regulations
require that every DV entrant must have
at least a high school education or its
equivalent or have two years of work
experience within the past five years in
an occupation that requires at least two
years of training or experience. A ‘‘high
school education or equivalent’’ is
defined as successful completion of a
12-year course of elementary and
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secondary education in the United
States OR the successful completion in
another country of a formal course of
elementary and secondary education
comparable to a high school education
in the United States. Only formal
courses of study meet this requirement;
correspondence programs or
equivalency certificates (such as the
General Equivalency Diploma [G.E.D.])
are not acceptable. You must present
documentary proof of education or work
experience to the consular officer at the
time of the visa interview.
If you do not meet the requirements
for education or work experience you
will be ineligible for a DV, and your
spouse and children will be ineligible
for derivative DVs.
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6. What occupations qualify for the DV
program?
The Department of State will use the
U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) O*Net
OnLine database to determine
qualifying work experience. The O*Net
OnLine database categorizes job
experience into five ‘‘job zones.’’ While
the DOL website lists many
occupations, not all occupations qualify
for the DV program. To qualify for a DV
on the basis of your work experience,
you must have, within the past five
years, two years of experience in an
occupation classified in a Specific
Vocational Preparation (SVP) range of
7.0 or higher.
If you do not meet the requirements
for education or work experience, you
will be ineligible for a DV, and your
spouse and children will be ineligible
for derivative DVs.
7. How can I find the qualifying DV
occupations in the Department of
Labor’s O*Net OnLine database?
When you are in O*Net OnLine,
follow these steps to determine if your
occupation qualifies:
Æ Under ‘‘Find Occupations,’’select
‘‘Job Family’’ from the pull down menu;
Æ Browse by ‘‘Job Family,’’ make your
selection, and click ‘‘GO’’.
Æ Click on the link for your specific
occupation; and
Æ Select the tab ‘‘Job Zone’’ to find
the designated Job Zone number and
Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP)
rating range.
As an example, select Aerospace
Engineers. At the bottom of the
Summary Report for Aerospace
Engineers, under the Job Zone section,
you will find the designated Job Zone 4,
SVP Range, 7.0 to <8.0. Using this
example, Aerospace Engineering is a
qualifying occupation.
For additional information, see the
Diversity Visa—List of Occupations web
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page: https://travel.state.gov/content/
travel/en/us-visas/immigrate/diversityvisa-program-entry/diversity-visa-if-youare-selected/diversity-visa-confirm-yourqualifications.html.
8. Is there a minimum age to apply for
the E–DV Program?
There is no minimum age to apply,
but the requirement of a high school
education or work experience for each
principal applicant at the time of
application will effectively disqualify
most persons who are under age 18.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for
the DV–2026 Program
9. When can I submit my entry?
The DV–2026 entry period will run
from 12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern Daylight
Time (EDT) (GMT–4), Wednesday,
October 4, 2024, until 12:00 p.m. (noon),
Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT–5),
Tuesday, November 7, 2024. Each year,
millions of people submit entries.
Restricting the entry period to these
dates ensures selectees receive
notification in a timely manner and
gives both the visa applicants and our
embassies and consulates time to
prepare and complete cases for visa
issuance.
We strongly encourage you to enter
early during the registration period.
Excessive demand at end of the
registration period may slow the
processing system. We cannot accept
entries after noon EST on Tuesday,
November 7, 2024.
10. I am in the United States. Can I
enter the DV program?
Yes, an entrant may apply while in
the United States or another country. An
entrant may submit an entry from any
location.
11. Can I only enter once during the
registration period?
Yes, the law allows only one entry per
person during each registration period.
The Department of State uses
sophisticated technology to detect
multiple entries. Individuals with more
than one entry will be ineligible for a
DV.
12. May my spouse and I each submit
a separate entry?
Yes, each spouse may each submit
one entry if each meets the eligibility
requirements. If either spouse is
selected, the other is entitled to apply as
a derivative dependent.
13. Which family members must I
include in my DV entry?
Spouse: If you are legally married,
you must list your spouse regardless of
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whether they live with you or intend to
immigrate to the United States. You
must list your spouse even if you
currently are separated from them
unless you are legally separated. Legal
separation is an arrangement when a
couple remains married but lives apart,
following a court order. If you and your
spouse are legally separated, your
spouse will not be able to immigrate
with you through the Diversity Visa
program. You will not be penalized if
you choose to enter the name of a
spouse from whom you are legally
separated. If you are not legally
separated by a court order, you must
include your spouse even if you plan to
be divorced before you apply for the
Diversity Visa, or your spouse does not
intend to immigrate. Failure to list your
eligible spouse or listing someone who
is not your spouse will make you
ineligible for a DV. If you are not
married at the time of entry but plan on
getting married in the future, do not list
a spouse on your entry form, as this
would make you ineligible for a DV.
If you are divorced or your spouse is
deceased, you do not have to list your
former spouse.
The only exception to this
requirement is if your spouse is already
a U.S. citizen or U.S. Lawful Permanent
Resident. If your spouse is a U.S. citizen
or Lawful Permanent Resident, do not
list them in your entry. A spouse who
is already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful
Permanent Resident will not require or
be issued a DV. Therefore, if you select
‘‘married and my spouse IS a U.S.
citizen or U.S. LPR’’ on your entry, you
will not be able to include further
information on your spouse.
Children: You must list ALL your
living children who are unmarried and
under 21 years of age at the time of your
initial DV entry, whether they are your
natural children, your stepchildren
(even if you are now divorced from that
child’s parent), your spouse’s children,
or children you have formally adopted
in accordance with the applicable laws.
List all children under 21 years of age
at the time of your electronic entry, even
if they no longer reside with you or you
do not intend for them to immigrate
under the DV program.You are not
required to list children who are already
U.S. citizens or Lawful Permanent
Residents, though you will not be
penalized if you do include them.
Parents and siblings of the entrant are
ineligible to receive DV visas as
dependents, and you should not include
them in your entry.
If you list family members on your
entry, they are not required to apply for
a visa or to immigrate or travel with
you. However, if you fail to include an
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eligible dependent on your original
entry or list someone who is not your
dependent, you may be ineligible for a
DV, in which case your spouse and
children will be ineligible for derivative
DVs. This only applies to those who
were family members at the time the
entry was submitted, not those acquired
at a later date. Your spouse, if eligible
to enter, may still submit a separate
entry even though they are listed on
your entry, and both entries must
include details about all dependents in
your family (see FAQ #13 above).
14. Must I submit my own entry, or can
someone else do it for me?
We encourage you to prepare and
submit your own entry, but you may
have someone submit the entry for you.
Regardless of whether you submit your
own entry, or an attorney, friend,
relative, or someone else submits it on
your behalf, only one entry may be
submitted in your name. You, as the
entrant, are responsible for ensuring that
information in the entry is correct and
complete; entries that are not correct or
complete may be disqualified. Entrants
should keep their confirmation number,
so they are able to check the status of
their entry independently, using Entrant
Status Check at dvprogram.state.gov.
Entrants should retain access to the
email account used in the E–DV
submission.
15. I’m already registered for an
immigrant visa in another category. Can
I still apply for the DV program?
Yes.
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16. Can I download and save the E–DV
entry form into a word processing
program and finish it later?
No, you will not be able to save the
form into another program for
completion and submission later. The
E–DV Entry Form is a web-form only.
You must fill in the information and
submit it while online.
17. Can I save the form online and finish
it later?
No. The E–DV Entry Form is designed
to be completed and submitted at one
time. You will have 60 minutes, starting
from when you download the form, to
complete and submit your entry through
the E–DV website. If you exceed the 60minute limit and have not submitted
your complete entry electronically, the
system discards any information already
entered. The system deletes any partial
entries so that they are not accidentally
identified as duplicates of a later,
complete entry. Read the DV
instructions completely before you start
to complete the form online so that you
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know exactly what information you will
need.
18. I don’t have a scanner. Can I send
photographs to someone else to scan
them, save them, and email them back
to me so I can use them in my entry?
Yes, as long as the photograph meets
the requirements in the instructions and
is electronically submitted with, and at
the same time as, the E–DV online entry.
You must already have the scanned
photograph file when you submit the
entry online; it cannot be submitted
separately from the online application.
The entire entry (photograph and
application together) can be submitted
electronically from the United States or
from overseas.
19. If the E–DV system rejects my entry,
can I resubmit my entry?
Yes, you can resubmit your entry as
long as your submission is completed by
12:00 p.m. (noon) Eastern Standard
Time (EST) (GMT–5) on Tuesday,
November 7, 2023. You will not be
penalized for submitting a duplicate
entry if the E–DV system rejects your
initial entry. Given the unpredictable
nature of the internet, you may not
receive the rejection notice
immediately. You can try to submit an
application as many times as is
necessary until a complete application
is received and the confirmation notice
sent. Once you receive a confirmation
notice, your entry is complete, and you
should NOT submit any additional
entries.
20. How soon after I submit my entry
will I receive the electronic
confirmation notice?
