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C1/D Visa Guide for Cruise Ship Crew 2026

The complete step-by-step guide to the US seafarer transit visa — who needs it, every document required, how to complete the DS-160, what happens at the embassy, and how to handle a denial.

$185Application fee (2026)
3–8 wksTypical processing time
5 yrsTypical validity
29 daysMax stay per entry

What Is the C1/D Visa — and Why Does Cruise Crew Need It?

The C1/D is a US non-immigrant visa designed specifically for seafarers and airline crew who work on vessels or aircraft that call at American ports. It combines two separate visa categories into one.

 

C1 — Transit Visa

The C1 portion allows you to transit through the United States en route to another destination. For cruise crew, this covers flying into a US airport to join a ship, or passing through US ports on your way to your embarkation point.

Without C1, you cannot legally enter US territory even for a few hours in transit — including a layover at Miami, New York, or Los Angeles.

D — Crewmember Visa

The D portion covers you while actively working aboard a vessel in US waters. It allows you to enter US ports during the itinerary, go ashore during port calls, and depart on the same vessel or any qualifying vessel within 29 days.

Together, C1/D is issued as a single combined visa — the most common visa for cruise ship crew worldwide.

 

What the Visa Allows

  • Legal entry into US ports during your ship’s itinerary
  • Shore leave during port calls in the United States
  • Transit through US airports to join or transfer between ships
  • Multiple entries over the validity period (up to 5 years)
  • Stays of up to 29 days per entry (or until your vessel departs)
  •  

What the Visa Does NOT Allow

  • Working for any US employer or US-based company
  • Staying in the US after your vessel departs — even one day is a violation
  • Changing immigration status while in the US on C1/D
  • Bringing family members — spouse and children need separate visas
  • Using the visa for tourism, study, or any non-crew purpose
  • Important — cruise lines are legally required to reimburse the C1/D visa fee. Under international maritime law and most flag state regulations, your employer must cover the cost of any visa required for your employment. Keep all receipts and request reimbursement in writing if it is not automatically provided in your first paycheck.

     

Who Needs a C1/D Visa?

Not everyone joining a cruise ship requires one, but most international crew members do. Here is a clear breakdown of who needs it, who is exempt, and some important edge cases.

Needs C1/D

All Non-Exempt International Crew

Any non-US, non-Canadian crew member whose ship calls at US ports — regardless of department, role, or seniority. This includes waiters, entertainers, housekeeping, spa staff, engineers, officers, and medical crew.

Exempt

US Citizens & Permanent Residents

US passport holders and green card holders do not need a C1/D. US citizens may need other documents such as a Merchant Mariner Credential (MMC) depending on their role.

Exempt

Canadian & Bermudan Citizens

Citizens of Canada and Bermuda do not require a C1/D visa to enter the US as crew members. This exemption is confirmed by the US State Department.

Check first

Visa Waiver Program Countries

UK, most EU nations, Australia, and Japan can use ESTA for tourism — but working on a vessel in US waters typically requires a full C1/D visa regardless. Confirm with your cruise line before relying on ESTA.

Check first

Non-US Itinerary Ships

If your ship operates exclusively on non-US itineraries and never enters US waters, you may not need a C1/D for that contract. However, many lines require it regardless as a precaution against itinerary changes.

Not covered

Private Yacht Crew (29+ Days)

Crew on private non-commercial yachts sailing US waters for more than 29 days need a B-1 visa instead of C1/D. B1/B2 tourist visas also do NOT substitute for C1/D.

B1/B2 tourist visa does NOT substitute for C1/D. Even if you hold a valid US tourist visa, you still need a C1/D to work aboard a vessel in US waters. The B1/B2 only permits entry as a visitor — it does not authorise crew duties. This is one of the most common misconceptions among first-time applicants.

Complete Document Checklist

Arrive at the embassy with every document below. Missing even one can result in your interview being rescheduled — and with tight embarkation timelines, that delay can cost you a contract.

