
The U.S. Department of State on February 27, 2026 authorised the voluntary departure of non-emergency personnel and family members from Israel and simultaneously announced that Embassy Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv Branch Office would pause routine visa processing. Applicants with appointments scheduled for March 2-6 will receive rescheduling notices once services resume. The decision follows escalating regional insecurity after recent military strikes and comes with a worldwide caution urging Americans in the Middle East to monitor embassy alerts.
During such disruptions, VisaHQ can serve as a practical lifeline. Its online portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks consular closures in real time, helps travelers locate alternative embassies, and guides both corporate mobility teams and individual applicants through the paperwork for U.S. visas as well as onward Schengen or regional permits.
Business travellers and multinational assignees must now plan for significant Schengen and onward-travel delays, as third-country nationals often secure U.S. visas through Tel Aviv’s high-volume NIV unit. U.S. companies with operations in Israel should trigger contingency plans: arrange consular appointments in Amman or Nicosia, verify ESTA eligibility for short-term trips, and update travel-risk assessments for staff. Employers relocating employees out of Israel may need to rely on automatic visa revalidation or advance parole to maintain U.S. work authorization while travel documents are pending. The suspension underscores growing fragility in regional mobility corridors; if unrest persists, capacity backlogs could ripple across global consular posts, extending lead times for H-1B renewals and E-2 investor visas filed abroad. Companies should track State-Department alerts and retain copies of cancelled appointment notices to request expedited rescheduling when normal operations resume.
During such disruptions, VisaHQ can serve as a practical lifeline. Its online portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks consular closures in real time, helps travelers locate alternative embassies, and guides both corporate mobility teams and individual applicants through the paperwork for U.S. visas as well as onward Schengen or regional permits.
Business travellers and multinational assignees must now plan for significant Schengen and onward-travel delays, as third-country nationals often secure U.S. visas through Tel Aviv’s high-volume NIV unit. U.S. companies with operations in Israel should trigger contingency plans: arrange consular appointments in Amman or Nicosia, verify ESTA eligibility for short-term trips, and update travel-risk assessments for staff. Employers relocating employees out of Israel may need to rely on automatic visa revalidation or advance parole to maintain U.S. work authorization while travel documents are pending. The suspension underscores growing fragility in regional mobility corridors; if unrest persists, capacity backlogs could ripple across global consular posts, extending lead times for H-1B renewals and E-2 investor visas filed abroad. Companies should track State-Department alerts and retain copies of cancelled appointment notices to request expedited rescheduling when normal operations resume.