You should receive the confirmation
notice immediately, including a
confirmation number that you must
record and keep. However, the
unpredictable nature of the internet can
result in delays. You can hit the
‘‘Submit’’ button as many times as is
necessary until a complete application
is sent and you receive the confirmation
notice. However, once you receive a
confirmation notice, do not resubmit
your information.
21. I hit the ‘‘Submit’’ button but did not
receive a confirmation number. If I
submit another entry, will I be
disqualified?
If you did not receive a confirmation
number, your entry was not recorded.
You must submit another entry. It will
not be counted as a duplicate. Once you
receive a confirmation number, do not
resubmit your information.
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Selection
22. How do I know if I am selected?
You must use your confirmation
number to access the Entrant Status
Check available on the E–DV website at
dvprogram.state.gov from May 4, 2025,
through September 30, 2026. Entrant
Status Check is the sole means by which
the Department of State will notify you
if you are selected, provide further
instructions on your visa application,
and notify you of your immigrant visa
interview appointment date and time.
To ensure the use of all available visas,
the Department of State may use Entrant
Status Check to notify additional
selectees after May 4, 2025. Retain your
confirmation number until September
30, 2026, in case of any updates. The
only authorized Department of State
website for official online entry in the
Diversity Visa Program and Entrant
Status Check is dvprogram.state.gov.
The Department of State will NOT
contact you to tell you that you have
been selected (see FAQ #25).
23. How will I know if I am not
selected? Will I be notified?
The Department of State will NOT
notify you directly if your entry is not
selected. You must use the Entrant
Status Check to learn whether you were
selected. You may check the status of
your DV–2026 entry through the Entrant
Status Check on the E–DV website from
May 4, 2025, until September 30, 2026.
Keep your confirmation number until at
least September 30, 2026. (Status
information for the previous year’s DV
program, DV–2024, is available online
through September 30, 2024.)
24. What if I lose my confirmation
number?
You must have your confirmation
number to access Entrant Status Check.
A tool is now available in Entrant Status
Check on the E–DV website that will
allow you to retrieve your confirmation
number via the email address with
which you registered by entering certain
personal information to confirm your
identity.
U.S. embassies and consulates and the
Kentucky Consular Center are unable to
check your selection status for you or
provide your confirmation number to
you directly (other than through the
Entrant Status Check retrieval tool). The
Department of State is NOT able to
provide a list of those selected to
continue the visa process.
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25. Will I receive information from the
Department of State by email or by
postal mail?
The Department of State will not send
you a notification letter. The U.S.
government has never sent emails to
notify individuals that they have been
selected, and there are no plans to use
email for this purpose for the DV–2026
program. If you are a selectee, you will
only receive email communications
regarding your visa appointment after
you have responded to the notification
instructions on Entrant Status Check, if
an immigrant visa interview becomes
available. These emails will not contain
information on the actual appointment
date and time; they will simply tell you
to go to the Entrant Status Check
website for details. The Department of
State may send emails reminding DV
program applicants to check the Entrant
Status Check for their status. However,
such emails will never indicate whether
the DV program applicant was selected
or not.
Only internet sites that end with the
‘‘.gov’’ domain suffix are official U.S.
government websites. Many other
websites (e.g., with the suffixes ‘‘.com,’’
‘‘.org,’’ or ‘‘.net’’) provide immigration
and visa-related information and
services. The Department of State does
not endorse, recommend, or sponsor
any information or material on these
other websites.
Warning: You may receive emails
from websites that try to trick you into
sending money or providing your
personal information. You may be asked
to pay for forms and information about
immigration procedures, all of which
are available free on the Department of
State website, travel.state.gov, or
through U.S. embassy or consulate
websites. Additionally, organizations or
websites may try to steal your money by
charging fees for DV-related services. If
you send money to one of these nongovernment organizations or websites,
you will likely never see it again. Also,
do not send personal information to
these websites, as it may be used for
identity fraud/theft.
Deceptive emails may come from
people pretending to be affiliated with
the Kentucky Consular Center or the
Department of State. Remember that the
U.S. government has never sent emails
to notify individuals they have been
selected, and there are no plans to use
email for this purpose for the DV–2026
program.The Department of State will
never ask you to send money by mail or
by services such as Western Union,
although applications to USCIS for
adjustments of status do require mailing
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a fee. Visit this site for more details on
adjusting status.
26. How many individuals will be
selected for DV–2026?
For DV–2026, 55,000 Diversity Visas
are available. The Department of State
selects more than 55,000 selectees to
account for selectees who will not
qualify for visas and those who will not
pursue their cases to completion. This
means there will not be a sufficient
number of visas for all those selected.
The Department does this to try to use
as many of the 55,000 DVs as we can.
You can check the E–DV website’s
Entrant Status Check to see if you have
been selected for further processing and
later to see the status of your case.
Interviews for the DV–2026 program
will begin in October 2025 for selectees
who have submitted all pre-interview
paperwork and other information as
requested in the notification
instructions. Selectees whose
applications have been fully processed
and have been scheduled for a visa
interview appointment will receive a
notification to obtain details through the
E–DV website’s Entrant Status Check
four to six weeks before the scheduled
interviews with U.S. consular officers
overseas.
Each month, visas may be issued to
those applicants who are eligible for
issuance during that month, as long as
visas are available. Once all the 55,000
diversity visas have been issued, the
program will end. Visa numbers could
be finished before September 2026.
Selected applicants who wish to apply
for visas must be prepared to act
promptly on their cases. Being
randomly chosen as a selectee does not
guarantee that you will receive a visa or
even the chance to make a visa
application or to schedule a visa
interview. Selection merely means that
you may be eligible to apply for a
Diversity Visa. If your rank number
becomes eligible for final processing,
you may have the chance to make an
application and potentially maybe
issued a Diversity Visa. A maximum of
55,000 visas may be issued to such
applicants.
27. How will successful entrants be
selected?
Official notifications of selection will
be made through Entrant Status Check,
available May 4, 2025, through
September 30, 2026, on the E–DV
website, dvprogram.state.gov. The
Department of State does not send
selectee notifications or letters by
regular postal mail or by email. Any
email notification or mailed letter
stating that you have been selected to
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receive a DV that does not come from
the Department of State is not
legitimate. Any email communication
you receive from the Department of
State will direct you to review Entrant
Status Check for new information about
your application. The Department of
State will never ask you to send money
by mail or by services such as Western
Union unless you are adjusting status.
See this site for more information on
adjusting status.
All entries received from each region
are individually numbered; at the end of
the entry period, a computer will
randomly select entries from among all
the entries received for each geographic
region. Within each region, the first
entry randomly selected will be the first
case registered; the second entry
selected will be the second case
registered, etc. All entries received
within each region during the entry
period will have an equal chance of
being selected. When an entry has been
selected, the entrant will receive
notification of his or her selection
through the Entrant Status Check
available starting May 4, 2025, on the E–
DV website, dvprogram.state.gov. For
individuals who are selected and who
respond to the instructions provided
online via Entrant Status Check, the
Department of State’s Kentucky
Consular Center (KCC) will process the
case until those selected are instructed
to appear for visa interviews at a U.S.
embassy or consulate or until those in
the United States who are applying to
adjust status apply with USCIS in the
United States.
28. I am already in the United States. If
selected, may I adjust my status with
USCIS?
Yes, provided you are otherwise
eligible to adjust status under the terms
of Section 245 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA), you may apply to
USCIS for adjustment of status to
permanent resident. You must ensure
that USCIS can complete action on your
case, including processing of any
overseas applications for a spouse or for
children under 21 years of age, before
September 30, 2026, since on that date
your eligibility for the DV–2026
program expires. The Department of
State will not approve any visa numbers
or adjustments of status for the DV–2026
program after midnight EDT on
September 30, 2026.
29. If I am selected, for how long am I
entitled to apply for a Diversity Visa?
If you are selected in the DV–2026
program, you may apply for visa
issuance only during U.S. government
fiscal year 2026, which is from October
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1, 2025, through September 30, 2026.
We encourage selectees to apply for
visas as early as possible once their
program rank numbers become eligible.
As noted above, once all the 55,000
diversity visas have been issued, the
program will end.
Without exception, all selected and
eligible applicants must obtain their
visa or adjust status by the end of the
fiscal year. There is no carry-over of DV
benefits into the next year for persons
who are selected but who do not obtain
visas by September 30, 2026 (the end of
the fiscal year). Also, spouses and
children who derive status from a DV–
2026 registration can only obtain visas
in the DV category between October 1,
2025, and September 30, 2026.
Individuals who apply overseas will
receive an appointment notification
from the Department of State through
Entrant Status Check on the E–DV
website four to six weeks before the
scheduled appointment.
30. If a DV selectee dies, what happens
to the case?
If a DV selectee dies at any point
before he or she has traveled to the
United States or adjusted status, the DV
case is automatically closed. Any
derivative spouse and/or children of the
deceased selectee will no longer be
entitled to apply for a DV visa. Any
visas issued to them will be revoked.
