
16 July 2003
Travelers Must Use Machine-Readable Passport for Visa Waiver
Program
Begins October 1, 2003
Beginning October 1, 2003, travelers participating in the Visa
Waiver Program will be required to use a machine-readable passport
to enter the United States, the State Department announced July
16.
The Visa Waiver Program requirements can be found at the Department
of State's Visa Services web site at http://travel.state.gov/vwp.html.
Following is the text of the State Department Media Note:
(begin text)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
July 16, 2003
MEDIA NOTE
Required Use of Machine-Readable Passport for Visa Waiver Program
Travel
Starting October 1, 2003, travelers entering the United States
under the Visa Waiver Program must have a machine-readable passport.
Any traveler without a machine-readable passport will be required
to obtain a visa before coming to the United States.
This requirement is mandated by the USA Patriot Act of 2001. Immigration
inspectors may deny entry to any traveler attempting to enter on
a visa-waiver basis without a machine-readable passport after October
1, 2003.
Countries participating in the Visa Waiver Program have long been
required to have a program for the issuance of machine-readable
passports, but the October 1, 2003, requirement makes the use of
such a passport mandatory for visa-free entry. It applies to both
adults and children. Citizens of Belgium have been required to
present a machine-readable passport for visa-waiver entry since
May 15, 2003.
Citizens of Visa Waiver Program countries are permitted to enter
the United States for general business or tourist purposes for
a maximum of 90 days without needing a visa. The 27 countries currently
in the Visa Waiver Program are: Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium,
Brunei, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy,
Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
A machine-readable passport can generally be identified by the
presence of two typeface lines printed at the bottom of the biographical
page that can be read by machine. These lines electronically provide
some of the information contained on the upper part of the biographical
page. The machine-readable passport requirement applies to all
categories of passport: regular, official or diplomatic. If a traveler
has any doubt about whether a passport qualifies as machine-readable,
he or she should check with the passport issuing authority for
that country.
Machine-readable passports enhance security as they can be scanned
at entry and exit points to verify the integrity of the passport
data. Because machine-readable passports facilitate rapid and precise
identification, they enable faster processing of travelers at ports
of entry. They also provide for advance passenger information,
so border inspectors can do much of their processing before a flight
arrives.
A traveler who must use a non-machine-readable passport, even
if from a Visa Waiver Program country, will have to apply for a
non-immigrant visa at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate. The worldwide
US-visa application fee is $100 US. The U.S. non-immigrant visa
contains machine-readable biographical data.
The Visa Waiver Program requirements can be found at the Department
of State's Visa Services web site, http://travel.state.gov/vwp.html.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs,
U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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