Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-Americans With Visiting Kin Rush To Extend B1/B2 Visas

Darpan News Desk, 17 Mar, 2020 10:13 PM

    In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, many Indian-Americans with visiting family members, were rushing to extend their B1/B2 visas, which only allows a maximum stay for six months.

    While for those whose parents have just arrived, it may be a matter of only cancelling the existing tickets, there were many whose parents' visa limits of a six-month stay was expiring, the American Bazaar said in a report on Monday.


    A US B1/B2 is a tourist, temporary, non-immigrant visa that allows the visa holder to visit the US for work or tourism purposes.

    As reported by VisaGuide.world, starting May 30th, 2023 B1/B2 visa applications will cost $185 instead of $160.

    The USCIS can extend the stay based on genuine and urgent conditions. Given the coronavirus crisis in the US and across the globe, most attorneys believe that extension of a visa should not be a problem, the report added.

    Ideally B1/B2 extensions should be filed 45 days in advance but in the given dire scenario immigration authorities are willing to help visitors

    "My parents will be completing their six months permitted stay next month," the American Bazaar quoted Nita Valar, a Texas resident, as saying.

    "Their return tickets were booked for later this month, but looking at the scenario it's (impossible) to send my aging parents on a flight, where they are more likely to catch infection than being at home."

    Many Indian-Americans who have been in a similar situation were filing extension for B1/B2 visas on the USCIS website.

    Many Indian-Americans were also cancelling their parents' return trips specifically because they have layovers in other countries.


    Most Indian-Americans whose parents are scheduled to travel to the US, are also reconsidering their plans.


    "My mom was supposed to travel from Bengaluru to the .S via Paris," the American Bazaar quoted another Indian-American as saying.


    "With the US placing travel restrictions from Europe, flights are already cancelled. We have cancelled our trip and claimed for a refund."


    The number of infections in the US climbed to nearly 4,000 with more than 65 people dying of the disease.

     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore
    Three months after they failed to sell the Kingfisher House, erstwhile headquarters of the defunct Kingfisher Airlines, lenders have once again put up the property for auction with a lower reserve price of Rs 135 crore so as to part-recover their loans.

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    A cross-party group of British lawmakers led by Indian-origin lawmaker Keith Vaz has called on the UK government to decriminalise sex work and prostitution, first time in decades that Parliament has considered the "polarising" subject.

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan
    Caitlan Coleman and Joshua Boyle lost touch with their families while travelling in a mountainous region near the Afghan capital, Kabul.

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan

    Dhaka Attack: 20-Yr-old Who Killed After Refusing To Leave Female Friends Behind Praised As 'Hero'

    Dhaka Attack: 20-Yr-old Who Killed After Refusing To Leave Female Friends Behind Praised As 'Hero'
    While many flooded social media with rich tributes to the 20-year-old, Bangladeshi daily Dhaka Tribune called him an icon to all Bangladeshis as "his bravery and selflessness is an inspiration for generations to come". 

    Dhaka Attack: 20-Yr-old Who Killed After Refusing To Leave Female Friends Behind Praised As 'Hero'

    Pakistani-Origin Man Jailed For Shouting 'Allah-O-Akbar' On Plane

    Pakistani-Origin Man Jailed For Shouting 'Allah-O-Akbar' On Plane
      Shehraz Sarwar caused alarm with his behaviour during turbulence on-board an Emirates Boeing 777 from Dubai to Birmingham

    Pakistani-Origin Man Jailed For Shouting 'Allah-O-Akbar' On Plane

    New Art Exhibit 'Sikh Project' To Explore Sikh Identity In Post-9/11 US

    New Art Exhibit 'Sikh Project' To Explore Sikh Identity In Post-9/11 US
    The exhibition will highlight the aesthetic of the Sikh articles of faith, including the turban and beard.

    New Art Exhibit 'Sikh Project' To Explore Sikh Identity In Post-9/11 US