For US ESTA, should I mention a visa denial from before I got UK citizenship?
I had applied for US visit visa back in 2011 from the UK but it was refused as I didn't have strong ties.
Last year I applied again for business purpose and was approved the visa in less than 15 minutes.
I have valid B1/B2 visa for 5 years in my other passport
I didn't travel as circumstanses changed.
Now I have acquired UK citizenship and hold UK passport. I am plannin to visit US for tourism purpose. As a british citizen I can apply for ESTA but I am confused what should I put in the question here
Have you ever been denied a U.S. visa or entry into the U.S. or had a
U.S. visa canceled?
Should I yes ? If I mention yes will it automatically reject my ESTA.
visas usa esta
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I had applied for US visit visa back in 2011 from the UK but it was refused as I didn't have strong ties.
Last year I applied again for business purpose and was approved the visa in less than 15 minutes.
I have valid B1/B2 visa for 5 years in my other passport
I didn't travel as circumstanses changed.
Now I have acquired UK citizenship and hold UK passport. I am plannin to visit US for tourism purpose. As a british citizen I can apply for ESTA but I am confused what should I put in the question here
Have you ever been denied a U.S. visa or entry into the U.S. or had a
U.S. visa canceled?
Should I yes ? If I mention yes will it automatically reject my ESTA.
visas usa esta
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
4
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
1
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago
add a comment |
I had applied for US visit visa back in 2011 from the UK but it was refused as I didn't have strong ties.
Last year I applied again for business purpose and was approved the visa in less than 15 minutes.
I have valid B1/B2 visa for 5 years in my other passport
I didn't travel as circumstanses changed.
Now I have acquired UK citizenship and hold UK passport. I am plannin to visit US for tourism purpose. As a british citizen I can apply for ESTA but I am confused what should I put in the question here
Have you ever been denied a U.S. visa or entry into the U.S. or had a
U.S. visa canceled?
Should I yes ? If I mention yes will it automatically reject my ESTA.
visas usa esta
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I had applied for US visit visa back in 2011 from the UK but it was refused as I didn't have strong ties.
Last year I applied again for business purpose and was approved the visa in less than 15 minutes.
I have valid B1/B2 visa for 5 years in my other passport
I didn't travel as circumstanses changed.
Now I have acquired UK citizenship and hold UK passport. I am plannin to visit US for tourism purpose. As a british citizen I can apply for ESTA but I am confused what should I put in the question here
Have you ever been denied a U.S. visa or entry into the U.S. or had a
U.S. visa canceled?
Should I yes ? If I mention yes will it automatically reject my ESTA.
visas usa esta
visas usa esta
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 9 hours ago
Dirty-flow
10.4k1354111
10.4k1354111
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 21 hours ago
MakkyMakky
1336
1336
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Makky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
4
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
1
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
4
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
1
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago
Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
4
4
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
1
1
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Presuming you still maintain your previous citizenship (in addition to your UK citizenship) AND you still have that passport and it's still valid, then you can travel on that passport/visa. There is no need to apply for a new ESTA or visa, and doing so will only put your current visa status at risk.
When your current visa expires, then if/when you subsequently need to travel to the US, then your best option will be to apply for an ESTA on your UK passport. When you do this, you should answer "yes" to the question about having been denied a visa previously, as YOU have been, and that's what matters (it's not related to your citizenship/etc).
When you do this your ESTA may be approved or it may be rejected. If it's approved, you're good to go. If it's not, then you will need to obtain another visa at that time.
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Update: OP updated their question to note they already have a valid US visa! Then just use that and don't apply for a new ESTA or visa. See I have two passports/nationalities. How do I use them when I travel? for how to travel with two passports.
Original answer assuming you don't already have a visa:
You should answer yes. All the questions are about you, not your passport or nationality, so becoming a UK citizen does not change the fact that you were previously denied a visa.
Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle, but based on what you've told us it's highly likely to get approved, and it's much better than getting busted for lying on the ESTA application form.
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
|
show 6 more comments
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Presuming you still maintain your previous citizenship (in addition to your UK citizenship) AND you still have that passport and it's still valid, then you can travel on that passport/visa. There is no need to apply for a new ESTA or visa, and doing so will only put your current visa status at risk.
When your current visa expires, then if/when you subsequently need to travel to the US, then your best option will be to apply for an ESTA on your UK passport. When you do this, you should answer "yes" to the question about having been denied a visa previously, as YOU have been, and that's what matters (it's not related to your citizenship/etc).
When you do this your ESTA may be approved or it may be rejected. If it's approved, you're good to go. If it's not, then you will need to obtain another visa at that time.
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Presuming you still maintain your previous citizenship (in addition to your UK citizenship) AND you still have that passport and it's still valid, then you can travel on that passport/visa. There is no need to apply for a new ESTA or visa, and doing so will only put your current visa status at risk.
When your current visa expires, then if/when you subsequently need to travel to the US, then your best option will be to apply for an ESTA on your UK passport. When you do this, you should answer "yes" to the question about having been denied a visa previously, as YOU have been, and that's what matters (it's not related to your citizenship/etc).
When you do this your ESTA may be approved or it may be rejected. If it's approved, you're good to go. If it's not, then you will need to obtain another visa at that time.
