Breaking US Travel Ban Expands Dramatically Blocking Entries from 39 Countries Starting January 2026
03 January 2026

Breaking US Travel Ban Expands Dramatically Blocking Entries from 39 Countries Starting January 2026

United States Travel Advisory

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Listeners, if you're planning a trip to the United States right now, urgent new travel restrictions have taken effect that could block your entry, especially if you're from one of dozens of affected countries. On December 16, 2025, the White House issued Presidential Proclamation 10998, dramatically expanding U.S. entry bans starting January 1, 2026 at 12:01 a.m. EST, more than doubling the number of restricted nations from 19 to 39 and adding bans on Palestinian Authority documents, as detailed by Fredrikson & Byron law firm and Alston & Bird insights.

This proclamation suspends immigrant visas and key nonimmigrant categories like B-1/B-2 tourist and business visas, F, M, and J student or exchange visas for nationals of these countries who are outside the U.S. without a valid visa on that date, according to Badmus Law and the White House announcement. Full entry bans hit 12 newly added countries including Syria and others in sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean, where no visas at all can be issued for entry, while partial restrictions apply to 21 more like certain African and Caribbean nations, blocking tourism, business, and study visas but potentially allowing some work visas case-by-case.

The U.S. Department of State emphasizes these measures address national security and vetting gaps, eliminating prior exemptions for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, adoptions, and Afghan Special Immigrant Visas that existed in the June 2025 ban. You're safe if you're already in the U.S., hold a valid pre-January 1 visa, are a green card holder, dual national using an unaffected passport, or qualify for narrow exceptions like diplomats or World Cup athletes, but companies face visa delays and should pause onboarding, per NAFSA and GWU International Services.

Canada's government travel advice warns its citizens of this exact proclamation now in force, urging checks on eligibility before booking flights. No U.S. State Department travel advisory rates America itself as risky for visitors—most global spots like Australia, Germany, and Japan sit at Level 1 exercise normal precautions—but for inbound travelers, these visa walls create the real barrier, with the State Department's Travel.gov listing unrelated outbound advisories.

Act fast: if you're outside the U.S. from an affected country without a visa, entry is likely denied, so review your status, consult immigration experts, and adjust plans immediately to avoid heartbreak at the border. Businesses and schools must scramble too, rethinking international hires and students amid processing backlogs. Stay informed via official State Department visa news, as waivers exist only if they serve U.S. interests, and this policy shift reshapes global travel overnight.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI