H-1B INTERVIEW

H-1B Visa Interview Questions & Answers: Complete 2026 Prep Guide

After USCIS approves your H-1B petition, you still need to survive the consular interview to get the visa stamp. Consular officers ask pointed questions about your job, employer, and qualifications. Here's what they ask β€” and how to answer.

By Sumit Patelβ€’May 6, 2026β€’18 min read

When Do You Need an H-1B Consular Interview?

The H-1B consular interview is required when you need to obtain a US visa stamp in your passport. This applies to:

  • First-time H-1B holders applying for a visa stamp for the first time
  • H-1B holders outside the US who need to renew their visa stamp after it expires
  • H-1B holders returning from travel whose visa stamp has expired (need renewal)

If you're already in the US and changing from another status to H-1B (or extending), you generally don't need a consular interview β€” USCIS handles your petition. The interview is only needed to stamp a physical visa in your passport.

What Questions Do Consular Officers Ask About Your Job?

Q: What exactly do you do in your job?
How to answer: Be specific and concise. Describe your role in plain language. Avoid jargon. "I design software systems for financial data processing" is better than "I work in full-stack development." Match language from your LCA/I-129.
Q: What is your job title?
How to answer: State your exact job title as it appears on your I-797 approval notice. If your working title differs, explain the formal vs. operational titles.
Q: How does your degree relate to your job?
How to answer: This is the specialty occupation question. Explain the direct connection: "My computer science degree is directly required because my role involves designing algorithms and systems architecture."
Q: What is your salary?
How to answer: Know your LCA wage and actual salary. State the amount confidently. Officers verify this against the LCA prevailing wage to ensure compliance.
Q: How long have you worked for this company?
How to answer: State your start date. If this is a new employer (transfer), note when the new petition was approved and when you'll start.
Q: What does your company do?
How to answer: Describe your employer's business in 1-2 sentences. Know the company's industry, main products/services, and approximate size.

What Questions Are Asked About Your Qualifications?

Q: Where did you get your degree?
How to answer: Name the university, country, degree type, and year. If you have foreign credentials evaluation, mention it. Officers may verify against USCIS records.
Q: Is your degree from a US institution?
How to answer: If foreign degree: confirm it was evaluated by a NACES-member organization (WES, ECE, etc.) and found equivalent to a US bachelor's. Have the evaluation handy.
Q: Do you have a professional license?
How to answer: If your profession requires state licensing (engineering PE, nursing, law), state whether you're licensed and in which state. Some roles don't require licensure.
Q: What was your major?
How to answer: State your major and any relevant coursework. If your major seems unrelated to your job, be ready to explain the connection (e.g., math major β†’ data science role).

What Documents Should You Bring to the Interview?

DocumentWhy It Matters
Valid Passport + Prior PassportsAll prior US visa stamps; officer checks travel history
DS-160 Confirmation PageRequired for appointment; carry printed copy
Interview Appointment ConfirmationProof of scheduled interview
I-797 Approval Notice (Original)Proof USCIS approved the H-1B petition
Labor Condition Application (LCA)Shows prevailing wage compliance
Offer Letter / Employment ContractConfirms job, salary, duties
Degree Certificate + TranscriptsProves specialty occupation qualification
Credential Evaluation (if foreign degree)NACES-member evaluation
Recent Paystubs (if employed)Evidence of current employment
Company DocumentsCompany letterhead, latest 10-K or website printout confirming the company exists and is reputable

What Is 221(g) Administrative Processing and How Do You Handle It?

If the officer cannot immediately approve your visa, they may place your application in "Administrative Processing" under INA 221(g). This is NOT a denial. The officer needs additional documents or security clearance.

Common 221(g) Triggers

  • β€’ Security clearance requirement (Visa Mantis)
  • β€’ Missing documents requested at interview
  • β€’ Employer verification needed
  • β€’ Questions about specialty occupation
  • β€’ Prior visa overstays or violations
  • β€’ Employment at third-party worksites

How to Respond to 221(g)

  • β€’ Submit requested documents promptly
  • β€’ Track status at ceac.state.gov
  • β€’ Wait β€” most resolve in 60–90 days
  • β€’ Do not rebook or re-appear without request
  • β€’ Consult attorney if no movement after 90 days
  • β€’ Don't make irrevocable plans until approved

What Are the Top Reasons H-1B Visa Stamps Get Denied?

Denial ReasonPrevention
Job doesn't qualify as specialty occupation (in officer's view)Carry detailed technical job description; highlight degree requirement
Employer concerns (shell company, low revenue)Bring company annual report, tax filings, website, client list
Third-party placement (staffing firm to client site)Bring end-client letter, specific project details, itinerary
214(b) immigrant intentEvidence of ties to home country: property, family, savings
Credential mismatchCredential evaluation; explain how degree relates to position

Frequently Asked Questions

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Sumit Patel
Immigration Career Strategist Β· h1bvisajobs.com

Sumit covers US work visa strategies, immigration pathways, and career navigation for foreign professionals. His guides help thousands of H-1B holders navigate complex immigration processes.