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USA Travel Ban 2026: What International Students Need to Know

The updated U.S. travel ban affects students from 39 countries. Full ban list, partial ban list, leaked watchlist, and what you should do if your country is banned.

William Kaseu
William Kaseu
March 27, 20265 min read
USA Travel Ban 2026: What International Students Need to Know

The U.S. just expanded its travel ban. Starting January 1, 2026, students from 39 countries will no longer be able to get F-1 student visas.

This is devastating news for thousands of students. But there are things you can do. This page covers exactly what happened, who's affected, and my recommendation for what to do next.


What Happened#

On December 16, 2025, President Trump signed a new proclamation expanding the travel ban from 19 to 39 countries. The expanded ban took effect January 1, 2026.

Source: White House Fact Sheet


What the Bans Mean#

There are two levels of ban:

Full Ban — All Visas Blocked#

ALL visas blocked. No student visas. No tourist visas. No work visas. No green cards. Nothing.

Partial Ban — Student and Tourist Visas Blocked#

Student visas (F-1), tourist visas (B-1/B-2), and exchange visas (J-1) are BLOCKED. Some work visas like H-1B are still possible but limited to 3 months.


Who's Affected?#

Your SituationWhat It Means
Already in the US with a valid visaYou can stay
Leave the US and your visa is still validYou can return (but expect extra screening)
Outside the US with no valid visaYou CANNOT get a new one
Your visa expiresYou CANNOT renew it

The bottom line: If you're already in the U.S. with a valid visa, you're safe for now. But if you leave, you might not be able to come back.


Full Ban Countries (20)#

All visas blocked — no student visas, no tourist visas, no work visas, no green cards:

#Country
1Afghanistan
2Burkina Faso
3Chad
4Equatorial Guinea
5Eritrea
6Haiti
7Iran
8Laos
9Libya
10Mali
11Niger
12Palestinian Authority
13Republic of the Congo
14Sierra Leone
15Somalia
16South Sudan
17Sudan
18Syria
19Yemen

Partial Ban Countries (19)#

Student visas (F-1), tourist visas (B-1/B-2), and exchange visas (J-1) are blocked. Some work visas still possible but limited:

#Country
1Angola
2Antigua and Barbuda
3Benin
4Burundi
5Cote d'Ivoire
6Cuba
7Dominica
8Gabon
9The Gambia
10Malawi
11Mauritania
12Nigeria
13Senegal
14Tanzania
15Togo
16Tonga
17Venezuela
18Zambia
19Zimbabwe

Watchlist Countries (Leaked — May Be Added Next)#

These 15 countries have appeared on a leaked watchlist and could be added to the ban in a future update:

#Country
1Bhutan
2Cambodia
3Cameroon
4Djibouti
5DR Congo
6Egypt
7Ethiopia
8Ghana
9Kyrgyzstan
10Liberia
11St. Kitts and Nevis
12St. Lucia
13Tuvalu
14Uganda
15Vanuatu

If your country is on this watchlist, I strongly recommend applying to schools now — before any additional restrictions take effect.


If Your Country Is on the Ban List#

I know this news is devastating. But here's my advice: STILL APPLY.

Here's why:

1. Policies change#

This ban doesn't have an end date, but that also means it could be modified or lifted at any time. The Secretary of State is required to review it every 180 days.

2. Courts could intervene#

During Trump's first term, courts issued temporary restraining orders that paused the ban and allowed people to get visas during that window. It could happen again. If you already have an admission letter in hand, you'd be ready to move fast.

3. Having an admission is valuable#

Even if you can't use it right now, an acceptance from an American university opens doors. You can defer enrollment, use it for other opportunities, or be ready if things change.

So don't stop your applications. Keep pushing.


But also have a backup plan. Here's what I recommend:

Consider University of the People#

University of the People (UoPeople) is a fully accredited, tuition-free online American university. You can earn an American degree from anywhere in the world.

Here's the strategy:

  1. Enroll at UoPeople and start earning credits toward an American degree
  2. Study for 2 years while staying in your home country
  3. Transfer those credits to a U.S. university later — hopefully after the bans are lifted
  4. Enter as a junior with 2 years already completed

This way, you're not wasting time. You're building toward your American degree right now, even if you can't physically be there yet.

Consider Canadian Universities#

Canada offers excellent full scholarship programs for international students and is not affected by U.S. travel bans.

Read: Full Scholarships in Canada for Your Master's Degree

Consider a Student Loan#

If the ban is lifted or you're from a non-banned country, MPOWER Financing offers loans to international students — no cosigner or collateral required. To see if you're eligible, fill out an application with MPOWER.


Don't Let This Stop You#

Don't let this ban stop your education. Adapt. Find another path. And stay ready.

The students who succeed are the ones who keep going even when the situation is unfair. Apply to American schools. Apply to Canadian schools. Start earning credits online. Build your profile. Write your essays. Prepare your documents.

When the door opens again — and it will — you'll be ready to walk through it.

I'm rooting for all of you.


Get One-on-One Help#

If you'd like personalized guidance on navigating the travel ban and your options, I offer one-on-one sessions where we go through everything together.

Book a 1-on-1 Call With Me — 60 minutes of focused guidance on your specific situation.


William Kaseu

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