Non-Immigrant Visas
Domestic Employees
A personal or domestic servants who are accompanying or following to join an employer in the United States and are eligible for B-1 visas. This category of domestic employees includes, but is not limited to, cooks, butlers, chauffeurs, housemaids, valets, footmen, nannies, au pairs, mothers' helpers, gardeners, and paid companions.
Those accompanying or following to join an employer who is a foreign diplomat or official, are eligible for an A-3 or G-5 visas, depending upon their employer's visa status.
Accompanying a Non-Immigrant Visa Holder
Domestic employees who are accompanying or following to join an employer who seeks admission to, or who is already in, the United States in B, E, F, H, I, J, L, M, O, P, Q, or R Non-Immigrant status may be eligible for the B-1 visa classification provided the employee has been employed outside the United States by the employer for at least one year prior to the date of the employer's admission to the United States, or if the employer-employee relationship:
- Existed immediately prior to the time of application;
- The employer can demonstrate that he has regularly employed (either year-round or seasonally) domestic help over a period of years preceding the time of application;
- The employee has at least one year's experience as a personal or domestic servant as attested to by statements from previous employers;
- The employer will be the only provider of employment, and will provide the employee free room and board and round trip airfare as indicated under the terms of the employment contract.
Accompanying an American Citizen
Domestic employees who are accompanying or following to join their United States citizen employer in the United States may be eligible for the B-1 visa classification if their American employer ordinarily resides outside the United States and is traveling to the United States temporarily, or the American employer is subject to frequent international transfers lasting two years or more and who, as a condition of employment, is going to reside in the United States for a stay not to exceed four years. In addition:
• The employer-employee relationship must have existed for at least 6 months prior to the employer's admission to the United States or, alternatively, that the employer has regularly employed a domestic servant in the same capacity while abroad;
- The employee has had at least one year experience as a personal or domestic servant by producing statements from previous employers attesting to such experience;
- The employer will be the only provider of employment, and will provide the employee free room and board and round trip airfare as indicated under the terms of the employment contract.
Note: It is not possible to qualify for a B-1 visa if the United States citizen will reside permanently in the United States, even if the individual concerned has previously been in the United States citizen's employ abroad.
Accompanying a Government or International Organization Official
An applicant who is the attendant, servant, or personal employee of someone classified A-1 or A-2 or G-1 through G-4 is entitled to the appropriate A-3 or G-5 classification. They must demonstrate entitlement to an A-3 or G-5 classification (e.g., letter of reference from a former employer, evidence of previous employment in that sector, etc.). Consular officers must establish the official status of the employer and the intent of both parties to enter into (or remain in) an employer-employee relationship.




