You can often move a visa interview to another embassy or consulate by rescheduling in the correct appointment portal and bringing matching confirmations to the new post.
Plans change. Flights spike. Work travel shifts. Or you spot earlier openings in a different city. For many U.S. visa applicants, changing the interview location is doable, but it’s not always a clean “edit location” switch. The steps depend on your visa type, the appointment platform your target post uses, and whether your fee and form details still match after the move.
Below is the practical playbook: how to switch posts without losing your slot, how to keep your DS-160 aligned, and when a post change turns into a case-transfer request.
Can I Change My Visa Interview Location? What Usually Works
For most nonimmigrant visas (tourism, business, study, exchange), you may apply at a U.S. embassy or consulate outside your passport country if that post accepts applicants who are visiting or living there. Many posts do, some limit intake during busy periods. The actual change usually means booking a new appointment at the post you want, then making sure your DS-160 confirmation and fee record match that new booking.
For immigrant visas, the “location” is often tied to where your case is routed. In that track, changing posts can mean moving the case file, not only changing the date.
Before You Switch, Identify What You Have Right Now
Open your paperwork and name the item that controls your next click. That keeps you from doing the right action in the wrong system.
Online appointment confirmation
If you can log into a scheduling portal and see an appointment with a city name and barcode, you’re usually in the nonimmigrant scheduling flow.
Interview letter tied to a case number
If you have a letter tied to immigrant processing, treat a post change as a request to move the case to a different embassy or consulate. That can take time because records must follow.
Only a profile and payment receipt
If you paid and never booked, you can often choose a different post before you lock the first appointment. This is the easiest moment to switch.
What Changes When You Pick A Different Embassy Or Consulate
A new location can mean a new wait time pattern, a new biometrics setup, and new local instructions.
Wait times and real inventory
Published wait estimates help you shortlist posts, then the portal inventory tells the truth for your category. The U.S. Department of State posts estimates on its Visa Appointment Wait Times page.
Biometrics and passport return
Some countries use a separate fingerprint/photo visit before the interview. Passport return can also take days after approval. If you’re flying in for the interview, build in time so you’re not stuck waiting in-country for your passport.
Local document rules
Each post can publish its own intake steps, photo handling, and courier options. Your eligibility still drives the decision, yet local instructions can trip you if you skip them.
How To Change A Nonimmigrant Interview Location
This is the common situation: you booked one city, and you want another.
Step 1: Use the portal that belongs to the target post
Appointment systems are usually country-based. If your target post uses a different platform, you may need a new profile in that country’s portal.
Step 2: Decide if you’re switching cities in one country or switching countries
Same country, different city: Many portals let you pick another consular section and reschedule inside the same account.
Different country: Fees are often tied to the country where you paid and to that country’s portal account. If the new country’s system can’t recognize your receipt, you may pay again there. Check the rules before you cancel anything.
Step 3: Keep your DS-160 aligned with the new post
Your DS-160 includes where you plan to apply. After a post change, submit a fresh DS-160 that lists the new location and bring the new confirmation page. The Department of State’s DS-160 FAQs explain how the form and confirmation page connect to interview processing.
Step 4: Reschedule both interview and biometrics if your country uses two steps
If your portal shows two appointments, reschedule them together so they stay paired. If you only see the interview, confirm whether your country uses a separate fingerprint step.
Step 5: Save confirmations like travel documents
Print or download your appointment confirmation, DS-160 confirmation, and receipt. Gate staff often scan the barcode before you reach the officer.
Where People Lose Their Slot
Most failures are small mismatches that snowball at the gate or in the portal.
- Appointment post and DS-160 post don’t match: Fix it by submitting a new DS-160 with the correct location and using that confirmation.
- Fee assumed to transfer across borders: Many receipts stay tied to the country of payment.
- Canceling before a replacement is secured: Some systems add reschedule limits or lockouts after cancellations.
- Not planning for passport return: Approval does not mean same-day passport pickup.
