The Trump Administration has moved to suspend new student and exchange visitor visa interview appointments, signaling a sharp escalation in its efforts to more tightly control who is allowed to study in the United States. The move, announced this week by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, effectively halts any new visa interviews while the government ramps up social media screening and background vetting of international applicants.
“Effective immediately, in preparation for an expansion of required social media screening and vetting, consulate sections should not add any additional student or exchange visitor visa appointment capacity,” Rubio said in an order issued earlier this week.
While the freeze does not cancel already-scheduled interviews, it places a hold on future appointments—casting uncertainty over thousands of prospective international students hoping to enter U.S. universities in the coming months.
The administration says the move is part of a broader effort to use “every available resource to vet people applying” for entry into the country. This includes increased scrutiny of applicants’ social media activity to detect what officials describe as extremist leanings or anti-American rhetoric.
The visa interview suspension follows a series of high-profile actions targeting foreign students. Earlier this year, several international students were arrested at top U.S. universities, raising alarm across the academic community. Just last week, President Trump attempted to block new international student enrollment at Harvard University, a move that drew swift backlash and legal challenges.
On Wednesday, Secretary Rubio doubled down, stating that the U.S. would “aggressively revoke” the visas of Chinese students suspected of espionage or connections to the Chinese Communist Party. The statement has fueled concerns among critics who see the administration’s moves as politically motivated and potentially discriminatory.
“Trump is targeting international students as a way to punish political dissent and stoke nationalist sentiment,” said one immigration policy expert. “It’s a dangerous precedent for academic freedom and U.S. global leadership.”
The administration, however, maintains that it has the sovereign right to determine who can enter and study in the country, particularly when national security is at stake.
As the 2025 academic year approaches, university admissions offices, immigration attorneys, and international students are scrambling to understand what this latest development means—and whether the freeze will be lifted before application deadlines hit. For now, only one thing is certain: the path to studying in America just got a lot more uncertain.