Visa Denied Over Social Media: What Are Your Options?
A denial connected to your online presence is not one thing — it ranges from a temporary 221(g) pause while your profiles are reviewed, to a credibility refusal you can reapply after, to a misrepresentation finding with permanent consequences. Knowing which one you got determines everything about what to do next.
I got a 221(g) slip and my profiles are being reviewed. Is that a denial?
Not a final one — 221(g) is administrative processing. For social-media-related cases it often means the review of your online presence isn't complete (common since the 2025 public-profile rules). Keep profiles public and consistent, respond to any document requests, and wait; many 221(g) cases resolve to issuance.
I was refused under 214(b) after questions about my posts. Can I reapply?
Yes — 214(b) (failure to establish nonimmigrant intent / ties) carries no ban. But reapplying without changing anything invites the same result. If posts about US job hunting or "staying for good" drove the doubt, address the substance: clean up the contradictions, strengthen documented ties, and be ready to discuss the posts directly.
The officer said I misrepresented by omitting an account. How serious is that?
The most serious outcome: a willful-misrepresentation finding under INA 212(a)(6)(C)(i) is a permanent inadmissibility ground. It doesn't always end the road — a waiver (e.g., under INA 212(d)(3) for nonimmigrants) may be available — but this is the point where a qualified immigration attorney stops being optional.
Can I find out exactly what content caused the problem?
Officers rarely itemize it. Your best reconstruction: what were you asked about at the window? Which accounts did the refusal reference? Then audit your entire public presence the way the officer saw it — the trigger content is usually findable once you look with fresh eyes.
What should change before I reapply?
Three things: full, accurate disclosure on the new DS-160 (every handle, five years); a public presence with the contradictions actually resolved — not deleted into a suspicious void, but consistent with your application; and an interview answer that addresses the previous refusal head-on instead of hoping it doesn't come up.
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Independent service — not affiliated with any government and not legal advice. Rules current as of July 2026; always confirm against official sources.