Applying for the United States Work Visa from China
This guide is tailored to applicants from China. A visa permitting employment, usually requiring a job offer and sponsorship from an approved employer. Skilled-worker routes often use points systems or labour-market tests.
A top origin for students and tourists, with high application volumes to the US, UK, Canada and Australia.
What applicants from your country are assessed on
- Your ability to fund the work visa and your stay.
- The consistency between your documents, forms and answers.
- Your ties and intentions, which the officer weighs against local trends.
Key things to know about United States
- Most nonimmigrant applicants attend an in-person interview at a US embassy or consulate.
- The B-1/B-2 visitor visa covers both business and tourism on one document.
- Strong ties to your home country are the single most important factor in approval.
- DS-160 is the universal online application form for nonimmigrant visas.
Common reasons applications from your country are refused
- Sponsorship or job-offer documents that are incomplete or inconsistent.
- Qualifications or experience that do not match the role.
- Salary below the threshold required by the visa route.
How VisaMet helps applicants from China
VisaMet tailors every step — eligibility, document screening, interview practice and deadline reminders — to your profile as an applicant from China heading to United States.
VisaMet provides preparation guidance, not legal advice. Confirm current requirements with the official source before applying.