It is official from the U.S. State Department, which handles the US Visa Lottery, that applications have been opened for the Diversity Visa Program for Fiscal Year 2022 (DV-2022), better known as the visa lottery.
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How to Apply:
As usual, Applications for the US Visa Lottery are done online via the official link here. Click on the link and follow the instructions. Importantly, be careful of fraudulent activities and only use the official link. Applicants do not have to pay any cost for the registration and winners are drawn by chance.
Requirement:
Applicants who are selected in the program (selectees) must meet simple but strict eligibility requirements to qualify for a diversity visa. 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.
Also, persons born in the following countries 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, China (including Hong Kong SAR), Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, India, Jamaica, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, South Korea, United Kingdom (except Northern Ireland) and its dependent territories, and Vietnam. Persons born in Macau SAR and Taiwan are eligible.
However, “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 simultaneously.
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-2022 program.”
There is no cost to submit an entry form.
Individuals who submit more than one entry during the registration period will be disqualified.
The popular program for foreigners who lack U.S. sponsors to come to America will provide up to 55,000 permanent resident cards or green cards in 2022, authorities said.
About Past Programs
For the DV-2021, the program received 6,741,128 qualified entries from around the world — or 11,830,707 foreign nationals including family members or “derivatives” of principal applicants. Egypt, Iran, Russia and Algeria won the most immigrant visas.
Applicants must meet simple but strict eligibility requirements to qualify, according to the State Department, which distributes the green cards among six geographical regions, from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the United States. 55,000 foreigners won green cards in the Visa Lottery.
How to Qualify for the DV Visa Lottery
The application process is simple, too, so it generally doesn’t require the legal services of an immigration lawyer, but there are some strict eligibility requirements to qualify.
Eligibility requirements before submitting entries:
▪ First, the foreigner must have been born in qualifying countries. Natives from these countries are not eligible for the DV-2022: Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China (including Hong Kong SAR), Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, India, Jamaica, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, United Kingdom (except Northern Ireland) and its dependent territories, and Vietnam.
▪ They also must have at least a high school diploma or its equivalent, or two years’ work experience over the past five years in an eligible field that requires at least two years of training.
Due to the expected huge volume of entries, State Department officials urge participants not to wait until the end of the period to submit their petitions, because excessive demand later will slow the system down.
“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 authorities said in the official Instructions for the 2022 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program DV-2022.
“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 will render you ineligible for a DV,” they noted.
After registering online, the green card hopeful will see a confirmation screen containing his or her name and a unique confirmation number a person must print to verify if he or she was chosen.
People who already live in the United States with legal non-immigrant status can also participate, provided their country of origin is included.
The following information is required to fill out the form:
▪ Name — last name, first name, middle name — as it appears on your passport
▪ Gender
▪ Date of birth
▪ City of birth
▪ Country of birth
▪ Country of eligibility for the DV-2022 program
▪ Recent photograph (of the applicant, his spouse and children) that meets these requirements
▪ Postal address
▪ Country of current residence
▪ Phone number (optional)
▪ Highest academic level achieved
▪ Marital status
DIVERSITY IMMIGRANT VISA PROGRAM DURING PANDEMIC
It has been a complicated year for 55,000 foreigners who won the 2020 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program from among 14 million qualified entries.
Ahead of a Sept. 30 deadline to get the visas issued, foreigners have scrambled to find a consular interview, one of the key requirements. So far, the Department of State has issued only 14,636 of the 55,000 diversity visas allocated for Fiscal Year 2020, according to immigration attorney Curtis Morrison, who represents over 3,000 of the plaintiffs.
U.S. embassies and consulates around the globe halted, in March, non-emergency visa services due to the coronavirus pandemic — and only recently has the Department of State restarted phased routine services for immigrant and travel visas.
But visa applicants and their attorneys are optimistic that U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta, who is presiding over a lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s immigrant ban, will extend the Sept 30 deadline.
On Wednesday, Mehta issued an order giving equitable relief to 2020 Diversity Visa Program Selectees.
“Judge Mehta ordered State Department to reserve 9,095 diversity visa numbers after September 30, 2020, which he calculates to mean, after all was said and done, about half of the regular number of annual DV numbers would be issued,” said Morrison in a press release.