Picking A New Post Without Guesswork
Most people choose a new location based on one thing: the earliest date they can see. That’s a start, yet a better pick also fits your travel reality.
Check that the post takes your visa class
Some posts throttle certain categories during peak seasons. If you see no slots for months in one class while other classes appear, that can be a sign of category limits at that post. Don’t assume you did something wrong in the portal.
Match the trip length to the full process
A same-day round trip sounds nice until you remember biometrics and passport return. If the country uses a separate fingerprint visit, you may need to arrive days before the interview. If the post returns passports by courier, you may need to stay until pickup is possible or plan a safe delivery location.
Don’t ignore entry and stay rules
Switching countries also means you must be able to enter legally and remain long enough to finish the process. If you’ll need a visa to enter that country, handle that first. A booked U.S. interview slot does not grant entry to the country hosting the embassy.
Use wait times as a screen, not a promise
Official wait estimates are a helpful screen across many posts, not a guarantee of what you’ll see when you log in. Compare a few nearby posts, then pick the one that fits your travel days and budget.
Decision Table For Location Changes
Use this table to pick a path before you click “cancel.”
| Situation | Best Move | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Same country, new city | Switch the post in your portal profile, then reschedule | Biometrics may move with it |
| Different country | Create a profile in the target country’s portal and book there | Fee may not carry across borders |
| Paid but not booked | Check post options first, then book where you’ll interview | Receipt validity windows can exist |
| Interview is soon | Hold the slot until the new one is confirmed | Cancel rules can block rebooking |
| Student or exchange case | Pick a post that routinely handles your class | Start dates and travel days |
| Family group appointment | Move the whole group together when possible | Profiles can split if one reschedules alone |
| Prior refusal or extra screening before | Allow extra time for passport return in your trip plan | Processing time varies by post |
| Immigrant visa interview letter issued | Follow case-transfer steps for the posts involved | File movement can take weeks |
Timing Moves That Cut Stress
If you want the smoothest switch, track three dates, not one: biometrics (if any), the interview, and the passport return window. Then plan travel around the whole chain.
Keep a fallback until you can grab the new slot
If your portal lets you keep your current appointment while searching, do it. If it forces a release first, only release when you can see and select the new appointment in the same session.
Build in buffer days
Cross-border interviews can add delays you can’t control: local holidays, courier cutoffs, and extra screening. Extra nights can be cheaper than rebooking flights when your passport is still with the embassy.
If Your Interview Is Post-Assigned
If your interview came as part of immigrant processing, a post change can require rerouting the case. That can mean new medical exam instructions, new document intake steps, and time for records to move. Start by reading the instructions for your current post, then the target post, and follow the published case-transfer steps.
Checklist For A Clean Switch
Run this list right before you lock the new location and build travel plans around it.
| Item To Verify | What “Good” Looks Like | If It’s Not Good |
|---|---|---|
| Target post appears in your portal | You can select the city where you’ll interview | Use the target country’s portal instead |
| Visa class is correct | Same category you intend to apply for | Fix the category before booking |
| DS-160 confirmation matches the post | Confirmation lists the new location | Submit a fresh DS-160 and bring that barcode |
| Receipt is active in the account | Payment shows as usable for scheduling | Expect a new fee if the system can’t recognize it |
| Biometrics step fits your dates | Fingerprint visit is booked in the right city | Reschedule biometrics before booking flights |
| Passport return plan is realistic | Courier or pickup option fits your stay | Add travel days or plan for local pickup |
Interview Day Notes After A Location Change
Bring the newest appointment confirmation and DS-160 confirmation. Also carry the old confirmation that shows what you canceled. If staff ask why you’re interviewing there, keep it simple: legal travel, residence, or earlier availability. Clear, calm answers beat a long story.
References & Sources
- U.S. Department of State.“Visa Appointment Wait Times.”Estimated nonimmigrant interview wait times by embassy or consulate.
- U.S. Department of State.“DS-160: Frequently Asked Questions.”How the DS-160 form and confirmation page tie to interview processing at a chosen post.
