WASHINGTON: Newly compiled U.S. State Department data show the country issued about 250,000 fewer immigrant and nonimmigrant visas from January through August 2025 than in the same period a year earlier. That amounted to an 11% decline in permanent and temporary visas excluding tourist visas, which also fell during the period. The lower totals stretched across student, exchange, worker and family-linked categories at U.S. embassies and consulates worldwide, showing a broad slowdown in legal visa issuance during the first eight months of 2025.

India and China were among the hardest-hit markets, with their nationals receiving roughly 84,000 fewer visas than in the comparable 2024 period. The drop was especially visible in categories used by students, temporary workers, exchange visitors and relatives seeking legal entry. Because the two countries generate heavy visa demand at some of the busiest U.S. posts, lower issuance there stood out sharply in the overall data for 2025 and added substantially to the fall in worldwide visa totals.
Student visas posted some of the steepest declines. State Department figures for May through August 2025 show 36% fewer F-1 visas than in the same months of 2024, while first-eight-month totals pointed to a drop of more than 30% in student approvals overall. Summer issuance to Indian students fell by about 60%, and Chinese students also recorded a sizeable decline, underscoring how the downturn hit two of the largest source markets for international education in the United States.
Student visa categories contract sharply
The weaker issuance coincided with several policy and processing changes in 2025. New student visa interview scheduling was paused in late May, and appointments resumed in June with expanded online presence screening for student and exchange visitor applicants. In the same month, a presidential proclamation imposed full or partial entry restrictions on 19 countries. The State Department was also advancing a reorganization plan that was expected to eliminate about 2,000 jobs, adding to pressure on processing capacity.
The monthly State Department visa tables are marked preliminary and can be revised, but they remain the clearest public gauge of consular output before annual totals are finalized. The data indicate the decline was not confined to one pathway. Alongside student visas, issuance fell in exchange visitor categories and in several worker and family-related channels, including visas tied to employment-based immigration and relatives of U.S. citizens, pointing to a wider pullback across both temporary and permanent admissions.
India and China remain central
The figures carry added weight because India and China are central to U.S. education and migration flows. Open Doors data for the 2024-25 academic year showed 363,019 students from India and 265,919 from China enrolled at U.S. institutions, the two largest national groups. That backdrop helps explain why lower student and temporary visa issuance in those markets was especially visible in the 2025 consular data released through early 2026 and why their decline featured prominently in the overall shift.
As of March 2026, the confirmed picture from the official visa data is a broad pullback in U.S. legal visa issuance during 2025, with some of the sharpest declines concentrated in student and other temporary categories and with India and China accounting for a large share of the drop. The first eight months of the year showed smaller issuance across several major visa tracks, reflecting a measurable slowdown in legal entry approvals recorded by the State Department – By Content Syndication Services.