Fees
31. How much does it cost to enter the
Diversity Visa program?
There is no fee charged to submit an
electronic entry. However, if you are
selected and apply for a DiversityVisa,
you must pay all required visa
application fees at the time of visa
application and interview directly to the
consular cashier at the U.S. embassy or
consulate. If you are a selectee already
in the United States and you apply to
USCIS to adjust status, you will pay all
required fees directly to USCIS. If you
are selected, you will receive details of
required fees with the instructions
provided through the E–DV website at
dvprogram.state.gov.
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32. How and where do I pay DV and
immigrant visa fees if I am selected?
If you are a randomly selected entrant,
you will receive instructions for the DV
application process through Entrant
Status Check at dvprogram.state.gov.
You will pay all fees in person only at
the U.S. embassy or consulate at the
time of the visa application and
interview. The consular cashier will
immediately give you a U.S. government
receipt for payment. Do not send money
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for DV fees to anyone through the mail,
Western Union, or any other delivery
service if you are applying for an
immigrant visa at a U.S. embassy or
consulate.
If you are selected and are already
present in the United States and plan to
file for adjustment of status with USCIS,
the instructions page accessible through
Entrant Status Check at
dvprogram.state.gov contains separate
instructions on how to mail adjustment
of status application fees to a U.S. bank.
33. If I apply for a DV, but don’t qualify
to receive one, can I get a refund of the
visa fees I paid?
No. Visa application fees cannot be
refunded. You must meet all
qualifications for the visa as detailed in
these instructions. If a consular officer
determines you do not meet
requirements for the visa, or you are
otherwise ineligible for the DV under
U.S. law, the officer cannot issue a visa
and you will forfeit all fees paid.
Ineligibilites
34. As a DV applicant, can I receive a
waiver of any grounds of visa
ineligibility? Does my waiver
application receive any special
processing?
DV applicants are subject to all
grounds of ineligibility for immigrant
visas specified in the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA). There are no
special provisions for the waiver of any
ground of visa ineligibility aside from
those ordinarily provided in the INA,
nor is there special processing for
waiver requests. Some general waiver
provisions for people with close
relatives who are U.S.citizens or Lawful
Permanent Resident aliens may be
available to DV applicants in some
cases, but the time constraints in the DV
program may make it difficult for
applicants to benefit from such
provisions.
Statistics
36. How many visas will be issued in
DV–2026?
By law, a maximum of 55,000 visas
are available each year to eligible
persons.
Miscellaneous
37. If I receive a visa through the DV
program, will the U.S. government pay
for my airfare to the United States, help
me find housing and employment, and/
or provide healthcare or any subsidies
until I am fully settled?
No. The U.S. government will not
provide any of these services to you if
you receive a visa through the DV
program. If you are selected to apply for
a DV, before being issued a visa you
must demonstrate that you will not
become a public charge in the United
States. If you are selected and submit a
diversity visa application, you should
familiarize yourself with the
Department of State’s public guidance
on how the likelihood of becoming a
public charge is assessed and what
evidence can be provided to
demonstrate that you are not likely to
become a public charge.
Fraud Warning and Scams
List of Countries/Areas by Region
Whose Natives Are Eligible for DV–
2026
The list below shows the countries
and areas whose natives are eligible for
DV–2026, grouped by geographic region.
Dependent areas overseas are included
within the region of the governing
country. DHS identified the countries
whose natives are not eligible for the
DV–2026 program according to the
formula in Section 203(c) of the INA.
The countries whose natives are not
eligible for the DV program (because
they are the principal source countries
of Family-Sponsored and EmploymentBased immigration or ‘‘high-admission’’
countries) are noted after the respective
regional lists.
35. How can I report internet fraud or
unsolicited emails?
Please visit the econsumer.gov
website, hosted by the Federal Trade
Commission in cooperation with
consumer-protection agencies from 36
nations. You also may report fraud to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Internet Crime Complaint Center. To file
a complaint about unsolicited email, use
the ‘‘Telemarking and Spam’’ complaint
tool on the econsumer.gov website or
visit the Department of Justice
Unsolicited Commercial Email
(‘‘Spam’’) web page for additional
information and contacts.
Africa
Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Cabo Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Cote D’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Djibouti
Egypt *
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Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Eswatini
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia, The
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
In Africa, natives of Nigeria are not
eligible for this year’s Diversity Visa
program.
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Asia
Afghanistan
Bahrain
Bhutan
Brunei
Burma
Cambodia
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel *
Japan ***
Jordan *
Kuwait
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Nepal
North Korea
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Sri Lanka
Syria *
Taiwan **
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Thailand
Timor-Leste
United Arab Emirates
Yemen
* Persons born in the areas
administered prior to June 1967 by
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are
chargeable, respectively, to Israel,
Jordan, Syria, and Egypt. Persons born
in the Gaza Strip are chargeable to
Egypt; persons born in the West Bank
are chargeable to Jordan; persons born
in the Golan Heights are chargeable to
Syria.
** Macau S.A.R. (Europe region,
chargeable to Portugal) and Taiwan
(Asia region) do qualify and are listed.
For the purposes of the diversity
program only, persons born in Macau
S.A.R. derive eligibility from Portugal.
*** Persons born in the Habomai
Islands, Shikotan, Kunashiri, and
Etorofuare chargeable to Japan. Persons
born in Southern Sakhalin are
chargeable to Russia.
Natives of the following Asia Region
countries are not eligible for this year’s
Diversity Visa program: Bangladesh,
China (including Hong Kong), India,
Pakistan, South Korea, Philippines, and
Vietnam.
Europe
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Estonia
Finland
France (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macau Special Administrative Region **
North Macedonia
Malta
Moldova
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80005
Monaco
Montenegro
Netherlands (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Northern Ireland ***
Norway (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Poland
Portugal (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Romania
Russia ****
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tajikistan
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
United Kingdom (including dependent
areas)
Uzbekistan
Vatican City
** Macau S.A.R. does qualify and is
listed above and for the purposes of the
diversity program only; persons born in
Macau S.A.R. derive eligibility from
Portugal.
*** For purposes of the diversity
program only, Northern Ireland is
treated separately. Northern Ireland
does qualify and is listed among the
qualifying areas.
**** Persons born in the Habomai
Islands, Shikotan, Kunashiri, and
Etorofu are chargeable to Japan. Persons
born in Southern Sakhalin are
chargeable to Russia.
North America
Bahamas, The
In North America, natives of Canada
and Mexico are not eligible for this
year’s DV program.
Oceaania
Australia (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Fiji
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia, Federated States of
Nauru
New Zealand (including components
and dependent areas overseas)
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Solomon Islands
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
South American, Central America, and
the Caribbean
Antigua and Barbuda
E:\FR\FM\01OCN1.SGM
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80006
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 1, 2024 / Notices
Argentina
Barbados
Belize
Bolivia
Chile
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominica
Ecuador
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
Uruguay
Countries in this region whose natives
are not eligible for this year’s DV
program:
Brazil, Colombia, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras,
Jamaica, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Rena E. Bitter,
Assistant Secretary, Consular Affairs,
Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2024–22482 Filed 9–30–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 12556]
Meeting of the United States-Chile
Environmental Affairs Council and
Joint Commission for Environmental
Cooperation
Notice of the upcoming United
States-Chile Environmental Affairs
Council and Joint Commission for
Environmental Cooperation meetings
and request for comments; invitation to
public session.
ACTION:
The Department of State and
the Office of the United States Trade
Representative are providing notice that
the parties to the United States-Chile
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) intend to
hold the tenth meeting of the
Environmental Affairs Council (Council)
established under Chapter 19 of the
FTA, as well as the eighth meeting of
the United States-Chile Joint
Commission for Environmental
Cooperation (Commission) established
under the United States-Chile
Environmental Cooperation Agreement
(ECA), on October 29, 2024. The
Council will review implementation of
Chapter 19 (Environment) of the FTA,
and the Commission will review
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SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:42 Sep 30, 2024
Jkt 265001
implementation of the ECA. During the
Council and Commission meetings,
Members will discuss the progress made
in implementing Chapter 19 obligations
and the impacts of environmental
cooperation. The Commission will also
review activities completed under the
Environmental Cooperation Work
Program for 2021–2024 and approve the
Environmental Cooperation Work
Program for 2025–2028. More
information on the Council and
Commission is included below under
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
DATES: The public session of the
Council and Commission will be held
on October 30, 2024, from 10:00 a.m. to
12:00 noon Chile Standard Time (9:00
a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Eastern Daylight
Time). Please contact Bradley Blecker
and Tia Potskhverashvili for the
location of this meeting and connection
information for virtual participation. We
request RSVPs and any written
comments no later than October 21,
2024, in order to facilitate
consideration.
ADDRESSES: Written comments or
questions should use ‘‘United StatesChile EAC/JCEC Meetings’’ as the
subject line and be submitted to both:
(1) Bradley Blecker, U.S. Department
of State, Bureau of Oceans and
International Environmental and
Scientific Affairs, Office of
Environmental Quality, by email to
BleckerBT@state.gov and
(2) Tia Potskhverashvili, Office of
Environment and Natural Resources,
Office of the United States Trade
Representative, by email to tiapots@
ustr.eop.gov.
