07/16/2022
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Reasons Your Diversity Lottery Visa Application Might Be Disqualified or Denied during the visa interview.
1. Failing to List Your Spouse and/or Children on Your Application. Once selected you can’t add anybody to your application again unless you have the required document. For your spouse, you can only add if you got married after submitting your application. For your children, you can only add if you gave birth after submitting your application.
2. Not Having the Requisite Education and/or Work Experience. To qualify for the diversity lottery, you must have either graduated from high school or have two years of work experience (within the past five years) in a field that typically requires two years of training. You do not need to meet both of these requirements, only one of the two, to be eligible for the diversity lottery.
3. Submitting More Than One Lottery Application in the Same Registration Period. If you submit more than one application for the diversity lottery during one open-registration period, your applications will all be rejected. While you cannot submit two applications under your name, spouses can each submit their own application and list their spouse as a derivative. This will increase each spouse's chances of being selected, even though each person can apply only once.
4. Submitting an Invalid Photograph. You must submit a recent (taken within the last six months) photograph of yourself and your co-applicants. The photographs you submit must be taken facing forward and in front of a plain background. You cannot wear any hair covering unless it is for a religious purpose. Failure to submit a photograph that meets these regulations could result in the disqualification of your application. It's usually easiest to find a professional to take the photo for you.
5. Being Inadmissible for Previous Unlawful Presence, Visa Fraud, or Criminal Activity. In addition to correctly completing the diversity lottery application, you must meet the general requirements for admission to the United States. The U.S. government won't look into this when you first enter the lottery, but it will if and when you win a slot. If, for example, you have spent more than 180 days unlawfully in the U.S. after 1997, you might be subject to a three- or ten-year admission bar. Similarly, if you have ever lied or made a material misrepresentation on a U.S. visa application you may be found inadmissible to the United States. Finally, convictions for certain crimes including "crimes involving moral turpitude," any two crimes with a combined sentence of five years or more, controlled substances offenses, drug trafficking, prostitution, and other crimes make one inadmissible to the United States.
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