Applying for tourist visa for US in country other than your own [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
Can I apply for and receive a US visa when residing in country other than my own?
Can British passport holders apply for a B2 USA visa from other countries, if they are living there? Or do they have to go back to Britain to apply for it?
Best Answer
For the most part you can apply at any US consulate. Some consulates enforce specific requirements, but these are simply to try and avoid people abusing the system in some way or other.
Given you are a current resident of the country you're in, you will have no trouble at all applying for a US visa there.
Personally I've obtained US visa both in my country of residence (Australia, whilst I was living there), my country of citizenship but not residence (Australia, whilst I was not living there), as well as a country that I was neither a resident nor citizen of (Canada).
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Can I apply for US visitor visa from another country?
As a broad rule, someone is allowed to apply for a nonimmigrant visa, such as a tourist, student, or other temporary visa, at any visa-issuing U.S. consulate or embassy. It doesn't have to be a consulate in the person's home country.Can I apply for two visas for different countries at the same time?
Yes you can. No 2 countries share data with each other. Neither are they bothered about you applying visa at the same time. You can apply visa to N number of countries at the same time.How can I increase my chances of getting a US tourist visa?
U.S. Tourist Visa: How to Make your Chances of Approval HigherHow can you prove you have ties in your home country when applying for a B1 B2 visa?
To substantiate your professional roots in your home country, you can use the following evidence:How Can One Apply for a Tourist Visa if (S)he is Unemployed?
More answers regarding applying for tourist visa for US in country other than your own [duplicate]
Answer 2
Generally you're supposed to apply at the US consulate at your place of residence. So if you're a resident of a country you're not a citizen of (legally that is, and can prove your legal status) - you can apply at that country, regardless of your citizenship.
Otherwise they'll send you back "home" (the UK in your case), however in some places US consulates have been known to approve visas for non-residents (although from what I know it is not B2 visas, I know people who stamped their L1/H1 visas in Canada, not being Canadian citizens or residents).
To make sure - call the closest US consulate and ask them directly.
As a citizen of the UK (with the right of abode, IIRC that's how its called), you can use the WVP program and then you don't need visa at all, that provided you have a valid ESTA approval, and biometric passport, and plan on staying no longer than 90 days (without any ability to extend, under WVP its very strict).
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