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Indian family rejected US visa despite Rs 50L savings, travel history; frustrating encounter goes viral

​​US visa nightmare: Indian family rejected despite Rs 50 lakh savings, global travel history, stable jobs; frustrating encounter goes viral

A seemingly routine US tourist visa application by a financially secure Indian family has gone viral after their unexpected rejection triggered a wider debate on Reddit about fairness, bias, and transparency in American visa processes.In a detailed Reddit post that has since gained traction, a 36-year-old IT professional, posting under the handle @Fun-Mind8782, shared his dismay after being denied a B-2 tourist visa at the US consulate in New Delhi, despite what he described as a strong application backed by financial stability, international travel history, and a clear travel plan.But what began as a personal grievance has since evolved into a broader conversation about how US consular officers wield the little-understood, but immensely powerful, Section 214(b) clause of the Immigration and Nationality Act.A ‘model’ application, denied in minutesAccording to the Redditor, he had applied for a two-week tourist visa for himself and his elderly parents to vacation in the US over Christmas. The family had already traveled to countries including the UK, France, Switzerland, Dubai, and Singapore. Financially, they were on solid ground, with over Rs 50 lakh (~$60,000) in savings between them, and confirmed hotel bookings across New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. “We wanted to go for a vacation,” he wrote. “I even had hotel reservations and an itinerary.”However, the visa interview, held at the New Delhi consulate, took a sharp turn. The man, whose parents are in their 70s and not fluent in English, offered to translate. Instead, the visa officer called in an official translator.After a few basic questions, particularly around whether the family had relatives in the US (they acknowledged having a grandniece, though stated they would not visit her), the officer abruptly denied the visas, citing Section 214(b). Their passports were returned on the spot. When a “yes” becomes a red flagThe incident has reignited scrutiny around Section 214(b), a provision that assumes every applicant for a non-immigrant visa intends to immigrate, unless they can prove strong ties to their home country.Critics argue that this standard is vague and inconsistently applied.The man, who shared his experience on Reddit, described how the interview unfolded. “I greeted him nicely, with a smile and gave him our Passports. I communicated that my Parents first language wasn’t English, so I could translate if he would allow. He replied, no I will get the translator. A lady came and the interview started.”When asked the purpose of their visit, the man replied, “We want to go for a vacation for 2 weeks around Christmas time. We would like to go to New York, LA, SF. I added we have made Hotel reservations and had an itinerary too if it was needed.”The officer then had the translator ask his mother in Hindi where they intended to travel. She answered, “We want to go to New York, LA, San Francisco.”When asked if they had any relatives in the US, she replied, “Yes we have grand niece, but we won’t be visiting her.”At this point, the officer interrupted, “You said your parents don’t know English, and your mother is speaking fine.”The man responded calmly, “Yes sir she is not fluent in English but she can say few words.”The translator then asked who would sponsor the trip, to which he replied, “We all will be sponsoring ourselves. We have stable jobs, sufficient savings and income from stocks etc too.”After waiting for further questions, the man said, “The officer asked no further questions and translator said your visas have been refused. 214b. Gave us the slip and passports back.”He added that, “No questions were asked about our jobs, about our ties back home, previous travel, nothing.”The man provided background about himself and his parents, “I am 36, single, I am the operations head of an IT company for 3.5 years. I earn 15 LPA. Sufficient savings of 20 lakh plus from savings, stocks. Have 10 year experience in running own business.”“My Parents are 70. Both ran our family business for 30 years. Business shut in covid. After a 1 year break, my Parents joined a Publishing company and worked as Client Managers… Earned salary/commissions of 8 and 7.5 lakh per annum respectively… Have savings in 30 lakhs plus which is sufficient for their age.”“I have travelled to UK, France, Switzerland, Spain, Dubai, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and few more countries.”“Parents love to travel too. have travelled to Uk, France, Switzerland, Dubai, Singapore and recently to Vietnam, Indonesia, Bhutan, Azerbaijan too.”“I co own my apartment with my mother. We have a loan too. My father owns properties too so stable ties! Job, and family too.”On his personal situation, he wrote, “I am single as was focussed on work, and then things didn’t work in my long term relationship, but at this age I have no intention of immigrating illegally anywhere. Love my Country and just like to travel.”Concluding, he said, “We weren’t even asked questions. Seems like officer had made mind to refuse from start. So, I would really like to know where we went wrong? Or is it even fair to just blame ourselves because of an unfair System?”Thousands of commenters on Reddit shared similar stories—of being denied for traveling with elderly parents, of innocuous ties to US-based relatives turning into red flags, and of interviews that felt more like foregone conclusions than fair assessments.Former visa officer speaks outBen, a former US consular officer who now runs a YouTube channel breaking down the visa process, weighed in on the Reddit post. He explained that while relatives in the US aren’t automatically a negative, they can be “contextual risk factors.”“If the applicant has a sibling working in a Fortune 500 company, it can actually help,” Ben said. “But if there are questions about whether the relative has maintained their visa status or overstayed, that can hurt, even if it’s not the applicant’s fault.”Ben also noted that officers have only minutes, often less than five, to assess applicants, leading to a heavy reliance on “gut instincts” and stereotypes.Travel dreams, bureaucratic nightmaresThe broader reaction to the post has been one of empathy but also frustration. Many questioned how applicants are supposed to prove “sufficient ties” when employment, property, savings, and return travel plans aren’t enough.“This is why people feel hopeless,” wrote one user. “You do everything by the book and still get rejected without a chance to explain yourself.”Another commenter added, “It feels like the process is rigged to say no, especially if you’re from certain countries.” Go to Source

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