
Student visas are the primary jumping-off point for most high-skilled immigrants to the United States. Immigrants study at Americaโs elite universities and then find jobs here when they graduate, mainly through the post-graduate employment authorization program calledโฏOptional Practical Trainingย (OPT). These skilled workers are critical components of US competitiveness, innovation, and growth. Nonetheless, in the past few months, the administration has engaged in a shocking assault on international students.
The administration started by mass terminating status forย at least 6,400 studentsย based onย dismissed charges,ย fishing license citations,ย traffic tickets, and other minor offenses. It suspendedย Harvardโs right to enroll foreign studentsย entirely. Officials have arrested students who oppose US foreign policy, including byย writing op-eds. Just this week, it temporarily suspended allย student visa issuancesย to troll their social media to look for dissent and announced aย new visa revocation policyย for Chinese students. Oneย Trump political appointeeย suggested this week that OPT should be ended.
These egregious and unjustified assaults come at a time when new statistics from the State Department show that, before Trump took office, the international student visa denial rate reached the highest level on record. The State Department rejected an unprecedented 41 percent of student visa applicants in 2024, surpassing 2023โs record of 36 percent.
Student visas are known as Fโ1 visas. Figure 1ย shows the Fโ1 student visa denial rate compared with the visa denial rate for all other nonimmigrant (i.e., temporary) visa applicants. As it shows, student visas usually have aย similar rejection rate to other nonimmigrant visa applicants. However, from 2021 to 2024, student visas were denied at nearly twice the rate of all other applicants. The student visa denial rate increased from a low of 15 percent in 2014 to 41 percent in 2024.
In 2024, consular officers denied a record 278,553 student visas. Figure 2 shows that more visas were rejected in 2024 than were issued in 2002 and 2005. The staggering number of denials occurred even as the number of issuances remained far below the peak year of 2015. Even in 2015, with far more applicants, there were fewer denials than in 2024. It now appears that the higher denial rates, which shot up in 2016, may have dissuaded some applicants from applying. The absolute number of total student visa applicants has declined, and student visa issuances have declined 38 percent from 2015 to 2024.
It is important to understand that before aย student can even apply for an Fโ1 visa, they mustย already be acceptedโฏinto a government-approved university. This means that the US Department of State rejected 278,553 students who eachย would have paidย an average of $30,884 per year, totaling approximately $8.6 billion annually in tuition and living expenses. Over four years, that number amounts to a significant $34.4 billion in lost tuition payments to the United States.
The State Department does not separately delineate the reasons for student visa denials, but nearly all nonimmigrant visas are denied for failing to prove โnonimmigrant intentโ (that is, the desire not to move to the United States permanently). Applicants need to show sufficient ties to their home country that would impel them to return when their reasons for visiting have ended.
The nonimmigrant intent subjective standard can be enforced in aโฏvariety of ways. Consular officers are supposed to consider only someoneโs โpresent intent,โ not how their intention might change if opportunities arise in the United States to stay legally. In practice, there is very little consistency in application.
The unprecedented denials occurred even though the State Department officials in Washington, DC, attempted to return to a lower standard of evidence for students that existed before Trump. Theย Foreign Affairs Manualโฏnow states that students โshould be looked at differentlyโ because โtypically, students lack the strong economic and social ties of more established visa applicants, and they plan longer stays in the United States.โ It concludes that โthe natural circumstances of being a student do not disqualify the applicant.โ This change occurred in September 2021, before the start of fiscal year 2022.
The State Department hasnโt disclosed the denial rate by nationality in 2023 or 2024, but the rise and fall of Chinese students is the most important trend in student visa policy in recent years (Figure 3). In 2024, however, the biggest change was among Indian nationals. Indian consulates issued an unprecedented 130,839 student visas in 2023, which is by far the highest total for India ever. In 2024, that number fell to 86,110 student visas, a decrease of 34 percent.
According to data obtained by researchers through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, US consulates in India were far more likely toย deny studentsย than US consulates in China before the pandemic. Indians accounted for a record 29 percent of all student visa issuances in 2023 and 21 percent of all issuances in 2024, so their higher denial rate could have affected the worldwide average more. According to FOIA data obtained by researchers atย Shorelight, the difference in denial rates between India and China persisted through 2022 (though the denial rate in 2022ย in China was higher than it was in 2015). But the researchers do not present exact numbers.
The more significant issue here is how the Bureau of Consular Affairs handles visa interviews. The then-head of the Consular Affairs division in India is Don Heflin. Heโฏexplainedโฏhowย student visa interviewsย work in April 2022:
Bring [bank statements] just in case the vice consul asks, but we are looking at this less than we used to. We know Indian families usually find aย way [to pay].โฆ Mostly itโs about explaining why this school and this curriculum makes sense to you. Itโs what in American English we call the elevator pitch. Youโll have aย minute and aย half to tell us why this [school] makes sense to you. Donโt walk up and recite something from memory about the campus, the student body, and how old the school is.โฆ Listen, Iย have aย lot of Indian friends. Iย know that your father may have told you where you were going to go to school and what you were going to study. Thatโs fine. Tell us what he told you. Show us that it makes sense for you.
None of this information relates to the legal requirements for a student visa. This absurd method of adjudicating student visas explains why India has a much higher-than-average student visa refusal rate, even though Indian students are extremely successful in the United States. The United States should not pass on tens of billions of dollars in economic activity from these students because they memorized their โelevator pitchโ on why they want to study computer science in Kansas. Itโs totally irrelevant.
With the Trump administration escalating attacks on international students, the student visa denial rate will likely increase further. More importantly, fewer people will likely apply to study in the United States as the odds of acceptance fall. Never before has the US government so explicitly attempted to smash a hole in the skilled immigrant pipeline. Congress should act to protect student visas from these unjustified assaults.
(This article appeared on Cato.org May 30, 2025)



