The real reasons US visa applications from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and other African countries get refused — and exactly what to do differently next time.
By VisaNav Team
The US B-1/B-2 visa has an approval rate of around 45–55% for applicants from most African countries. That means nearly half of all applications are refused. Understanding exactly why rejections happen — and what consular officers are really looking for — can dramatically improve your chances.
Every US visa applicant must prove they will return home after their visit. This is called non-immigrant intent, and it is the single most important factor in the decision.
Consular officers are trained to assume you want to stay in the US permanently. Your job is to prove them wrong.
What convinces them you will return:
If your life looks like it could easily relocate to the US, your application is at high risk.
The US requires you to show you can fund your trip without working illegally. Consular officers look at:
The biggest mistake: Depositing borrowed money into your account just before applying. Officers see this pattern constantly. Your balance should reflect genuine savings built over months.
A good rule of thumb — your bank balance should be at least 3× the estimated trip cost.
"Tourism" is not a sufficient answer. Consular officers want to know:
A detailed, credible itinerary signals that you have genuinely planned a real trip — not that you are looking for any excuse to enter the US.
If you have been refused a US visa before, your new application needs to directly address why the previous one was refused and what has changed.
Do not simply reapply with the same documents. Officers can see your entire visa history.
Ask yourself — what was the reason for refusal? Then build your new application specifically to address that weakness.
Consular officers are trained to spot inconsistencies between:
Every document must tell the same consistent story. Review your application carefully before submitting.
Since 2019, US visa applications require you to disclose your social media accounts. Officers do check them.
Posts that suggest you want to live in the US permanently, have US citizen connections you did not mention, or show a lifestyle inconsistent with your stated income can all cause problems.
Start with a realistic self-assessment. Use VisaNav's AI Assessment tool to evaluate your profile honestly before investing time and money in an application.
Document your ties to home first. Before applying, gather evidence of your job, property, family, and community ties. These are your strongest arguments.
Build your bank balance genuinely. Do not rush to apply. Spend 3–6 months building a consistent bank balance that clearly reflects your real income.
Get a strong employer letter. Your employer letter should be on official letterhead, signed by a senior person, and state your position, salary, length of employment, and the specific dates you have been granted leave.
Prepare thoroughly for the interview. The consular interview is brief — typically 2–5 minutes. Your answers need to be clear, confident, and consistent with your documents. Our Interview Preparation tool generates the 20 most likely questions for your specific profile with model answers tailored to your situation.
Consider building travel history first. If you have never traveled internationally, consider getting a UAE visa or visiting nearby countries first. A clean travel history with no overstays is a significant positive signal.
You will receive a refusal code. The most common are:
For a 214(b) refusal, do not reapply immediately. Take time to genuinely strengthen your ties to your home country. A new job, a property purchase, getting married, or having children all help.
When you do reapply, write a brief cover letter acknowledging the previous refusal and clearly explaining what has changed in your circumstances since then.
Many African applicants get approved on their second or third attempt — not because they got lucky, but because their circumstances genuinely improved. US consular officers are not trying to discriminate. They are following a clear assessment of risk.
The applicants who succeed are those who build a profile that genuinely says: I have too much to lose at home to overstay in the US.
Build that profile, document it thoroughly, and your application will speak for itself.
Need help with your US visa application? Use VisaNav's AI Assessment to check your approval chances, or get a personalised cover letter and interview preparation guide.
Last updated: January 2026.
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