| Before
you can come to the United States as a student,
you must be accepted to a school and prove that
you have sufficient financial resources (scholarships,
loans, family or personal resources) to pay your
school and living expenses. For information on
sources of financial aid, on applying to schools,
and on organizations in your country that can
assist you, see the area of our website called
Study in the U.S.
There are two nonimmigrant visa
categories for persons wishing to study in the
United States (a nonimmigrant is someone admitted
to the U.S. temporarily):
"F" visa includes academic
students in colleges, universities, seminaries,
conservatories,
academic high schools, other academic institutions,
and in
language training.
"M"visa is for people
wishing to pursue nonacademic or vocational studies.
Am I Eligible?
To be eligible to apply for the F or M visas,
you must intend to stay for a temporary period
of time and have proof of compelling ties (social,
family, economic, professional or other) to a
residence outside the United States to which you
will return after the visit. You must also meet
the following criteria:
Scholastic Preparation
You must have successfully completed a course
of study normally required for enrollment. Unless
you are coming to participate exclusively in an
English language training program, you must either
be sufficiently proficient in English to pursue
the intended course of study, or the school must
have made special arrangements for English language
courses or teach the course in your native language.
Financial Resources
You must prove that sufficient funds are, or will
be, available from an identified and reliable
financial source to defray all living and school
expenses during the period of your study in the
U.S. Specifically, you must prove that you have
enough readily available funds to meet all expenses
for the first year of study, and that adequate
funds will be available for each subsequent year
of study. If you are applying for an M-1 visa,
you must have evidence that sufficient funds are
immediately available to pay all tuition and living
costs for the entire period of your intended stay.
Acceptance
You must be accepted as a full-time student in
a U.S. academic educational program, language-training
program, or vocational program. The school must
be approved by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS), and the school must send you a
Form I-20 (which it receives from the INS).
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