01

Valid Passport

Must be valid for at least 6 months beyond your intended period of stay. Most cruise lines recommend 12 months of remaining validity. Bring your current passport AND any previous passports containing prior US visas.

Mandatory — cannot proceed without this
02

DS-160 Confirmation Page (with barcode)

The printed confirmation page from your completed online DS-160 application. The barcode must be scannable — do not fold or damage it. Log back into the CEAC portal to reprint if needed.

Print in advance
03

MRV Fee Payment Receipt

Proof of payment of the $185 Machine Readable Visa fee. The receipt number is required to schedule your interview — keep it safe.

Pay before scheduling
04

Employer Letter / Contract Offer

An official letter on cruise line or manning agency letterhead. Must include: your full name, position, vessel name, salary, contract start and end date, and planned travel itinerary. Ensure it is an original with a signature.

Original letter required — not a copy
05

Passport-Size Photograph

A recent photograph: 2×2 inches (51x51mm), colour, white background, full face, no glasses. Bring one printed copy to the interview even though you upload digitally with the DS-160.

White background, full face only
06

Proof of Home Ties / Intent to Return

Property ownership, lease agreement, family documents, bank statements, or employment records — evidence you will return home after your contract. Officers are assessing your ties to your home country.

Strong home ties = stronger application
07

STCW Certificates (if held)

Your Basic Safety Training certificates. Not always required but demonstrates professional credibility. First-time applicants may be asked for evidence of qualifications.

Recommended — not always mandatory
08

Seaman's Book / CDC
(if applicable)

Your Continuous Discharge Certificate if your nationality requires one. Officers may ask for it as additional proof of seafaring employment history.

Bring if you hold one
09

Financial Documents (supporting)

Bank statements or evidence of financial means. Supplementary — your employer letter should be the primary financial evidence — but having recent statements available is good practice.

Supplementary — good to have
10

Interview Appointment Confirmation

Your printed confirmation from the US Visa Information Service portal (usvisa-info.com). Contains your interview date, time, location, and confirmation number. Required for embassy entry.

Print and bring on the day

Completing the DS-160 Form

The DS-160 is the mandatory online visa application form completed at ceac.state.gov. It must be completed fully and accurately before you can pay the fee or book your interview.

Have everything ready before you start. The DS-160 session expires after 20 minutes of inactivity. Have your passport, employment letter, and 10 years of travel history in front of you before opening the form. Do not leave the page idle.

Personal Information

Full legal name exactly as in your passport, date of birth, nationality, national ID, home address. Use your passport as the source — every detail must match exactly.

Include: Full name (no nicknames) • Passport number & expiry • Place and country of birth • Current and permanent address

Travel Information

Purpose of trip, intended arrival date, and where you plan to stay. For C1/D: purpose = crewmember duties; vessel name and embarkation port as your US address.

Include: Visa type: C1/D Crewmember • Intended arrival date • Name of vessel joining • US embarkation port as address

Travel History (Last 5 Years)

Every country you have visited in the last 5 years with approximate dates. Be thorough — incomplete travel history is one of the most common reasons applications are flagged for review.

Include: All countries visited including stopovers • Previous US visits and visa history • Any visa refusals from any country

Employment & Education

Current and previous employer details. If not yet employed, enter your most recent employer and indicate you are applying in anticipation of employment. Manning agency counts as employer.

Include: Employer/agency name and address • Job title • Monthly salary • Highest level of education

Security & Background Questions

A series of yes/no questions covering criminal history, prior visa refusals, immigration violations, and national security matters. Answer honestly — dishonesty is grounds for permanent visa ineligibility.

Covers: Prior US visa refusals • Criminal convictions in any country • History of substance abuse • Immigration violations

Submitting & Printing

Once submitted, you cannot edit the DS-160. Review every field carefully before submitting. Print the confirmation page immediately — it contains the barcode needed for fee payment, appointment booking, and the interview.

Key actions: Review all fields • Print confirmation immediately • Save your Application ID • Keep barcode page clean and unfolded

The Full C1/D Application Process — Step by Step

From receiving your job offer to holding the visa in your passport. Follow these steps in order — skipping any step or doing them out of sequence will cause delays.