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Presuming you still maintain your previous citizenship (in addition to your UK citizenship) AND you still have that passport and it's still valid, then you can travel on that passport/visa. There is no need to apply for a new ESTA or visa, and doing so will only put your current visa status at risk.
When your current visa expires, then if/when you subsequently need to travel to the US, then your best option will be to apply for an ESTA on your UK passport. When you do this, you should answer "yes" to the question about having been denied a visa previously, as YOU have been, and that's what matters (it's not related to your citizenship/etc).
When you do this your ESTA may be approved or it may be rejected. If it's approved, you're good to go. If it's not, then you will need to obtain another visa at that time.
Presuming you still maintain your previous citizenship (in addition to your UK citizenship) AND you still have that passport and it's still valid, then you can travel on that passport/visa. There is no need to apply for a new ESTA or visa, and doing so will only put your current visa status at risk.
When your current visa expires, then if/when you subsequently need to travel to the US, then your best option will be to apply for an ESTA on your UK passport. When you do this, you should answer "yes" to the question about having been denied a visa previously, as YOU have been, and that's what matters (it's not related to your citizenship/etc).
When you do this your ESTA may be approved or it may be rejected. If it's approved, you're good to go. If it's not, then you will need to obtain another visa at that time.
answered 19 hours ago
DocDoc
73.9k4173275
73.9k4173275
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
2
2
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
Or even if that other passport is no longer valid. A valid visa in an invalid passport + another valid passport is acceptable.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
@RomanOdaisky reference?
– Makky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/…, item 4. The “should be from the same country” part is rather confusing though. Maybe some further research is needed.
– Roman Odaisky
9 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
If the OP is still a citizen of his original country, he should be able to get a new passport for that citizenship as well, and use that as described with the old visa
– George M
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Update: OP updated their question to note they already have a valid US visa! Then just use that and don't apply for a new ESTA or visa. See I have two passports/nationalities. How do I use them when I travel? for how to travel with two passports.
Original answer assuming you don't already have a visa:
You should answer yes. All the questions are about you, not your passport or nationality, so becoming a UK citizen does not change the fact that you were previously denied a visa.
Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle, but based on what you've told us it's highly likely to get approved, and it's much better than getting busted for lying on the ESTA application form.
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
|
show 6 more comments
Update: OP updated their question to note they already have a valid US visa! Then just use that and don't apply for a new ESTA or visa. See I have two passports/nationalities. How do I use them when I travel? for how to travel with two passports.
Original answer assuming you don't already have a visa:
You should answer yes. All the questions are about you, not your passport or nationality, so becoming a UK citizen does not change the fact that you were previously denied a visa.
Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle, but based on what you've told us it's highly likely to get approved, and it's much better than getting busted for lying on the ESTA application form.
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
|
show 6 more comments
Update: OP updated their question to note they already have a valid US visa! Then just use that and don't apply for a new ESTA or visa. See I have two passports/nationalities. How do I use them when I travel? for how to travel with two passports.
Original answer assuming you don't already have a visa:
You should answer yes. All the questions are about you, not your passport or nationality, so becoming a UK citizen does not change the fact that you were previously denied a visa.
Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle, but based on what you've told us it's highly likely to get approved, and it's much better than getting busted for lying on the ESTA application form.
Update: OP updated their question to note they already have a valid US visa! Then just use that and don't apply for a new ESTA or visa. See I have two passports/nationalities. How do I use them when I travel? for how to travel with two passports.
Original answer assuming you don't already have a visa:
You should answer yes. All the questions are about you, not your passport or nationality, so becoming a UK citizen does not change the fact that you were previously denied a visa.
Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle, but based on what you've told us it's highly likely to get approved, and it's much better than getting busted for lying on the ESTA application form.
edited 14 hours ago
answered 21 hours ago
jpatokaljpatokal
116k18361520
116k18361520
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
|
show 6 more comments
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
But I already have B1/B2 Visa in my other passport which is valid for 5 years. Should I use that to travel? If I decide to apply for ESTA and its rejected will it void my current visa in my other passport too? – Makky 28 mins ago
– Makky
19 hours ago
2
2
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
NO! Why would you recommend applying for a new visa? that makes zero sense
– Doc
19 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
@Doc The OP's original post did not say they already had a visa!
– jpatokal
14 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
I had it mentioned. Later I made it bold to make it more clear.
– Makky
9 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
"Your best option is to apply for a B-2 visa. It's an expensive hassle..." (For someone who doesn't already have a valid visa,) why is this better than applying for ESTA? The ESTA application, if refused, costs $4. Since the last visa application was successful, it seems unlikely that the ESTA application would be refused. But if it is, the only negative consequence is having to apply for the visa instead of using the VWP. Why jump to that negative consequence just to save $4?
– phoog
7 hours ago
|
show 6 more comments
Makky is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Makky is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Makky is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Makky is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Do you still hold the citizenship from your previous passport (the one with the visas in it?)
– Doc
19 hours ago
Yes I do have that
– Makky
18 hours ago
4
If you say "No" when it isn't true, and they find out, now that will get you automatically rejected and banned for a long time.
– gnasher729
8 hours ago
1
@gnasher729 the ban for deception is lifelong (but there is a waiver available through an expensive and time-consuming process).
– phoog
7 hours ago