
The U.S. Department of State has re-amplified its Level-4 (“Do Not Travel”) advisory for Iran, urging all U.S. citizens to depart the country immediately amid some of the bloodiest street protests since the 1979 revolution. Although the advisory was first issued in late 2025, consular officials reposted the alert across social-media channels on 13 January, citing new reports of more than 600 deaths and widespread arbitrary detentions.
The reminder matters for multinational employers with U.S. staff on short-term assignments in Iran’s energy, NGO and academic sectors. Evacuation insurance providers report a spike in enquiries for charter extraction flights via Doha and Istanbul. Companies are activating “tripwire” thresholds in crisis-management plans, including mandatory check-ins and remote-work contingencies for dual nationals who cannot exit easily.
As organizations scramble to adjust itineraries, VisaHQ can help simplify the logistics of a fast departure. Their specialists can rush-process U.S. passport renewals, source transit visas for regional hubs, and clarify exit formalities for Iranian-American dual nationals—all from a single online dashboard. For more information, visit https://www.visahq.com/united-states/.
Financial-services firms are also flagging compliance exposure: extended telecom blackouts have made it difficult to conduct mandatory sanctions screening and KYC checks on counterparties. Any employee remaining in Iran without specific OFAC licensing may face penalties if caught engaging in otherwise routine commercial activity.
Practical advice: enrol any travelling U.S. nationals in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP); audit travel-approval workflows to ensure no inadvertent trips are booked; and, for Iranian dual nationals on U.S. payroll, obtain specialised legal guidance before directing or permitting travel. The government’s ability to aid citizens is “extremely limited,” the advisory stresses.
The reminder matters for multinational employers with U.S. staff on short-term assignments in Iran’s energy, NGO and academic sectors. Evacuation insurance providers report a spike in enquiries for charter extraction flights via Doha and Istanbul. Companies are activating “tripwire” thresholds in crisis-management plans, including mandatory check-ins and remote-work contingencies for dual nationals who cannot exit easily.
As organizations scramble to adjust itineraries, VisaHQ can help simplify the logistics of a fast departure. Their specialists can rush-process U.S. passport renewals, source transit visas for regional hubs, and clarify exit formalities for Iranian-American dual nationals—all from a single online dashboard. For more information, visit https://www.visahq.com/united-states/.
Financial-services firms are also flagging compliance exposure: extended telecom blackouts have made it difficult to conduct mandatory sanctions screening and KYC checks on counterparties. Any employee remaining in Iran without specific OFAC licensing may face penalties if caught engaging in otherwise routine commercial activity.
Practical advice: enrol any travelling U.S. nationals in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP); audit travel-approval workflows to ensure no inadvertent trips are booked; and, for Iranian dual nationals on U.S. payroll, obtain specialised legal guidance before directing or permitting travel. The government’s ability to aid citizens is “extremely limited,” the advisory stresses.