 
1

Receive your conditional job offer

Start the C1/D process as soon as you receive your conditional offer — not after all other pre-employment requirements are done. Visa processing is typically the longest step. Starting early gives you the most buffer against appointment wait times and administrative delays.

You do not need a final contract — a conditional offer letter is sufficient to apply

2

Complete the DS-160 online form

Go to ceac.state.gov and complete the Non-Immigrant Visa Application. Select your country, create a session, and work through all sections carefully (45–90 minutes with all information ready). Submit and print the confirmation page with the barcode immediately.

Save your DS-160 Application ID — you need it to retrieve your application or reprint the confirmation

3

Pay the $185 MRV application fee

Go to the US Visa Information Service portal for your country (typically usvisa-info.com) and pay the $185 non-refundable MRV fee. Payment methods vary by country. Save your payment receipt number — you need it to schedule your appointment.

This fee is non-refundable even if your visa is denied — keep the receipt for employer reimbursement

4

Book your ASC biometrics appointment

In most countries you must attend an Application Support Centre (ASC) appointment before the consular interview to have your photo taken and fingerprints collected. Book through the same portal where you paid your fee.

Book the ASC appointment before the interview — it is usually a separate visit

5

Book your embassy interview appointment

Book your in-person interview at the nearest US Embassy or Consulate. As of 2025, nearly all C1/D applicants must attend in-person. Check travel.state.gov/wait-times for current appointment availability before planning your schedule.

Check travel.state.gov/wait-times for real-time appointment availability at your local embassy

6

Attend the ASC (biometrics)

Bring your passport, appointment confirmation, and DS-160 barcode page. Your photo will be taken and all 10 fingerprints collected. The visit takes 15–30 minutes.

Remove nail polish and keep your fingertips clean — poor scans cause delays

7

Attend the embassy interview

Arrive 15–30 minutes before your appointment with all documents organised. The interview is typically 3–10 minutes. The consular officer will assess your employment, travel plans, and home ties.

Dress professionally — smart casual at minimum. First impressions matter.

8

Passport returned with visa stamp

If approved, your passport is returned within 3–7 working days with the C1/D visa stamped inside. Check your name, nationality, and expiry date are correct. Store digital copies of the visa page immediately.

Photograph your visa page and store it securely in cloud storage as backup

The Embassy Interview — What to Expect & How to Answer

The C1/D interview is typically short — 3 to 10 minutes. The consular officer is assessing one thing: are you a genuine crew member who will return home after your contract?

The golden rule: Be confident, be honest, and be brief. The consular officer is looking for genuine crew members with strong ties to their home country. Do not memorise scripted answers. Speak naturally from your own experience.

Before You Go In

  • Dress professionally — smart casual minimum. No shorts or flip-flops.
  • Arrive 15–30 minutes early — security queues at embassies can be long.
  • Organise documents in the order they appear on the checklist.
  • Do not bring mobile phones into most embassy buildings.
  • Know the name of your ship, cruise line, and approximate start date without checking documents.

Common Denial Reasons

  • Missing or unsigned employer letter — the most common reason
  • Weak home ties — no evidence of family, property, or employment at home
  • Inconsistencies between the DS-160 and documents at interview
  • Prior overstays, immigration violations, or undisclosed visa refusals
  • Criminal record that was not disclosed on the DS-160

Common Interview Questions & How to Answer

Keep answers short, direct, and honest.

"What is the purpose of your visit to the US?"I am joining a cruise ship as a [your role] — I will be working on board while the ship calls at US ports and departing on the vessel.
"Which cruise line and which ship?"Know both answers without checking documents. State the cruise line name and vessel name confidently.
"What is your role on board?"State your exact job title simply. "I work as a [waiter / spa therapist / entertainer]." Do not over-explain.
"How long is your contract?""My contract runs for [X months], starting approximately [month/year]."
"Where will you go after your contract ends?"Back home to [your country]. Briefly mention family, home, or other ties — this reinforces your intent to return.
"Have you ever been to the US before?"Answer honestly. If yes, mention previous contracts or visits briefly.
"Do you have family in the US?"Answer honestly. If yes, clarify they are not the reason for your visit.
"Have you ever been denied a US visa?"Always answer honestly — this is on your DS-160 already. A prior denial is not automatic grounds for another denial if circumstances have changed.

