TikTok Social Media Check for the H-4 Visa: 2025 Vetting Rules
H-4 dependents face public-profile vetting since December 2025. What officers see on TikTok, dependent-specific red flags, and how to check your profile before the interview.
The rules that apply to H-4 dependent visa applicants
Public-profile vetting extended to H-1B & H-4
December 2025Effective Dec 15, 2025, the State Department extended the "make profiles public + online presence review" requirement to H-1B specialty workers and H-4 dependents.
H-1B/H-4 applicants must now also set all accounts to public and expect a full online review. This is causing appointment reschedules and longer processing — prepare early.
Source: U.S. Department of State
DS-160 requires 5 years of social media handles
In forceEvery U.S. nonimmigrant visa applicant must list all social media usernames used on each platform in the past five years on the DS-160 form.
Disclose every handle — including old, inactive or deleted accounts. An omission is treated as misrepresentation and can mean denial plus permanent (lifetime) ineligibility.
Content-based denials for extremist endorsement
April 2025USCIS will treat social media content endorsing or promoting antisemitic terrorism or designated terrorist organizations as a negative factor that can justify denying an immigration benefit.
Beyond disclosure, the actual content of your posts matters. Endorsing, sharing or "liking" content tied to designated terrorist groups can be held against you. Review old posts for anything that could be read this way.
Source: USCIS / DHS guidance
What a visa officer can see on TikTok
Screening reviews publicly accessible information — what anyone can see without logging in or following you. On TikTok, that includes:
- Bio, username, profile photo and follower/like counts
- Every public video with sounds, captions, hashtags and post dates
- Comments you leave on other videos (searchable from your profile)
- Reposts and, if enabled, your liked-videos tab
If your account is private: A private TikTok hides your videos, but the account itself — username, photo, bio, follower count — is still visible and still must be disclosed where handle disclosure applies.
TikTok red flags for H-4 dependent visa applicants
These are the patterns that actually cause problems — inconsistencies and intent signals, not embarrassing photos.
Unauthorized-work signals
H-4 holders cannot work without a separate EAD. A TikTok presence advertising services, clients or income — even a hobby shop — is a documented red-flag category for dependents.
Relationship inconsistencies
H-4 is derivative: your marriage and household are part of the application. Public content that contradicts the relationship timeline or living arrangement invites scrutiny of the whole family's status.
A private profile during processing
Since December 15, 2025, H-1B and H-4 applicants must set profiles to public for the online-presence review. A locked TikTok can delay processing.
Trend participation that reads badly out of context
Viral joke formats about overstaying, working under the table or "marrying for papers" are comedy in-app and evidence in a consular review.
Your comment history
Comments on other creators' videos are visible from your profile and are part of your "online presence" — people forget years of them.
Duets and stitches
Reacting to political or extremist content associates your account with it, even if your own take was neutral.
How to audit your TikTok before you apply
- Open your profile in an incognito/private window, logged out — that is the officer's view.
- Check the profile basics: does your bio, location and work info match what your application says?
- Scroll your full history — posts, comments, tagged content — not just the last few months.
- Search your username and real name on Google; screening includes the open web, not just the app.
- List every handle you’ve used in the past five years for the DS-160 — including accounts you no longer use.
Frequently asked questions
Do I have to list my TikTok handle on the DS-160?
Yes, if you used it in the past five years. The DS-160 requires every social media username used on each platform in that period — including old, inactive or deleted TikTok accounts. Omitting one is treated as misrepresentation and can mean denial plus permanent ineligibility.
Does a private TikTok account hurt my H-4 dependent visa application?
It can. Since December 2025, H-1B and H-4 applicants are required to set profiles to public for the online-presence review — a locked account can itself cause delay or be read as having something to hide. A private TikTok hides your videos, but the account itself — username, photo, bio, follower count — is still visible and still must be disclosed where handle disclosure applies.
How far back do officers look on TikTok?
Handle disclosure covers the past five years, but the content review has no time limit: officers are instructed to review your entire online presence. Old posts, comments and tagged content on TikTok are all part of it.
Should I delete my TikTok account before applying?
Deletion does not remove your disclosure obligation: a TikTok handle used in the past five years must be listed on the DS-160 even if the account is gone. Deleting right before applying can also look evasive. Audit and fix specific content instead.
Can visa officers read my TikTok DMs or private messages?
No. Consular and immigration screening reviews publicly accessible information — direct messages and private content are not part of it. (Border officers inspecting a device at entry are a separate, much rarer scenario.) That is also exactly what this tool audits: what's publicly visible.
See your TikTok the way an officer will
Run a free scan of your public profiles — we flag the inconsistencies and risk signals that matter for a H-4 dependent visa, before you submit.
Check my profiles freeRelated guides
Independent service — not affiliated with any government and not legal advice. Regulations current as of June 2026; always confirm against the linked official sources.