DS-160 Social Media Disclosure: What You Need to Know
Since 2019, the DS-160 visa application form requires disclosure of social media identifiers. Here's what that means for your application.
What is Officially Required
The DS-160 Online Nonimmigrant Visa Application asks all applicants to provide social media identifiers used in the past 5 years.
- You must list usernames/handles for platforms like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and others
- The form covers the past 5 years of social media activity
- Consular officers may review publicly available information from these accounts
Source: U.S. Department of State, 22 CFR Part 41 (2019)
What is Public vs Private
Understanding what visa officers can actually see on each platform without logging in.
X (Twitter)
Common DS-160 Social Media Mistakes
Avoid these pitfalls that can lead to visa complications:
Omitting Active Accounts
Failing to list social media accounts you actively use can be considered misrepresentation if discovered.
Inconsistent Employment Information
Your LinkedIn job history should match the employment section of your DS-160 exactly.
Immigration Intent Signals
Public posts suggesting permanent relocation plans contradict non-immigrant visa intent requirements.
Mira Lo Que Los Oficiales de Visa Ven Sobre Ti — Gratis
En solo 3 minutos, obtén un reporte que muestra exactamente qué es visible públicamente en tus perfiles. Corrige problemas antes de tu entrevista — no después de un rechazo.
Revisar Mis Perfiles Ahora →This tool analyzes publicly accessible information only. Not affiliated with any government agency. Not legal advice.