A trip to the US Embassy for a visa interview

5 minute read

Back in early July, I had to head off to the US Embassy in London for the interview for my work visa to come and live out in Seattle. While there was lots of official information about what you needed to do, I didna€™t find much discussion of the experience and so I thought Ia€™d share mine here. First of all, nothing here is secret or security related information. You can find all the details on the US Embassy web site, here and here for example.

Microsoft retains a law firm to help prepare all the paperwork for international work visas. This is the norm and most companies would do this. At a certain point once the initial checks are complete, they ask you to contact the embassy to make an appointment for a visa interview. When I applied, the wait time was about 6 weeks and this gives the lawyers a deadline to work with to ensure you have all the documentation you need by then and everything has been checked.

In the UK, you can have an interview either at the embassy in London or at the consulate in Belfast. With hindsight, Belfast might have been more convenient for me and I could have flown from Birmingham instead of getting a train down to London. As it turned out, I was working in Reading the same week as my interview so things worked out okay. Ita€™s just worth considering Belfast since ita€™s not too hard to get to and some of the low cost carriers offer cheaper flights to Belfast than the cost of a train ticket to London.

One thing to note is that when you call the embassy to make the appointment you have to ring a premium rate phone number at £1.20/minute. The call takes 6 or 7 minutes and it seems infuriatingly expensive at the time as they repeat everything back to you and spell everything twice but then again this isna€™t something you want to get wrong because ita€™ll probably mean starting again if it is. This offered only a small problem in that the phones in the office wouldna€™t dial premium rate numbers nor would the Microsoft issued mobile phone so I had to wait until I was at home during the day to make the call. You need your passport to hand (sort of obvious) and a credit card to pay the application fee (maybe less obvious) while on the call. It costs US$131 to make the appointment.

When you ring they will let you know the first available appointment and probably offer a couple of appointment times. My recommendation is that you get the earliest time they offer. I made the mistake of going a little later and getting a 10.30am appointment which meant the process ran into lunchtime and so took a little longer (they dona€™t stop completely for lunch but half the people go to lunch and then the other half so it does cause a delay while fewer people are serving). Ia€™d recommend 9am or 9.30am if they offer it.

The Embassy is probably about 10 minutes walk from Bond Street tube or 15 minutes from Oxford Circus. There are some important rules with visiting the Embassy because of the security. You cana€™t take any electronic devices with you. This includes mobile phones, MP3 players, or even the electronic key fob for locking your car. This is pretty inconvenient and the embassy web site does have links to left luggage places where you can leave these things.

You are told to arrive at the embassy 30 minutes before your appointment but no earlier. You queue up outside and if it happens to be raining youa€™re going to get wet so go prepared. I was lucky a€” it started raining (hard) just as I got inside but a few people came in soaked after me. You queue up to show the people outside that you have the required basic documentation. You need to show your passport and again to the embassy security guard who checks your passport against the appointment confirmation. You then wait to go into the security lodge for your belongings to be x-rayed and to go through the airport-style metal detector. Once through here, you walk around the corner and into the embassy.

Inside, speak to the receptionist and show the appointment receipt. She scans it and gives you a number and invites you to go and sit and wait to be called. It took about half an hour from arriving to get to this point so you get inside roughly at the time of your appointment. You wait until your number is called (I had to wait for about half an hour) and you go to a booth to give the official all your paperwork and your passport. Rather than just giving him or her a big pile of documents, give him each document and any copies as he asks for each one. He will check to ensure it is all filled out correctly. They also take your fingerprints on an electronic scanner. Once this process is done, they will ask you to take a seat until you are called for your interview.

This is the part where you have to wait around while they are doing all the checks on you and processing the application. After about 2 hours I was called to a different area for the interview and to pay another visa fee. Finally, you have to queue up to pay the courier who will be returning your passport to you. Of note here is that while the embassy say they take Amex to pay the visa fee (and they do), the courier firm dona€™t and so you need a different way to pay them.

It was a long process and I spent 4 hours or so in the embassy but in the end you are asking for permission to go and live and work in someone elsea€™s country so it only pays to be patient and understanding. After all, if you dona€™t like it you can always stay at home!

Fortunately, everything went to plan and my passport was returned within a week so that I could confirm my travel plans.

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