Fees, Costs & Reimbursement

The C1/D application costs more than just the visa fee. Here is the full picture of what to budget for — and what your cruise line is legally obligated to cover.

Cost ItemAmountNotesWho Pays
MRV Application Fee$185 (USD)Non-refundable regardless of outcome.Cruise line must reimburse
Reciprocity Fee (some nationalities)Varies by countryAdditional fee for citizens of countries that charge US citizens for visas.Cruise line must reimburse
Passport delivery / return courier$15 – $50If you choose mail return rather than in-person collection.Usually self
Travel to embassyVariesFactor in transport and possibly accommodation if your nearest embassy is not local.Usually self
Visa assistance service (optional)$50 – $200Third-party services that help complete DS-160 and prepare documents.Self — optional
Expedited appointment (emergency)Varies by embassySome embassies offer emergency appointments for genuine urgent need.Usually self
Typical total cost$185 – $350Depending on nationality, location, and whether you use assistance services.Core fee reimbursable

Cruise Lines Are Required to Reimburse You

Under international maritime law and MLC 2006, your employer must cover the cost of any visa required for your employment — including the C1/D MRV fee and any reciprocity fees.

  • Keep all receipts — original payment confirmation
  • Request reimbursement in writing through your recruiter
  • Many lines reimburse automatically via first paycheck
  • If refused, cite your flag state’s MLC obligations

Renewal Costs

The C1/D is valid for up to 5 years with multiple entries (up to 10 years for some nationalities). When it expires, you must go through the entire application process again.

  • Start renewal at least 3 months before your current visa expires
  • Do not wait for the visa to expire
  • Renewal does not automatically transfer
  • A prior approval does not guarantee renewal

Realistic Timelines by Region

Appointment wait times vary enormously depending on where you are applying. Always check the live State Department wait times tool before planning your schedule.

Region / CountryAppointment WaitTotal TimeNotes
Philippines2–6 weeks3–8 weeksHigh volume of seafarer applications — Manila embassy is experienced with C1/D. Relatively efficient.
India4–12 weeks6–14 weeksSignificant backlog at some consulates. Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata times vary widely. Start early.
Indonesia3–8 weeks5–10 weeksJakarta embassy handles many maritime applications. Moderate wait times.
Eastern Europe2–6 weeks3–8 weeksRomania, Ukraine, Croatia — generally faster than South/Southeast Asia.
UK & Western Europe3–10 weeks4–12 weeksLondon embassy is heavily loaded. Dublin or Edinburgh may be faster.
Latin America4–16 weeks6–18 weeksSome of the longest wait times globally — particularly Brazil and Mexico. Apply early.
Caribbean / Honduras / Jamaica2–8 weeks3–10 weeksModerate volume. Important region given Caribbean cruise itineraries.
South Africa4–10 weeks5–12 weeksJohannesburg and Cape Town handle southern Africa applications. Growing cruise crew sector.

Always check live wait times at travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/visa-information-resources/global-visa-wait-times.html before planning your application timeline. Wait times change weekly. Once you have an appointment, check regularly — earlier slots open up constantly.

If Your Application Is Denied

A C1/D denial is not necessarily the end of the road. Most denials are for fixable reasons — understanding why you were denied is the first step to a successful reapplication.

Missing or Inadequate Employer Letter

The most common fixable reason. Request a new letter that is more detailed — include vessel name, contract dates, salary, specific duties, and confirmation you are required to transit through US ports.

Insufficient Home Ties (Section 214(b))

The most common non-fixable-at-interview reason. Strengthen with more documentation: property records, marriage certificate, bank statements, children’s school records.

Inconsistencies in the Application

If your DS-160 does not match your documents or interview answers, it raises red flags. Review everything carefully before reapplying and ensure all information is consistent before retrying.