In your email, please include your full
name and organization.
If you have access to the internet, you
can view and comment on this notice by
going to: https://www.regulations.gov/
#!home and searching for docket
number DOS–2024–0037.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bradley Blecker, (202) 394–3316,
BleckerBT@state.gov or Tia
Potskhverashvili, (202) 395–5414,
tiapots@ustr.eop.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
United States and Chile negotiated the
United States-Chile FTA and United
States-Chile ECA in concert, signing the
FTA on June 6, 2003, in Miami, USA
and the ECA on June 17, 2003, in
Santiago, Chile. Article 19.3 of the FTA
establishes an Environment Affairs
Council (Council). The Council
discusses implementation of Chapter 19
of the FTA, and its meetings include a
public session. The Joint Commission
for Environmental Cooperation
(Commission) was established in Article
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
II of the ECA. The Commission
evaluates cooperative activities under
the ECA, recommends options for
improving cooperation, and establishes
work programs that reflect national
priorities and that identify the scope
and focus of environmental cooperation
activities. Commission meetings also
include a public session.
The Council and Commission last met
in August 2022 in Washington, DC,
USA. The Council reviewed the
implementation of the Environment
Chapter of the FTA. The Commission
approved the 2021–2024 Work Program,
which built on previous successes and
identified activities to achieve the longterm goals of: (1) strengthening effective
implementation and enforcement of
environmental laws and regulations; (2)
encouraging development and adoption
of sound environmental practices and
technologies, particularly in business
enterprises; (3) promoting sustainable
development and management of
environmental resources, including
wild fauna and flora, protected wild
areas, and other ecologically important
ecosystems; and (4) encouraging civil
society participation in the
environmental decision-making process
and environmental education.
If you would like to attend the public
session, please notify Bradley Blecker
and Tia Potskhverashvili at the email
addresses listed above under the
heading ADDRESSES and RSVP. Please
include your full name and identify any
organization or group you represent. In
preparing comments, we encourage
submitters to refer to:
• Chapter 19 of the FTA and
• the ECA.
These documents are available at:
https://www.state.gov/key-topics-officeof-environmental-quality-andtransboundary-issues/current-tradeagreements-with-environmentalchapters/#chile and https://ustr.gov/
issue-areas/environment/bilateral-andregional-trade-agreements. Visit https://
www.state.gov and the USTR website at
www.ustr.gov for more information.
All interested persons are invited to
attend the Council and Commission
joint public session in person beginning
at 10:00 a.m. Chile Standard Time (9:00
a.m. Eastern Daylight Time) on October
30, 2024, in Santiago, Chile. There will
also be a link provided for those that
would like to participate virtually.
Attendees will have the opportunity to
ask questions and discuss
implementation of Chapter 19 and the
ECA with Council and Commission
Members and environmental
cooperation implementers. At the public
session, the Council will receive input
from the public on current
E:\FR\FM\01OCN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 190 (Tuesday, October 1, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 79997-80006]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-22482]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 12558]
Diversity Visa Instructions for DV-2026
ACTION: Notice of Diversity Visa Program for Fiscal Year 2026.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This public notice provides information on how to apply for
the DV-2026 Program and is issued pursuant to the Immigration and
Nationality Act.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Program Overiew
The Department of State annually administers the statutorily
created Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. Section 203(c) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) provides for a class of
immigrants known as ``diversity immigrants'' from countries with
historically low rates of immigration to the United States. For Fiscal
Year 2026, up to 55,000 Diversity Visas (DVs) will be available. There
is no cost to register for the DV program, but selectees who are
scheduled for an interview will be required to pay a visa application
fee prior to making their formal visa application where a consular
officer will determine whether they qualify for the visa.
Applicants who are selected in the program (selectees) must meet
simple but strict eligibility requirements to qualify for a DV. The
Department of State determines selectees through a randomized computer
drawing. The Department of State distributes diversity visas among six
geographic regions, and no single country may receive more than seven
percent of the available DVs in any one year.
For DV-2026, natives of the following countries and areas are not
eligible to apply, because more than 50,000 natives of these countries
immigrated to the United States in the previous five years: Bangladesh,
Brazil, Canada, The People's Republic of China (including mainland and
Hong Kong born), Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador,
Haiti, Honduras, India, Jamaica, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Philippines, Republic of Korea (South Korea),Venezuela, Vietnam,
Natives of Macau SAR and Taiwan are eligible. With the exception of
Cuba, which is not eligible for DV-2026, there were no changes in
eligibility from the previous fiscal year.
Eligibility
Requirement One: Natives of countries with historically low rates
of immigration to the United States may be eligible to enter.
If you are not a native of a country with historically low rates of
immigration to the United States, there are two other ways you might be
able to qualify.
Is your spouse a native of a country with historically low
rates of immigration to the United States? If yes, you can claim your
spouse's country of birth--provided that you and your spouse are named
on the selected entry, are found eligible and issued diversity visas,
and enter the United States at the same time.
[[Page 79998]]
Are you a native of a country that does not have
historically low rates of immigration to the United States, but in
which neither of your parents was born or legally resident at the time
of your birth? If yes, you may claim the country of birth of one of
your parents if it is a country whose natives are eligible for the DV-
2026 program. For more details on what this means, see the Frequently
Asked Questions.
Requirement Two: Each DV entrant must meet the education/work
experience requirement of the DV program by having either:
at least a high school education or its equivalent,
defined as successful completion of a 12-year course of formal
elementary and secondary education;
OR
two years of work experience within the past five years in
an occupation that requires at least two years of training or
experience to perform. The Department of State will use the U.S.
Department of Labor's O*Net Online database to determine qualifying
work experience. For more information about qualifying work experience,
see the Frequently Asked Questions.
You should not submit an entry to the DV program unless you meet
both of these requirements.
Entry Period
Applicants must submit entries for the DV-2026 program
electronically at dvprogram.state.gov between 12:00 p.m. (noon),
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) (GMT-4), Wednesday, October 4, 2023, and
12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT-5), Tuesday,
November 7, 2023. Do not wait until the last week of the registration
period to enter as heavy demand may result in website delays. No late
entries or paper entries will be accepted. The law allows only one
entry per person during each entry period. The Department of State uses
sophisticated technology to detect multiple entries. Submission of more
than one entry for a person will disqualify all entries for that
person.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for the DV-2026 Program
Submit your Electronic Diversity Visa Entry Form (E-DV Entry Form
or DS-5501), online at dvprogram.state.gov. We will not accept
incomplete entries or entries sent by any other means. There is no cost
to submit the online entry form. Please use an updated browser when
submitting your application; older browsers (Internet Explorer 8, for
example) will likely encounter problems with the online DV system.
We strongly encourage you to complete the entry form yourself,
without a ``visa consultant,'' ``visa agent,'' or other person who
offers to help. If someone helps you, you should be present when your
entry is prepared so that you can provide the correct answers to the
questions and keep your unique confirmation number and a printout of
your confirmation screen. It is extremely important that you have the
printout of your confirmation page and unique confirmation number.
Unscrupulous visa facilitators have been known to assist entrants with
their entries, keep the confirmation page print out, and then demand
more money or illegal activities in exchange for the confirmation
number. Without this information, you will not be able to access the
online system that informs you of your entry status. Be wary if someone
offers to keep this information for you. You also should have access to
the email account listed in your E-DV entry. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about DV program scams.
After you submit a complete entry, you will see a confirmation
screen containing your name and a unique confirmation number. Print
this confirmation screen for your records. Starting May 4, 2025, you
will be able to check the status of your entry by returning to
dvprogram.state.gov, clicking on Entrant Status Check, and entering
your unique confirmation number and personal information. You must use
Entrant Status Check to check if you have been selected for DV-2026
and, if selected, to view instructions on how to proceed with your
application. The U.S. government will not inform you directly. Entrant
Status Check is the sole source for instructions on how to proceed with
your application. If you are selected and submit a visa application and
required documents, you must use Entrant Status Check to check your
immigrant visa interview appointment date. Please review the Frequently
Asked Questions for more information about the selection process.
You must provide all of the following information to complete your
entry. Failure to accurately include all the required information may
make you ineligible for a DV.
1. Name--last/family name, first name, middle name--exactly as it
appears on your passport, if you have a passport (for example, if your
passport shows only your first and last/family name, please list your
last/family name and then first name; do not include a middle name
unless it is included on your passport. If your passport includes a
first, middle and last/family name, please list them in the following
order: last/family name, first name, middle name). If you have only one
name, it must be entered in the last/family name field.
2. Gender--male or female.
3. Birth date--day, month, year.
4. City where you were born.
5. Country where you were born--Use the name of the country
currently used for the place where you were born.
6. Country of eligibility for the DV program--Your country of
eligibility will normally be the same as your country of birth. Your
country of eligibility is not related to where you live or your
nationality if it is different from your country of birth.
