The US Mission in Nigeria has warned Nigerians to honour the terms of their US visa, urging travellers to respect the conditions attached to their entry. The advisory comes amid a broader American crackdown on visa overstays by Nigerian nationals.

In its message, the Mission asked Nigerians travelling for study, work or visits to stay only for the authorised period and to keep their documents updated, sharing the guidance under the hashtag #VisaWiseTravelSmart.
What the US visa warning says
The core advice is simple: follow the rules of whatever visa you hold. The Mission stressed that travellers should not exceed the time granted to them and should ensure their paperwork remains valid throughout their stay.
Summing up its appeal, the Mission said, “When you respect the process, everyone wins.” The line frames compliance not just as a personal obligation but as something that protects the wider community of Nigerian travellers.
A tougher US stance
The warning fits a pattern of tightened US immigration policy affecting Nigerians. In January 2026, the United States partially suspended issuance of several visa categories for Nigerians outside the country who did not already hold valid visas, including visitor, student, exchange and immigrant visas.
American officials have pointed to overstay data to justify the scrutiny, citing a visitor-visa overstay rate of about 5.56 percent and a student and exchange overstay rate of roughly 11.90 percent for Nigerian nationals.
Why overstays matter for everyone
Earlier in 2026, the Mission warned that one person’s overstay can hurt the chances of other Nigerians seeking visas. Because the United States weighs national trends when setting policy, individual breaches can feed into decisions that affect the whole country’s applicants.
That collective risk is central to the Mission’s messaging. By framing compliance as a shared responsibility, it hopes to encourage travellers to protect not only their own records but the prospects of future applicants.
Advice for travellers
Immigration experts echo the Mission’s guidance with practical steps. Travellers should know their exact authorised period of stay, keep copies of their entry documents, and seek proper advice before assuming they can extend or change their status.
Overstaying, even by accident, can carry lasting consequences, including bans on future entry. Because records follow applicants across years, a single misstep can complicate later attempts to study, work or visit family in the United States.
For students and workers in particular, staying within the rules also means maintaining the conditions tied to their specific visa, such as enrolment or employment terms. Careful compliance, the Mission argues, protects both the individual and the wider pool of Nigerian applicants.
Why it matters
The United States remains a top destination for Nigerian students, workers and families, and visa access shapes countless plans for education, jobs and reunions. Tighter enforcement raises the stakes for anyone hoping to travel.
For now, the advice from the Mission is clear and practical. Travellers who understand their visa conditions, respect the authorised stay and keep documents in order stand the best chance of smooth journeys and future approvals. Anyone unsure of their status is encouraged to check official guidance before travelling.