Entering the US with my wife when we hold a passports from different countries?

Entering the US with my wife when we hold a passports from different countries? - Top view of different types and colors American dollars placed together on each other

My wife has a passport of country A + B1/B2 visa to US (country A citizens need a visa to enter US). I have a passport of country A and also a passport of country B + ESTA (country B citizens don't need a visa to enter the US, only ESTA) Since I didn't apply for a visa with my country A passport, I will use my country B passport to enter the US.

My question is:

My wife & I are planning to travel to the US and since we are family should go to the passport control together when entering the US. I have a concern that the security officer at border control will challenge us about why we are using passports from different nations and especially why I didn't apply for a visa for my passport from country A. Is this concern justified, or should we not face any problems?



Best Answer

There's no problem. Immigration officers understand that people have different citizenships and passports and will be used to seeing families where not everybody has the same passport. It happens all the time. You are not expected to get a visa just because your wife needs one; they can see you have a passport from a country that is part of the Visa Waiver Program and will understand why you wanted to use that.

On your ESTA application, you will be asked if you are a citizen of any other country, and you should answer Country A at that time. As such, the US authorities will already know you have both citizenships.

If you are asked about it at the border, you can simply tell the truth as you have here.




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Entering the US with my wife when we hold a passports from different countries? - From above of flags of United States of America on toothpicks placed near bundle of American dollars of different nominal pars on white surface of table
Entering the US with my wife when we hold a passports from different countries? - Crop unrecognizable male in casual outfit standing with different nominal pars of dollar banknotes in pocket of jeans jacket
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Can I leave the US with one passport and enter with another?

Most U.S. citizens, including dual nationals, must use a U.S. passport to enter and leave the United States. Dual nationals may also be required by the foreign country to use its passport to enter and leave that country. Use of the foreign passport does not endanger U.S. citizenship.

Can an American hold two passports?

Yes. U.S. citizens are allowed to have more than one valid U.S. passport at the same time, according to the National Passport Information Center, which is a division of the U.S. State Department. But in most cases, you are only allowed to have two valid passports at a time, according to the NPIC.

Do dual nationals need visa?

As a dual passport holder can use the passport which is most beneficial for your needs \u2013 e.g. requires no visa or allows you to stay for longer. The ability to travel between both countries without restriction.

How do you travel with dual citizenship?

Travelers with dual citizenship should travel with the passport that makes their journey easiest. Different countries each have their own immigration and visa policies. These policies often affect some nationalities differently from others.



Traveling with two passports - I almost got arrested | Jure Sanguinis Italian Dual Citizenship




More answers regarding entering the US with my wife when we hold a passports from different countries?

Answer 2

This will not be a problem.

Approach immigration together. This is what is normally expected of a family travelling together. Immigration officials are used to seeing married couples from different countries and requiring different documents. They will process them both. As @phoog says, you are expected to submit a joint customs declaration form, which means you have to approach together.

In the case where two people approached together when they are not supposed to, the worst that would happen is that they would tell one of you to go back and wait (source: I've done it accidentally). There is zero chance that wrongly approaching immigration together would have any effect on whether they admitted you.

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