The US B1 and B2 visa is that common short visa for quick U.S. visits. B1 visa side lets you handle business — sit in meetings, go to conferences, negotiate deals, or chat with partners. But no proper job or getting paid by any American company, that’s strictly not allowed. B2 visa is for normal tourist stuff: holiday, seeing family and friends, or even short medical treatment. Most people just apply for the combined one.
When you land, the officer at immigration writes your allowed stay on the I-94 paper — usually up to 6 months max, but it depends on what you tell them. The visa sticker can be valid for many years, but every trip must be short and you have to prove you’ll go back home. Show your job, family, or property ties clearly.
Main rules: Don’t overstay even one extra day, it can ruin future visas badly. No full-time study, no paid work or performances. Be straight with the officer about your plans — they check intentions hard.
It’s only for temporary visits, nothing more. Always check the latest on travel.state.gov before you fill the form or travel, because one small mistake creates big problems later.
Depends on your passport and what the embassy feels like giving. Indians mostly get 10 years these days. Pakistanis often get 1 to 5 years. UAE folks usually land 5 or 10 years. But remember, the visa being “valid” just means you can try to enter the US during that time. The real limit is how many days the officer at the airport lets you stay.
It’s for genuine business stuff – going for meetings, conferences, signing deals, talking to partners, or quick training. You can’t start working a normal job or get paid by an American company on this.
This is the one most of us get. One visa stamp that lets you do both business things and tourism/medical visits.
The regular visitor visa for short trips – either for work meetings or holiday/family time.
B-1 is strictly business only. B-1/B-2 is the combo that gives you both options. These days they hardly issue pure B-1 anymore for our countries.
Simple: B-1 for business meetings and deals. B-2 for holidays, visiting relatives, weddings, or getting medical treatment. Most people just get the combined B-1/B-2.
Absolutely not. If you take any paid job, even small gigs, they can cancel your visa and make it very hard to come back later.
No chance. It’s a visitor visa, not a work visa.
The U.S. visa doesn’t open doors to Canada. You still need your own Canadian visa or eTA. Having a U.S. visa in your passport can sometimes help your Canadian application though.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
Usually up to 6 months each time you enter. The guy at immigration stamps your I-94 and writes the exact days. Most people get between 3 to 6 months.
Up to 6 months per visit, decided when you land.
Maximum 6 months each entry. You can try to extend it sometimes, but don’t count on it easily.
It’s possible but risky. If you have a strong reason like marrying a U.S. citizen, you can try to adjust status inside the U.S. But if they smell that you planned to stay from the beginning, it can backfire badly. A lot of people go back home and apply the proper way. Get a good lawyer before trying anything.
From Pakistan it’s tough – refusal rates are high, sometimes over 50%. India is better but still not easy, around 20% refusal lately. UAE is much easier, very low refusal. You really need to show strong ties back home – job, family, property, savings – so they believe you’ll return.
The normal short-stay visa for business or tourism.
Same – visitor visa for temporary trips.
Visitor visa for business meetings or holiday.
Business visitor visa.
B-1 = business only. B-2 = tourism or medical only.
No such thing as H-B1. You might be mixing it with H-1B, which is a proper work visa for skilled professionals. Completely different.
B-1 for business activities, B-2 for pleasure/tourism/medical.
It’s still the regular B-1/B-2 visitor visa. The “R” is just an internal code the embassy uses.
US visa for short business or tourist visits.
Visa for short business trips.
Fill the DS-160 form online, pay the fee, book your interview at the embassy (Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Dubai etc.), and go with solid documents showing your purpose and why you’ll come back.
Same difficulties as B1/B2. Talk to a proper immigration lawyer first.
Temporary visitor visa for business or tourism.
The combined business + tourist visa.
Your passport, DS-160 confirmation, fee receipt, invitation letter if any, job letter or business proof, bank statements, property papers, family details – anything that shows you have strong reasons to return home.
It’s tough for pure visitors. California DMV usually doesn’t give full licenses to tourists on B-1/B-2. You might get a temporary one matching your stay period if you prove legal presence, but many people can’t. For short trips, just use your home license + international permit. Check the latest DMV rules because they are strict.
Nonimmigrant. You have to prove you’re only visiting and will go back home.
Short visits for meetings, holidays, family events or medical stuff – up to 6 months each time. No paid work allowed.
For short business activities.
Visitor visas – B-1 business, B-2 tourism.
Business visitor only.
Combined visitor visa.
Same list – passport, forms, proofs of ties and purpose.
On the visa sticker in your passport, look for the red number (usually 8 digits) at the bottom right corner.
Same spot – red number at the bottom right of the visa foil.
This version is written like normal conversation – the way we actually talk. No perfect sentences, just clear and honest. Rules can shift, so always check travel.state.gov for your specific case, especially interview wait times in your city.
Disclaimer:
Some content on this website may be created or assisted using AI technology and is provided for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, tax, accounting, financial, or immigration advice. Please consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.






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