US Names Lagos, 19 Others As Visa Processing Hubs, See Full List 

 The United States Department of State has named Lagos, Nigeria and 19 other African capitals as visa processing hubs in the continent.

The Department also disclosed planning a major overhaul of its visa processing operations in Africa, reducing the number of embassies and consulates handling visa applications from nearly 50 to 20 in the coming weeks.

The changes, it was gathered, are expected to force applicants from non-hub countries to travel to designated locations for visa processing, a development likely to increase travel costs and logistical challenges.

Visa services in Africa have already been affected in recent months by travel restrictions on certain countries, new visa bond requirements of up to $15,000 for some applicants, and disruptions linked to health-related measures, including Ebola-related restrictions.

The restructuring marks one of the most significant reductions in U.S. visa processing access across Africa in recent years.

This was contained in an internal memo and three U.S. officials cited by The Associated Press on Monday, 1 June, 2026.

According to the memo, the restructuring is expected to take effect in June, although no specific date has been announced.

Under the plan, according to the memo, visa processing for both immigrant and non-immigrant categories will be centralised in 20 designated “hubs” across the continent.

The memo added that the development is part of the Trump administration’s broader immigration policy aimed at tightening visa issuance and reducing cases of visa overstays.

The news agency said U.S. diplomats, including consular chiefs, were reportedly briefed on the changes during a conference call last Friday.

The State Department, under a directive approved by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, will scale down consular operations in all but the 20 designated centres, the memo stated.

While consular sections in non-hub countries will remain open, their functions will be limited to services such as assisting American citizens with passport renewals, emergency consular support, special national interest cases, and diplomatic visa processing.

The State Department said it “is constantly evaluating its overseas operations in order to deploy taxpayer resources in a way that advances America’s priorities as efficiently and effectively as possible.”

The memo also added that this “includes a visa process that maintains rigorous standards of security screening and vetting and aligns resources and operational capacity with America’s national interests.”

Full List of 20 U.S. Visa Processing Hubs in Africa:

• Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire

• Accra, Ghana

• Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

• Cape Town, South Africa

• Dakar, Senegal

More details here...