
After an unexpected 24-hour closure on 22 October, the United States Consulate-General in Chennai swung its doors open again at 09:00 IST on Thursday, 23 October 2025. All non-immigrant and immigrant visa interviews, document drop-offs and American Citizen Services (ACS) resumed on site, ending a brief bottleneck that had forced hundreds of South-Indian applicants to scramble for alternative slots.
Consular officials said the interruption was caused by a facility systems failure that has now been rectified. Only applicants holding appointments for 23 October were admitted on the reopening day; interviews cancelled on 22 October are being auto-rescheduled and applicants will receive new dates by e-mail and SMS. The Consulate stressed that applicants do not need to take any action unless contacted, and warned travellers not to turn up at the gate without a confirmed slot.
The restart is a relief for students with looming programme start-dates, H-1B workers facing joining deadlines and B-1/B-2 visitors planning festival-season trips to the United States. Chennai handles roughly 18 per cent of all US visas issued in India and is the primary post for applicants from Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka and Puducherry. Industry estimates suggest the one-day closure alone displaced nearly 2,300 interviews and document submissions.
Travel consultants advise corporate mobility managers to re-check profile dashboards on the US Travel Docs portal and to factor in a possible 5- to 7-day slippage for employees who were due to interview this week. Employers using Blanket L or H-1B categories should keep LCA validity and petition expiry dates in mind when re-booking flights.
Long-term, the incident underscores capacity constraints at US posts in India, which have handled a record 1.7 million visas in the last fiscal year. Washington has promised to deploy additional consular officers by mid-2026, but mobility planners may still want to budget extra lead-time for South-India-based assignees.
Consular officials said the interruption was caused by a facility systems failure that has now been rectified. Only applicants holding appointments for 23 October were admitted on the reopening day; interviews cancelled on 22 October are being auto-rescheduled and applicants will receive new dates by e-mail and SMS. The Consulate stressed that applicants do not need to take any action unless contacted, and warned travellers not to turn up at the gate without a confirmed slot.
The restart is a relief for students with looming programme start-dates, H-1B workers facing joining deadlines and B-1/B-2 visitors planning festival-season trips to the United States. Chennai handles roughly 18 per cent of all US visas issued in India and is the primary post for applicants from Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka and Puducherry. Industry estimates suggest the one-day closure alone displaced nearly 2,300 interviews and document submissions.
Travel consultants advise corporate mobility managers to re-check profile dashboards on the US Travel Docs portal and to factor in a possible 5- to 7-day slippage for employees who were due to interview this week. Employers using Blanket L or H-1B categories should keep LCA validity and petition expiry dates in mind when re-booking flights.
Long-term, the incident underscores capacity constraints at US posts in India, which have handled a record 1.7 million visas in the last fiscal year. Washington has promised to deploy additional consular officers by mid-2026, but mobility planners may still want to budget extra lead-time for South-India-based assignees.