If you were born in a country that is not eligible, please review
the Frequently Asked Questions to see if there is another way you may
be eligible.
7. Entrant photograph(s)--Recent photographs (taken within the last
six months) of yourself, your spouse, and all your derivative children
included on your entry. See Submitting a Digital Photograph for
compositional and technical specifications. You do not need to include
a photograph for a spouse or child who is already a U.S. citizen or a
Lawful Permanent Resident, but you will not be penalized if you do. DV
entry photographs must meet the same standards as U.S. visa photos. You
may be ineligible for a DV if the entry photographs for you and your
family members do not fully meet these specifications or have been
manipulated in any way. Submitting the same photograph that was
submitted with a prior year's entry will make you ineligible for a DV.
See Submitting a Digital Photograph (below) for more information.
8. Mailing Address--In Care Of
Address Line 1
Address Line 2
City/Town
District/Country/Province/State
Postal Code/Zip Code Country
9. Country where you live today.
10. Phone number (optional).
11. Email address--An email address to which you have direct access
and will continue to have direct access through May of the next year.
If you check the Entrant Status Check in May and learn you have been
selected, you will later receive follow-up email communication from the
Department of State with details if an immigrant visa interview becomes
available. The Department of State will never send you an email telling
you that you have been selected for the DV program. See the Frequently
Asked Questions for more information about the selection process.
[[Page 79999]]
12. Highest level of education you have achieved, as of today: (1)
Primary school only, (2) Some high school, no diploma, (3) High school
diploma, (4) Vocational school, (5) Some university courses, (6)
University degree, (7) Some graduate-level courses, (8) Master's
degree, (9) Some doctoral-level courses, or (10) Doctorate. See the
Frequently Asked Questions for more information about educational
requirements.
13. Current marital status: (1) unmarried, (2) married and my
spouse is NOT a U.S.citizen or U.S. Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR),
(3) married and my spouse IS a U.S. citizen or U.S. LPR, (4) divorced,
(5) widowed, or (6) legally separated. Enter the name, date of birth,
gender, city/town of birth, and country of birth of your spouse, and a
photograph of your spouse meeting the same technical specifications as
your photo.
Failure to list your eligible spouse or, listing someone who is not
your spouse, may make you ineligible as the DV principal applicant and
your spouse and children ineligible as DV derivative applicants. You
must list your spouse even if you currently are separated from them
unless you are legally separated. Legal separation is an arrangement
when a couple remain married but live apart, following a court order.
If you and your spouse are legally separated, your spouse will not be
able to immigrate with you through the DV program. You will not be
penalized if you choose to enter the name of a spouse from whom you are
legally separated. If you are not legally separated by a court order,
you must include your spouse even if you plan to be divorced before you
apply for the Diversity Visa, or your spouse does not intend to
immigrate.
If your spouse is a U.S. citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident, do
not list them in your entry. A spouse who is already a U.S. citizen or
LPR will not require or be issued a visa.Therefore, if you select
``married and my spouse IS a U.S. citizen or U.S. LPR'' on your entry,
you will not be prompted to include further information on your spouse.
See the Frequently Asked Questions for more information about family
members.
14. Number of children--List the name, date of birth, gender, city/
town of birth, and country of birth for all living, unmarried children
under 21 years of age, regardless of whether they are living with you
or intend to accompany or follow to join you, should you immigrate to
the United States. Submit individual photographs of each of your
children using the same technical specifications as your own
photograph.
Be sure to include:
[cir] all living natural children;
[cir] all living children legally adopted by you; and,
[cir] all living stepchildren who are unmarried and under the age
of 21 on the date of your electronic entry, even if you are no longer
legally married to the child's parent, and even if the child does not
currently reside with you and/or will not immigrate with you. Married
children and children who are already aged 21 or older when you submit
your entry are not eligible for the DVprogram. However, the Child
Status Protection Act protects children from ``aging out'' in certain
circumstances: if you submit your DV entry before your unmarried child
turns 21, and the child turns 21 before visa issuance, it is possible
that he or she may be treated as though he or she were under 21 for
visa processing purposes.
A child who is already a U.S. citizen or LPR when you submit your
DV entry will not require or be issued a Diversity Visa; you will not
be penalized for either including or omitting such family members from
your entry.
Failure to list all children who are eligible or listing someone
who is not your child may make you ineligible for a DV, in which case
your spouse and children will also be ineligible as Diversity Visa
derivative applicants. See the Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about family members.
See the Frequently Asked Questions for more information about
completing your Electronic Entry for the DV-2026 Program.
Selection of Entries
Based on the allocations of available visas in each region and
country, the Department of State will randomly select individuals by
computer from among qualified entries. All DV-2026 entrants must go to
the Entrant Status Check using the unique confirmation number saved
from their DV-2026 online entry registration to find out whether their
entry has been selected in the DV program. Entrant Status Check will be
available on the E-DV website at dvprogram.state.gov from May 4, 2025,
through at least September 30, 2026.
If your entry is selected, you will be directed to a confirmation
page providing further instructions, including information about fees
connected with immigration to the United States. Entrant Status Check
will be the ONLY means by which the Department of State notifies
selectees of their selection for DV-2026. The Department of State will
not mail notification letters or notify selectees by email. U.S.
embassies and consulates will not provide a list of selectees.
Individuals who have not been selected also ONLY will be notified
through Entrant Status Check.You are strongly encouraged to access
Entrant Status Check yourself. Do not rely on someone else to check and
inform you.
In order to immigrate, DV selectees must be admissible to the
United States. The DS-260, Online Immigrant Visa and Alien Registration
Application, electronically, and the consular officer, in person, will
ask you questions about your eligibility to immigrate under U.S. law.
These questions include criminal and security-related topics.
All selectees, including family members, must be issued visas by
September 30, 2026, or prior to issuance of the approximately 55,000
visas available each year--whichever is earlier. Under no circumstances
can the Department of State issue DVs nor can USCIS approve adjustments
after this date, nor can family members obtain DVs to follow-to-join
the principal applicant in the United States after this date. The U.S.
government only authorizes issuance of approximately 55,000 diversity
visas each year. Given the limited number of visas available, selectees
should act promptly in submitting their materials and pursuing their
application.
See the Frequently Asked Questions for more information about the
selection process.
Submitting a Digital Photograph
You can take a new digital photograph or scan a recent (taken
within the last six months) photograph with a digital scanner if it
meets all of the standards below. DV entry photos must be of the same
quality and composition as U.S. visa photos. You can see examples of
acceptable photos at the following link: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/visa-information-resources/photos/photo-examples.html. Do not submit a photograph older than six months or a
photograph that does not meet all the standards described below.
Submitting the same photograph that you submitted with a prior year's
entry, a photograph that has been manipulated, or a photograph that
does not meet the specifications below may make you ineligible for a
DV.
Your photos or digital images must be:
[ssquf] In color
[ssquf] In focus
[ssquf] Sized such that the head is between 1 inch and 1\3/8\ inches
(22 mm and 35 mm) or 50 percent and 69 percent of the image's total
height from the
[[Page 80000]]
bottom of the chin to the top of the head. View the Photo Composition
Template for more size requirement details.
[ssquf] Taken within the last six months to reflect your current
appearance.
[ssquf] Taken in front of a plain white or off-white background
[ssquf] Taken in full-face view directly facing the camera
[ssquf] With a neutral facial expression and both eyes open
[ssquf] Taken in clothing that you normally wear on a daily basis
[ssquf] Uniforms should not be worn in your photo, except religious
clothing that is worn daily.
[ssquf] Do not wear a hat or head covering that obscures the hair or
hairline, unless worn daily for a religious purpose.Your full face must
be visible, and the head covering must not cast any shadows on your
face.
[ssquf] Headphones, wireless hands-free devices, or similar items are
not acceptable in your photo.
[ssquf] Do not wear eyeglasses.
[ssquf] If you normally wear a hearing device or similar articles, they
may be worn in your photo.
Review the Photo Examples at this link: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/visa-information-resources/photos/photo-examples.html to see examples of acceptable and unacceptable photos.
Photos copied or digitally scanned from driver's licenses or other
official documents are not acceptable. In addition, snapshots, magazine
photos, low quality vending machine, and full-length photographs are
not acceptable.
