Find answers to common questions about US visa applications and social media privacy
Answer: Yes. As of 2026, it is mandatory for nearly all visa applicants (F, M, J, H-1B, H-4, B1/B2) and ESTA travelers to provide social media identifiers used in the last 5 years.
Answer: No. Consular officers will never ask for your passwords. They only require your "public-facing" handles or usernames (e.g., @Traveler_John).
Answer: Yes, for specific visa types. As of late 2025/early 2026, the Department of State has instructed applicants for H-1B, H-4, F, M, and J visas to set their profiles to "public" during the application process to facilitate vetting.
Answer: No, this is highly discouraged. Deleting accounts right before an interview is a major red flag.
Answer: That is perfectly fine. You can select "None" on the application.
Answer: Yes. You must list any handle used to "create or share content" or interact with others. If the account was active in the last 5 years, it must be disclosed, regardless of the name used on the profile.
Answer: The government isn't looking at your vacation photos. They flag:
Answer: Generally, no. US policy states they do not deny visas based on race, religion, sexual orientation, or standard political affiliation. However, posts that cross the line into inciting violence or "hostile attitudes" toward U.S. institutions are grounds for denial under national security vetting.
Answer: Do your best to recover it. Search your old emails for "Welcome" messages from social platforms. If you absolutely cannot find it, you should provide as much detail as possible in the "Additional Information" section of the DS-160 to show you are acting in good faith.
Answer: While there isn't "live" 24/7 monitoring for every tourist, the US government reserves the right to review social media data stored in your "A-File" (Alien File) during future entries or when applying for visa renewals.
Ready to nail your interview? Social media is just one part of the puzzle. Would you like to generate a personalized checklist of documents you'll need to bring to the embassy based on your specific visa type? Start Your Assessment
Can't find what you're looking for? Submit your question and we'll get back to you.