US Visa Interview Freeze Puts Future of International Students in Jeopardy

By Aahana June 5, 2025
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A freeze on student visa interviews by the US State Department has raised alarm across the international education sector, threatening the study plans of thousands of students due to begin courses this summer and autumn.

The US administration paused all new student visa appointments globally as it expanded its social media vetting procedures, initially piloted on prospective Harvard students. While students with existing appointments are unaffected for now, others face rising uncertainty, with some visa slots already cancelled.

In a strongly worded letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, American Council on Education (ACE) president Ted Mitchell, along with 38 other education bodies including NAFSA and the Presidents’ Alliance, urged immediate action. “We are concerned that imposing a broad pause on all student visas would send a message that our nation no longer welcomes talented students and scholars from other countries,” the letter warned.

At the NAFSA 2025 conference, Miriam Feldblum, CEO of the Presidents’ Alliance, said the timing of the freeze is particularly disruptive. “Even if they reverse course soon, the damage is done. Those interview slots may no longer be available,” she stated.

The United Kingdom, a major sending country for US-bound international students, is likely to see its students affected by the pause. Visa uncertainties may prompt UK-based students to consider alternate destinations, impacting enrolment for the 2025/26 academic year.

Fanta Aw, CEO of NAFSA, called the visa pause “misguided” and “troubling,” while Mark Overmann of the Alliance for International Exchange advised institutions to prepare for an extended freeze.

Though a State Department spokesperson hinted the pause may lift “sooner rather than later,” no official timeline has been confirmed. Stakeholders continue to press for transparency and urgent policy guidance.

With peak application season underway, international students from the UK and elsewhere face growing concerns over their academic future in the US.

Source: THE PIE NEWS

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