Administrative Processing (221g)

Not a denial — a request for additional time or documents. Respond promptly to any 221g request. Most cases are resolved within a few weeks but be quick to respond.

Undisclosed Criminal History

Address it on your reapplication. Some convictions may require an approved waiver — speak to an immigration attorney specialising in maritime visa applications.

Prior Immigration Violations

Undisclosed overstays, deportations, or prior visa fraud are serious. Consult a licensed immigration attorney before reapplying. Some violations carry multi-year or permanent bars.

How to Reapply After Denial

  • You can reapply immediately — there is no mandatory waiting period
  • You must pay the full $185 fee again for each new application
  • You must disclose the prior denial on your new DS-160
  • Reapplying with identical documents will likely produce the same result — address the reason first
  • A denial letter explains which ground was cited — use it to target your reapplication

Communicating a Denial to Your Employer

Inform your recruiter or manning agency immediately. Most cruise lines and agencies have experienced this before and can advise on the reapplication process.

If the denial is due to a 221g administrative processing hold, the cruise line may be able to accelerate their internal sponsorship documentation to support your case. Ask your recruiter what they can provide.

The Bigger Picture

What Are All the Requirements to Work on a Cruise Ship?

The C1/D visa is one piece of a larger pre-employment puzzle. Our full requirements guide covers every step: passport, C1/D, PEME medical, background check, STCW, and US-specific documents — all from first-hand crew experience.

PassportC1/D VisaPEME MedicalSTCWBackground Check

Frequently Asked Questions

If your itinerary never enters US waters or US ports and your travel to join the ship does not route through the US, you may not need one for that specific contract. However, many cruise lines require all crew to hold a valid C1/D regardless — because itineraries can change, and because flying via the US to join a ship in another country requires the C1 transit component. Always confirm with your specific cruise line before assuming you are exempt.
Yes — you can apply while you are still in the recruitment process. However, you will need a letter from an employer or manning agency confirming you are applying in anticipation of employment on board. Having a stronger, more specific letter (with a named vessel and contract dates) significantly improves your chances of approval.
Validity depends on your nationality and the principle of reciprocity — the US issues visas with the same terms that your country offers to US citizens. For most nationalities it is 5 years with multiple entries. Some nationalities receive up to 10 years (120 months). Each entry permits a stay of up to 29 days, or until your vessel departs — whichever comes first.
No. A B1/B2 tourist visa does not authorise crew duties on a commercial vessel. Using a tourist visa to work on a ship is an immigration violation that could result in deportation, a ban from the US, and termination of your contract. You need a specific C1/D regardless of what other US visas you hold.
A CBP officer boards or processes the vessel before crew and passengers can go ashore. They check crew credentials including passport and C1/D visa. You will typically receive a crew landing permit (I-95 form) which allows you ashore during the port call. You must remain with the ship and depart on the vessel — you cannot extend your stay beyond the port call without a different visa category.
No. The C1/D strictly covers crew duties on the vessel you arrived on. You cannot take any other employment in the US, receive payment from a US employer, or perform work outside the scope of your shipboard duties. Violating these conditions is grounds for visa cancellation and removal.
It depends on the nature of the offence. Minor offences from many years ago are often not disqualifying — particularly if disclosed honestly. Serious convictions, drug trafficking, fraud, or crimes involving moral turpitude are more likely to result in denial or require a waiver. Disclose everything on the DS-160 and consult a maritime immigration specialist before applying if you have a complex criminal history.
Yes — under international maritime law (MLC 2006) and the regulations of most flag states, cruise lines are legally required to cover the cost of any visa required for your employment on their vessel. Keep your payment receipt and request reimbursement in writing from your recruiter or manning agency. Most lines reimburse through your first paycheck, but always confirm this in advance and get it documented in your contract or offer letter.

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Visa In Hand. Ready to Apply.

With your C1/D sorted you are cleared for US port itineraries — the majority of Caribbean and North American cruise contracts. Now find the right role.