You must upload your digital image as part of your entry. Your
digital image must be:
In JPEG (.jpg) file format
Equal to or less than 240 kB (kilobytes) in file size
In a square aspect ratio (height must equal width)
600 x 600 pixels in dimension
Do you want to scan an existing photo? In addition to the digital
image requirements, your existing photo must be:
2 x 2 inches (51 x 51 mm)
Scanned at a resolution of 300 pixels per inch (12 pixels per
millimeter)
Taking photos of your baby or toddler--When taking a photo of your
baby or toddler, no other person should be in the photo, and your child
should be looking at the camera with his or her eyes open. Tip 1: Lay
your baby on his or her back on a plain white or off-white sheet. This
will ensure your baby's head is supported and provide a plain
background for the photo. Make certain there are no shadows on your
baby's face, especially if you take a picture from above with the baby
lying down. Tip 2: Cover a car seat with a plain white or off-white
sheet and take a picture of your child in the car seat. This will also
ensure your baby's head is supported.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Eligiblity
1. What do the terms``native'', and ``chargeability'' mean?
Native ordinarily means someone born in a particular country,
regardless of the individual's current country of residence or
nationality. Native can also mean someone who is entitled to be charged
to a country other than the one in which he/she was born under the
provisions of Section 202(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Because there is a numerical limitation on immigrants who enter
from a country or geographic region, each individual is charged to a
country. Your chargeability refers to the country towards which
limitation you count. Your country of eligibility will normally be the
same as your country of birth. However, you may choose your country of
eligibility as the country of birth of your spouse, or the country of
birth of either of your parents if you were born in a country in which
neither parent was born and in which your parents were not resident at
the time of your birth. These are the only three ways to select your
country of chargeability.
Listing an incorrect country of eligibility or chargeability (i.e.,
one to which you cannot establish a valid claim) may make you
ineligible for DV-2026.
2. Can I still apply if I was not born in a qualifying country?
There are two circumstances in which you still might be eligible to
apply. First, if your derivative spouse was born in an eligible
country, you may claim chargeability to that country. As your
eligibility is based on your spouse, you will only be issued an
immigrant visa if your spouse is also eligible for and issued an
immigrant visa. Both of you must enter the United States together,
using your DVs. Similarly, your minor dependent child can be
``charged'' to a parent's country of birth.
Second, you can be ``charged'' to the country of birth of either of
your parents as long as neither of your parents was born in or a
resident of your country of birth at the time of your birth. People are
not generally considered residents of a country in which they were not
born or legally naturalized. For example, persons simply visiting,
studying, or temporarily working in a country are not generally
considered residents.
If you claim alternate chargeability through either of the above,
you must provide an explanation on the E-DV Entry Form, in question #6.
Listing an incorrect country of eligibility or chargeability (i.e.,
one to which you cannot establish a valid claim) will make you
ineligible for a DV.
3. Why do natives of certain countries not qualify for the DV program?
DVs are intended to provide an immigration opportunity for persons
who are not from ``high admission'' countries. U.S. law defines ``high
admission countries'' as those from which a total of 50,000 persons in
the Family-Sponsored and Employment-Based visa categories immigrated to
the United States during the previous five years. Each year, the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) counts the family and employment
immigrant admission and adjustment of status numbers for the previous
five years to identify the countries that are considered ``high
admission'' and whose natives will therefore be ineligible for the
annual Diversity Visa program. Since DHS makes this calculation
annually, the list of countries whose natives are eligible or not
eligible may change from one year to the next.
4. How many DV-2026 visas will go to natives of each region and
eligible country?
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) determines the regional
DV limits for each year according to a formula specified in Section
203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The number of
visas the Department of State eventually will issue to natives of each
country will depend on the regional limits established, how many
entrants come from each country, and how many of the selected entrants
are found eligible for the visa. No more than seven percent of the
total visas available can go to natives of any one country.
5. What are the requirements for education or work experience?
U.S. immigration law and regulations require that every DV entrant
must have at least a high school education or its equivalent or have
two years of work experience within the past five years in an
occupation that requires at least two years of training or experience.
A ``high school education or equivalent'' is defined as successful
completion of a 12-year course of elementary and
[[Page 80001]]
secondary education in the United States OR the successful completion
in another country of a formal course of elementary and secondary
education comparable to a high school education in the United States.
Only formal courses of study meet this requirement; correspondence
programs or equivalency certificates (such as the General Equivalency
Diploma [G.E.D.]) are not acceptable. You must present documentary
proof of education or work experience to the consular officer at the
time of the visa interview.
If you do not meet the requirements for education or work
experience you will be ineligible for a DV, and your spouse and
children will be ineligible for derivative DVs.
6. What occupations qualify for the DV program?
The Department of State will use the U.S. Department of Labor's
(DOL) O*Net OnLine database to determine qualifying work experience.
The O*Net OnLine database categorizes job experience into five ``job
zones.'' While the DOL website lists many occupations, not all
occupations qualify for the DV program. To qualify for a DV on the
basis of your work experience, you must have, within the past five
years, two years of experience in an occupation classified in a
Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP) range of 7.0 or higher.
If you do not meet the requirements for education or work
experience, you will be ineligible for a DV, and your spouse and
children will be ineligible for derivative DVs.
7. How can I find the qualifying DV occupations in the Department of
Labor's O*Net OnLine database?
When you are in O*Net OnLine, follow these steps to determine if
your occupation qualifies:
[cir] Under ``Find Occupations,''select ``Job Family'' from the
pull down menu;
[cir] Browse by ``Job Family,'' make your selection, and click
``GO''.
[cir] Click on the link for your specific occupation; and
[cir] Select the tab ``Job Zone'' to find the designated Job Zone
number and Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP) rating range.
As an example, select Aerospace Engineers. At the bottom of the
Summary Report for Aerospace Engineers, under the Job Zone section, you
will find the designated Job Zone 4, SVP Range, 7.0 to <8.0. Using this
example, Aerospace Engineering is a qualifying occupation.
For additional information, see the Diversity Visa--List of
Occupations web page: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/immigrate/diversity-visa-program-entry/diversity-visa-if-you-are-selected/diversity-visa-confirm-your-qualifications.html.
8. Is there a minimum age to apply for the E-DV Program?
There is no minimum age to apply, but the requirement of a high
school education or work experience for each principal applicant at the
time of application will effectively disqualify most persons who are
under age 18.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for the DV-2026 Program
9. When can I submit my entry?
The DV-2026 entry period will run from 12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern
Daylight Time (EDT) (GMT-4), Wednesday, October 4, 2024, until 12:00
p.m. (noon), Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT-5), Tuesday, November 7,
2024. Each year, millions of people submit entries. Restricting the
entry period to these dates ensures selectees receive notification in a
timely manner and gives both the visa applicants and our embassies and
consulates time to prepare and complete cases for visa issuance.
We strongly encourage you to enter early during the registration
period. Excessive demand at end of the registration period may slow the
processing system. We cannot accept entries after noon EST on Tuesday,
November 7, 2024.
10. I am in the United States. Can I enter the DV program?
Yes, an entrant may apply while in the United States or another
country. An entrant may submit an entry from any location.
11. Can I only enter once during the registration period?
Yes, the law allows only one entry per person during each
registration period. The Department of State uses sophisticated
technology to detect multiple entries. Individuals with more than one
entry will be ineligible for a DV.
12. May my spouse and I each submit a separate entry?
Yes, each spouse may each submit one entry if each meets the
eligibility requirements. If either spouse is selected, the other is
entitled to apply as a derivative dependent.
13. Which family members must I include in my DV entry?
Spouse: If you are legally married, you must list your spouse
regardless of whether they live with you or intend to immigrate to the
United States. You must list your spouse even if you currently are
separated from them unless you are legally separated. Legal separation
is an arrangement when a couple remains married but lives apart,
following a court order. If you and your spouse are legally separated,
your spouse will not be able to immigrate with you through the
Diversity Visa program. You will not be penalized if you choose to
enter the name of a spouse from whom you are legally separated. If you
are not legally separated by a court order, you must include your
spouse even if you plan to be divorced before you apply for the
Diversity Visa, or your spouse does not intend to immigrate. Failure to
list your eligible spouse or listing someone who is not your spouse
will make you ineligible for a DV. If you are not married at the time
of entry but plan on getting married in the future, do not list a
spouse on your entry form, as this would make you ineligible for a DV.
If you are divorced or your spouse is deceased, you do not have to
list your former spouse.
The only exception to this requirement is if your spouse is already
a U.S. citizen or U.S. Lawful Permanent Resident. If your spouse is a
U.S. citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident, do not list them in your
entry. A spouse who is already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful Permanent
Resident will not require or be issued a DV. Therefore, if you select
``married and my spouse IS a U.S. citizen or U.S. LPR'' on your entry,
you will not be able to include further information on your spouse.
Children: You must list ALL your living children who are unmarried
and under 21 years of age at the time of your initial DV entry, whether
they are your natural children, your stepchildren (even if you are now
divorced from that child's parent), your spouse's children, or children
you have formally adopted in accordance with the applicable laws. List
all children under 21 years of age at the time of your electronic
entry, even if they no longer reside with you or you do not intend for
them to immigrate under the DV program.You are not required to list
children who are already U.S. citizens or Lawful Permanent Residents,
though you will not be penalized if you do include them.
Parents and siblings of the entrant are ineligible to receive DV
visas as dependents, and you should not include them in your entry.
