U.S. Revokes 100000+ Visas And Expands Ongoing Checks

U.S. Revokes 100000+ Visas And Expands Ongoing Checks
January 13, 2026

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U.S. Revokes 100000+ Visas And Expands Ongoing Checks

Key Points

  1. Washington says it has revoked more than 100,000 visas since January 2025, a 150% jump from 2024.
  2. The campaign reaches beyond the border: officials say they are reviewing more than 55 million valid visa holders under “continuous vetting.”
  3. New filters add friction and cost, including proposals tied to social-media histories and visa bonds of up to $15,000 for a wider set of countries.

The headline number sounds like a single, clean action: more than 100,000 visas revoked since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025.

The State Department presented it as a record and a safety story, pairing the claim with a tough message about removing “thugs” and keeping the country secure.

But the story behind the story is not only about who gets removed. It is about how travel to the United States is being redesigned into a system that can change its mind—after you already have the stamp.

U.S. Revokes 100,000+ Visas And Expands Ongoing Checks. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Officials say the revocations include about 8,000 student visas and roughly 2,500 specialized visas involving people who had encounters with U.S. law enforcement for criminal activity.

They also cite four recurring triggers: staying after a visa expires, driving under the influence, assault, and theft. A revoked visa can block re-entry if you are abroad, and it can become the first domino toward removal proceedings if you are already inside the country.

U.S. tightens visa rules globally

The bigger shift is scale. In August 2025, the administration said it was reviewing more than 55 million people who hold valid U.S. visas, looking for infractions that could justify cancellation.

That approach—often described as continuous vetting—treats a visa less like a permission granted and more like a status that must be constantly re-earned.

Digital life is moving to the center of the screening. A U.S. border agency proposal would require many travelers, including those using the Visa Waiver Program, to disclose up to five years of social-media identifiers.

Supporters argue it helps surface genuine threats. Critics warn it encourages self-censorship and widens the net beyond clearly dangerous behavior.

Money is becoming a gate, too. The United States has expanded a visa-bond policy that can demand deposits of up to $15,000 for applicants from an enlarged list of 38 countries, including Cuba and Venezuela. Even when refundable, a bond changes who can afford spontaneity.

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