US Launches $750 Fast-Track Option for Tourist Visas

Washington, D.C. - Travelers applying for U.S. business and tourist visas can now pay $750 to skip ahead in the interview queue under a six-month pilot program.

By Jeff Colhoun 3 min read

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WASHINGTON - Starting July 1, 2026, travelers applying for B1 and B2 nonimmigrant visas for business and tourism can pay $750 to jump ahead in the queue for visa interviews, a significant shift in how the State Department manages consular services for foreign nationals seeking entry to the United States.

The expedited service, structured as a "proof-of-concept" pilot program, will run through the end of 2026 to assess demand for fast-tracked visa processing, according to USA Today. Applicants who pay the additional fee will be able to secure a visa interview appointment within 10 business days, rather than waiting for the next available opening in the standard queue.

How the Fast-Track Process Works

The $750 fee allows applicants to move to the front of the appointment line without providing written justification or seeking personal intervention, according to USA Today. The fee structure applies specifically to B1 (business) and B2 (tourism) visa categories, which cover the majority of temporary visitors to the United States for meetings, conferences, leisure travel, and medical appointments.

The program does not eliminate other visa requirements or alter the adjudication process itself. Applicants still need to complete standard forms, pay the base visa application fee, and attend an in-person interview at a U.S. consulate or embassy. The $750 charge simply accelerates the scheduling of that interview.

State Department's Rationale and Timeline

The State Department is treating the program as a pilot to evaluate whether demand exists for premium scheduling services in the visa process. By limiting the program to six months and framing it as proof of concept, the agency leaves open the possibility of expansion, modification, or cancellation based on how many travelers opt in and what operational impacts emerge.

No cap on the number of fast-track slots has been announced, nor has the State Department disclosed how many standard appointments might be displaced or delayed as a result of prioritizing paid applicants. The pilot will run through December 31, 2026, with implementation starting July 1.

What Changed in the Booking Calculus

For travelers heading to developing regions, conferences, or time-sensitive events in the United States, the $750 fee introduces a clear transactional option where none existed before. If you're organizing a group expedition departure, coordinating a multi-leg itinerary that requires U.S. transit, or booking cruise embarkations with tight turnarounds, the ability to secure a 10-day interview window eliminates a major variable.

That reliability comes at a steep price. The base B1/B2 visa application fee is $185, meaning the total cost to fast-track is $935 per person. For families, business delegations, or travelers from countries where repeat U.S. travel is common but visa validity periods are short, those costs add up quickly.

The pilot also highlights a broader shift in how governments are managing visa backlogs: not by adding capacity or streamlining adjudication, but by tiering access based on ability to pay. That model works for travelers with corporate budgets or discretionary income, but it deepens the gap between those who can afford expedited services and those who can't.

From a practical standpoint, the program is most useful for last-minute business trips, emergency travel, or situations where flight and hotel deposits are already on the line. For leisure travelers planning months out, the standard queue may still be the better bet if wait times at your consulate are manageable. The State Department has not released data on current average wait times by post, so knowing whether the $750 is worth it depends on local conditions that vary widely by country and season.

One unknown is how consulates will balance capacity between paid and standard appointments. If fast-track demand is high, it could push standard wait times even longer, creating a feedback loop where more travelers feel compelled to pay. If demand is low, the pilot may quietly end without fanfare. Either way, the program represents a test case for premium-tier consular services, and how it performs over the next six months will likely shape future policy across other visa categories.

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