If you list family members on your entry, they are not required to
apply for a visa or to immigrate or travel with you. However, if you
fail to include an
[[Page 80002]]
eligible dependent on your original entry or list someone who is not
your dependent, you may be ineligible for a DV, in which case your
spouse and children will be ineligible for derivative DVs. This only
applies to those who were family members at the time the entry was
submitted, not those acquired at a later date. Your spouse, if eligible
to enter, may still submit a separate entry even though they are listed
on your entry, and both entries must include details about all
dependents in your family (see FAQ #13 above).
14. Must I submit my own entry, or can someone else do it for me?
We encourage you to prepare and submit your own entry, but you may
have someone submit the entry for you. Regardless of whether you submit
your own entry, or an attorney, friend, relative, or someone else
submits it on your behalf, only one entry may be submitted in your
name. You, as the entrant, are responsible for ensuring that
information in the entry is correct and complete; entries that are not
correct or complete may be disqualified. Entrants should keep their
confirmation number, so they are able to check the status of their
entry independently, using Entrant Status Check at dvprogram.state.gov.
Entrants should retain access to the email account used in the E-DV
submission.
15. I'm already registered for an immigrant visa in another category.
Can I still apply for the DV program?
Yes.
16. Can I download and save the E-DV entry form into a word processing
program and finish it later?
No, you will not be able to save the form into another program for
completion and submission later. The E-DV Entry Form is a web-form
only. You must fill in the information and submit it while online.
17. Can I save the form online and finish it later?
No. The E-DV Entry Form is designed to be completed and submitted
at one time. You will have 60 minutes, starting from when you download
the form, to complete and submit your entry through the E-DV website.
If you exceed the 60-minute limit and have not submitted your complete
entry electronically, the system discards any information already
entered. The system deletes any partial entries so that they are not
accidentally identified as duplicates of a later, complete entry. Read
the DV instructions completely before you start to complete the form
online so that you know exactly what information you will need.
18. I don't have a scanner. Can I send photographs to someone else to
scan them, save them, and email them back to me so I can use them in my
entry?
Yes, as long as the photograph meets the requirements in the
instructions and is electronically submitted with, and at the same time
as, the E-DV online entry. You must already have the scanned photograph
file when you submit the entry online; it cannot be submitted
separately from the online application. The entire entry (photograph
and application together) can be submitted electronically from the
United States or from overseas.
19. If the E-DV system rejects my entry, can I resubmit my entry?
Yes, you can resubmit your entry as long as your submission is
completed by 12:00 p.m. (noon) Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT-5) on
Tuesday, November 7, 2023. You will not be penalized for submitting a
duplicate entry if the E-DV system rejects your initial entry. Given
the unpredictable nature of the internet, you may not receive the
rejection notice immediately. You can try to submit an application as
many times as is necessary until a complete application is received and
the confirmation notice sent. Once you receive a confirmation notice,
your entry is complete, and you should NOT submit any additional
entries.
20. How soon after I submit my entry will I receive the electronic
confirmation notice?
You should receive the confirmation notice immediately, including a
confirmation number that you must record and keep. However, the
unpredictable nature of the internet can result in delays. You can hit
the ``Submit'' button as many times as is necessary until a complete
application is sent and you receive the confirmation notice. However,
once you receive a confirmation notice, do not resubmit your
information.
21. I hit the ``Submit'' button but did not receive a confirmation
number. If I submit another entry, will I be disqualified?
If you did not receive a confirmation number, your entry was not
recorded. You must submit another entry. It will not be counted as a
duplicate. Once you receive a confirmation number, do not resubmit your
information.
Selection
22. How do I know if I am selected?
You must use your confirmation number to access the Entrant Status
Check available on the E-DV website at dvprogram.state.gov from May 4,
2025, through September 30, 2026. Entrant Status Check is the sole
means by which the Department of State will notify you if you are
selected, provide further instructions on your visa application, and
notify you of your immigrant visa interview appointment date and time.
To ensure the use of all available visas, the Department of State may
use Entrant Status Check to notify additional selectees after May 4,
2025. Retain your confirmation number until September 30, 2026, in case
of any updates. The only authorized Department of State website for
official online entry in the Diversity Visa Program and Entrant Status
Check is dvprogram.state.gov.
The Department of State will NOT contact you to tell you that you
have been selected (see FAQ #25).
23. How will I know if I am not selected? Will I be notified?
The Department of State will NOT notify you directly if your entry
is not selected. You must use the Entrant Status Check to learn whether
you were selected. You may check the status of your DV-2026 entry
through the Entrant Status Check on the E-DV website from May 4, 2025,
until September 30, 2026. Keep your confirmation number until at least
September 30, 2026. (Status information for the previous year's DV
program, DV-2024, is available online through September 30, 2024.)
24. What if I lose my confirmation number?
You must have your confirmation number to access Entrant Status
Check. A tool is now available in Entrant Status Check on the E-DV
website that will allow you to retrieve your confirmation number via
the email address with which you registered by entering certain
personal information to confirm your identity.
U.S. embassies and consulates and the Kentucky Consular Center are
unable to check your selection status for you or provide your
confirmation number to you directly (other than through the Entrant
Status Check retrieval tool). The Department of State is NOT able to
provide a list of those selected to continue the visa process.
[[Page 80003]]
25. Will I receive information from the Department of State by email or
by postal mail?
The Department of State will not send you a notification letter.
The U.S. government has never sent emails to notify individuals that
they have been selected, and there are no plans to use email for this
purpose for the DV-2026 program. If you are a selectee, you will only
receive email communications regarding your visa appointment after you
have responded to the notification instructions on Entrant Status
Check, if an immigrant visa interview becomes available. These emails
will not contain information on the actual appointment date and time;
they will simply tell you to go to the Entrant Status Check website for
details. The Department of State may send emails reminding DV program
applicants to check the Entrant Status Check for their status. However,
such emails will never indicate whether the DV program applicant was
selected or not.
Only internet sites that end with the ``.gov'' domain suffix are
official U.S. government websites. Many other websites (e.g., with the
suffixes ``.com,'' ``.org,'' or ``.net'') provide immigration and visa-
related information and services. The Department of State does not
endorse, recommend, or sponsor any information or material on these
other websites.
Warning: You may receive emails from websites that try to trick you
into sending money or providing your personal information. You may be
asked to pay for forms and information about immigration procedures,
all of which are available free on the Department of State website,
travel.state.gov, or through U.S. embassy or consulate websites.
Additionally, organizations or websites may try to steal your money by
charging fees for DV-related services. If you send money to one of
these non-government organizations or websites, you will likely never
see it again. Also, do not send personal information to these websites,
as it may be used for identity fraud/theft.
Deceptive emails may come from people pretending to be affiliated
with the Kentucky Consular Center or the Department of State. Remember
that the U.S. government has never sent emails to notify individuals
they have been selected, and there are no plans to use email for this
purpose for the DV-2026 program.The Department of State will never ask
you to send money by mail or by services such as Western Union,
although applications to USCIS for adjustments of status do require
mailing a fee. Visit this site for more details on adjusting status.
26. How many individuals will be selected for DV-2026?
For DV-2026, 55,000 Diversity Visas are available. The Department
of State selects more than 55,000 selectees to account for selectees
who will not qualify for visas and those who will not pursue their
cases to completion. This means there will not be a sufficient number
of visas for all those selected. The Department does this to try to use
as many of the 55,000 DVs as we can.
You can check the E-DV website's Entrant Status Check to see if you
have been selected for further processing and later to see the status
of your case. Interviews for the DV-2026 program will begin in October
2025 for selectees who have submitted all pre-interview paperwork and
other information as requested in the notification instructions.
Selectees whose applications have been fully processed and have been
scheduled for a visa interview appointment will receive a notification
to obtain details through the E-DV website's Entrant Status Check four
to six weeks before the scheduled interviews with U.S. consular
officers overseas.
Each month, visas may be issued to those applicants who are
eligible for issuance during that month, as long as visas are
available. Once all the 55,000 diversity visas have been issued, the
program will end. Visa numbers could be finished before September 2026.
Selected applicants who wish to apply for visas must be prepared to act
promptly on their cases. Being randomly chosen as a selectee does not
guarantee that you will receive a visa or even the chance to make a
visa application or to schedule a visa interview. Selection merely
means that you may be eligible to apply for a Diversity Visa. If your
rank number becomes eligible for final processing, you may have the
chance to make an application and potentially maybe issued a Diversity
Visa. A maximum of 55,000 visas may be issued to such applicants.
27. How will successful entrants be selected?
Official notifications of selection will be made through Entrant
Status Check, available May 4, 2025, through September 30, 2026, on the
E-DV website, dvprogram.state.gov. The Department of State does not
send selectee notifications or letters by regular postal mail or by
email. Any email notification or mailed letter stating that you have
been selected to receive a DV that does not come from the Department of
State is not legitimate. Any email communication you receive from the
Department of State will direct you to review Entrant Status Check for
new information about your application. The Department of State will
never ask you to send money by mail or by services such as Western
Union unless you are adjusting status. See this site for more
information on adjusting status.
