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U.S. Mission to India continues to break records in 2024-Telangana Today


In the past four years, visitor numbers from India have increased by five times, and more than two million Indians traveled to the United States in the first eleven months of 2024, a 26% increase over the same period in 2023.

Published Date – 27 December 2024, 03:25 PM


U.S. Mission to India continues to break records in 2024


Hyderabad: The U.S. Mission to India issued more than one million non-immigrant visas for the second year in a row, including a record number of visitor visas, underscoring the huge demand of Indians for travel to the United States for tourism, business, and education.

In the past four years, visitor numbers from India have increased by five times, and more than two million Indians traveled to the United States in the first eleven months of 2024, a 26% increase over the same period in 2023. Over five million Indians already have a non-immigrant visa to visit the United States and each day the Mission issues thousands more.


The Department of State completed a successful pilot program to renew of H-1B visas in the United States this year. This allowed many specialty occupation workers from India to renew their visas without leaving the United States. This pilot program streamlined the renewal process for thousands of applicants, and the Department of State is working to formally establish a U.S.-based renewal program in 2025.

The U.S. Mission to India issued tens of thousands of immigrant visas, facilitating legal family reunification and the migration of skilled professionals. These immigrant visa holders became permanent residents upon their arrival, adding to the already rich and sizable Indian diaspora community in the United States.

The U.S. Mission to India also provided more than 24,000 passports and other consular services to American citizens living and traveling in India. A new version of the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) debuted in 2024, making it easier for the embassy and consulates to contact American citizens during emergencies and send them safety and security alerts.

Increased processing of thousands of interview waiver-eligible non-immigrant visa applications each week made it quicker and easier for Indians to renew their non-immigrant visas.

More Indian students than ever before now have U.S. student visas. In 2024, India became the top sender of international students for the first time since the 2008/2009 academic year with more than 331,000 students overall studying in the United States.

India also remained the largest sender of international graduate students in the United States for the second year; Indian graduate student numbers increased by 19 percent to reach almost 200,000 students.



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