All entries received from each region are individually numbered; at
the end of the entry period, a computer will randomly select entries
from among all the entries received for each geographic region. Within
each region, the first entry randomly selected will be the first case
registered; the second entry selected will be the second case
registered, etc. All entries received within each region during the
entry period will have an equal chance of being selected. When an entry
has been selected, the entrant will receive notification of his or her
selection through the Entrant Status Check available starting May 4,
2025, on the E-DV website, dvprogram.state.gov. For individuals who are
selected and who respond to the instructions provided online via
Entrant Status Check, the Department of State's Kentucky Consular
Center (KCC) will process the case until those selected are instructed
to appear for visa interviews at a U.S. embassy or consulate or until
those in the United States who are applying to adjust status apply with
USCIS in the United States.
28. I am already in the United States. If selected, may I adjust my
status with USCIS?
Yes, provided you are otherwise eligible to adjust status under the
terms of Section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), you
may apply to USCIS for adjustment of status to permanent resident. You
must ensure that USCIS can complete action on your case, including
processing of any overseas applications for a spouse or for children
under 21 years of age, before September 30, 2026, since on that date
your eligibility for the DV-2026 program expires. The Department of
State will not approve any visa numbers or adjustments of status for
the DV-2026 program after midnight EDT on September 30, 2026.
29. If I am selected, for how long am I entitled to apply for a
Diversity Visa?
If you are selected in the DV-2026 program, you may apply for visa
issuance only during U.S. government fiscal year 2026, which is from
October
[[Page 80004]]
1, 2025, through September 30, 2026. We encourage selectees to apply
for visas as early as possible once their program rank numbers become
eligible. As noted above, once all the 55,000 diversity visas have been
issued, the program will end.
Without exception, all selected and eligible applicants must obtain
their visa or adjust status by the end of the fiscal year. There is no
carry-over of DV benefits into the next year for persons who are
selected but who do not obtain visas by September 30, 2026 (the end of
the fiscal year). Also, spouses and children who derive status from a
DV-2026 registration can only obtain visas in the DV category between
October 1, 2025, and September 30, 2026. Individuals who apply overseas
will receive an appointment notification from the Department of State
through Entrant Status Check on the E-DV website four to six weeks
before the scheduled appointment.
30. If a DV selectee dies, what happens to the case?
If a DV selectee dies at any point before he or she has traveled to
the United States or adjusted status, the DV case is automatically
closed. Any derivative spouse and/or children of the deceased selectee
will no longer be entitled to apply for a DV visa. Any visas issued to
them will be revoked.
Fees
31. How much does it cost to enter the Diversity Visa program?
There is no fee charged to submit an electronic entry. However, if
you are selected and apply for a DiversityVisa, you must pay all
required visa application fees at the time of visa application and
interview directly to the consular cashier at the U.S. embassy or
consulate. If you are a selectee already in the United States and you
apply to USCIS to adjust status, you will pay all required fees
directly to USCIS. If you are selected, you will receive details of
required fees with the instructions provided through the E-DV website
at dvprogram.state.gov.
32. How and where do I pay DV and immigrant visa fees if I am selected?
If you are a randomly selected entrant, you will receive
instructions for the DV application process through Entrant Status
Check at dvprogram.state.gov. You will pay all fees in person only at
the U.S. embassy or consulate at the time of the visa application and
interview. The consular cashier will immediately give you a U.S.
government receipt for payment. Do not send money for DV fees to anyone
through the mail, Western Union, or any other delivery service if you
are applying for an immigrant visa at a U.S. embassy or consulate.
If you are selected and are already present in the United States
and plan to file for adjustment of status with USCIS, the instructions
page accessible through Entrant Status Check at dvprogram.state.gov
contains separate instructions on how to mail adjustment of status
application fees to a U.S. bank.
33. If I apply for a DV, but don't qualify to receive one, can I get a
refund of the visa fees I paid?
No. Visa application fees cannot be refunded. You must meet all
qualifications for the visa as detailed in these instructions. If a
consular officer determines you do not meet requirements for the visa,
or you are otherwise ineligible for the DV under U.S. law, the officer
cannot issue a visa and you will forfeit all fees paid.
Ineligibilites
34. As a DV applicant, can I receive a waiver of any grounds of visa
ineligibility? Does my waiver application receive any special
processing?
DV applicants are subject to all grounds of ineligibility for
immigrant visas specified in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
There are no special provisions for the waiver of any ground of visa
ineligibility aside from those ordinarily provided in the INA, nor is
there special processing for waiver requests. Some general waiver
provisions for people with close relatives who are U.S.citizens or
Lawful Permanent Resident aliens may be available to DV applicants in
some cases, but the time constraints in the DV program may make it
difficult for applicants to benefit from such provisions.
Fraud Warning and Scams
35. How can I report internet fraud or unsolicited emails?
Please visit the econsumer.gov website, hosted by the Federal Trade
Commission in cooperation with consumer-protection agencies from 36
nations. You also may report fraud to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Internet Crime Complaint Center. To file a
complaint about unsolicited email, use the ``Telemarking and Spam''
complaint tool on the econsumer.gov website or visit the Department of
Justice Unsolicited Commercial Email (``Spam'') web page for additional
information and contacts.
Statistics
36. How many visas will be issued in DV-2026?
By law, a maximum of 55,000 visas are available each year to
eligible persons.
Miscellaneous
37. If I receive a visa through the DV program, will the U.S.
government pay for my airfare to the United States, help me find
housing and employment, and/or provide healthcare or any subsidies
until I am fully settled?
No. The U.S. government will not provide any of these services to
you if you receive a visa through the DV program. If you are selected
to apply for a DV, before being issued a visa you must demonstrate that
you will not become a public charge in the United States. If you are
selected and submit a diversity visa application, you should
familiarize yourself with the Department of State's public guidance on
how the likelihood of becoming a public charge is assessed and what
evidence can be provided to demonstrate that you are not likely to
become a public charge.
List of Countries/Areas by Region Whose Natives Are Eligible for DV-
2026
The list below shows the countries and areas whose natives are
eligible for DV-2026, grouped by geographic region. Dependent areas
overseas are included within the region of the governing country. DHS
identified the countries whose natives are not eligible for the DV-2026
program according to the formula in Section 203(c) of the INA. The
countries whose natives are not eligible for the DV program (because
they are the principal source countries of Family-Sponsored and
Employment-Based immigration or ``high-admission'' countries) are noted
after the respective regional lists.
Africa
Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Cabo Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Cote D'Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Djibouti
Egypt *
[[Page 80005]]
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Eswatini
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia, The
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
In Africa, natives of Nigeria are not eligible for this year's
Diversity Visa program.
Asia
Afghanistan
Bahrain
Bhutan
Brunei
Burma
Cambodia
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel *
Japan ***
Jordan *
Kuwait
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Nepal
North Korea
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Sri Lanka
Syria *
Taiwan **
Thailand
Timor-Leste
United Arab Emirates
Yemen
* Persons born in the areas administered prior to June 1967 by
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are chargeable, respectively, to
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt. Persons born in the Gaza Strip are
chargeable to Egypt; persons born in the West Bank are chargeable to
Jordan; persons born in the Golan Heights are chargeable to Syria.
** Macau S.A.R. (Europe region, chargeable to Portugal) and Taiwan
(Asia region) do qualify and are listed. For the purposes of the
diversity program only, persons born in Macau S.A.R. derive eligibility
from Portugal.
*** Persons born in the Habomai Islands, Shikotan, Kunashiri, and
Etorofuare chargeable to Japan. Persons born in Southern Sakhalin are
chargeable to Russia.
Natives of the following Asia Region countries are not eligible for
this year's Diversity Visa program: Bangladesh, China (including Hong
Kong), India, Pakistan, South Korea, Philippines, and Vietnam.
Europe
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Estonia
Finland
France (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macau Special Administrative Region **
North Macedonia
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
Netherlands (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Northern Ireland ***
Norway (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Poland
Portugal (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Romania
Russia ****
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tajikistan
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
United Kingdom (including dependent areas)
Uzbekistan
Vatican City
** Macau S.A.R. does qualify and is listed above and for the
purposes of the diversity program only; persons born in Macau S.A.R.
derive eligibility from Portugal.
*** For purposes of the diversity program only, Northern Ireland is
treated separately. Northern Ireland does qualify and is listed among
the qualifying areas.
**** Persons born in the Habomai Islands, Shikotan, Kunashiri, and
Etorofu are chargeable to Japan. Persons born in Southern Sakhalin are
chargeable to Russia.
North America
Bahamas, The
In North America, natives of Canada and Mexico are not eligible for
this year's DV program.
Oceaania
Australia (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Fiji
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia, Federated States of
Nauru
New Zealand (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Solomon Islands
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
South American, Central America, and the Caribbean
Antigua and Barbuda
[[Page 80006]]
Argentina
Barbados
Belize
Bolivia
Chile
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominica
Ecuador
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
Uruguay
Countries in this region whose natives are not eligible for this
year's DV program:
Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras,
Jamaica, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Rena E. Bitter,
Assistant Secretary, Consular Affairs, Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2024-22482 Filed 9-30-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-06-P