The DV-2025 chapter closed on September 30, 2025, cutting off thousands of pending Diversity Visa dreams worldwide, including many from Sudan, Iran, and Cuba. By law, that date marked the final moment when any visa based on a DV-2025 selection could be issued. When midnight passed in Washington, applicants who were still waiting for interviews, background checks, or final approvals lost their chance, even if the delay was completely outside their control.
Why the date matters: legal cutoff and its effect

Under U.S. immigration law, each DV year is tied to the federal fiscal year (October 1 – September 30). The statute requires that all DV visas for a given year be issued within that period. Once the fiscal year ends:
- Unused visa numbers disappear and cannot be rolled over or revived.
- There are no legal appeals that can create additional DV-2025 visa numbers after the deadline.
- Consulates and the U.S. Department of State have no authority to extend issuance beyond September 30, 2025.
“No new diversity visas can be issued under that program year after September 30, 2025.”
The State Department explains this rule in its official guidance on the Diversity Visa program on the State Department explains this rule in its official guidance on the Diversity Visa program on travel.state.gov.
Countries hit hardest: Sudan, Iran, Cuba
The end-of-year cutoff was especially severe for countries where the Diversity Visa program has long been a major route to migration to the United States:
- Sudan, Iran, and Cuba received some of the highest numbers of DV-2025 visas.
- A large share of available numbers was allocated to people from these nations, so unfinished cases there have disproportionate impact.
- In these countries, the DV program often represents one of the few realistic pathways that does not rely on family sponsorship or employer petitions.
Who lost eligibility
Under the rules, all DV-2025 selectees had to complete one of the following by September 30, 2025:
- Receive an immigrant visa at a U.S. embassy or consulate, or
- Complete an approved adjustment of status inside the United States.
There is no legal third option. Therefore:
- Applicants who were still “in process” on October 1, 2025—even if they had attended interviews or submitted additional documents—can no longer move forward with their DV-2025 cases.
- Derivative beneficiaries (spouses and unmarried children) lost eligibility at the same moment. If a child turned 21 after the deadline, or a spouse’s case remained stuck in administrative processing, they cannot claim DV-2025 benefits.
Practical consequences for families and individuals
Many families had built plans around expected DV outcomes. The consequences include:
- Sold property, left jobs, or relocated internally to be near consulates.
- Borrowed money to cover medical exams, travel, and visa fees.
- Loss of a rare migration lifeline in places with economic or political instability.
Specifically:
- In Sudan, political unrest and economic hardship make the DV route especially critical for many.
- In Iran and Cuba, options for direct migration to the U.S. are limited, so the DV program often stands out as one of the few realistic channels.
Why delays were fatal this year
Late scheduling in the fiscal year left little margin for routine processing delays:
- Administrative processing, missing documents, or extra security checks could easily push a case past September 30.
- Once the year closed, consular officers had no authority to continue or conclude a DV-2025 case—even if a security issue was later cleared.
Legal practitioners emphasize that there are no extensions or exceptions for pending DV-2025 cases, regardless of cause (embassy closures, technical failures, personal emergencies, etc.). While some other immigration categories allow humanitarian exceptions or expedited handling, the DV program contains no safety valve for missed fiscal-year deadlines.
Reminder: The DV-2025 cutoff is final—no extensions, rollovers, or post-deadline visa issuance. If you were still in process on Oct 1, 2025, you cannot advance your DV-2025 case or its derivatives.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, courts have been asked in past years to intervene when processing problems threatened many DV winners, but judges repeatedly refer back to the statute’s strict fiscal-year limit.
Next steps for those affected
The end of DV-2025 does not permanently block future chances, but it does reset the process:
- Prospective applicants may try again in DV-2027, which is expected to accept entries during October and November 2025.
- Important points for former DV-2025 selectees:
- A DV-2025 selection number does not carry over; it gives no priority in future lotteries.
- Anyone who wants another chance must submit a fresh entry and comply with the DV-2027 instructions, including updated photo rules and entry periods.
- Keep careful records of past cases, but treat DV-2025 cases as legally closed.
Concerns that arise from starting over:
- Older applicants may fear aging out or losing eligibility due to changed rules.
- Families may be split if different members are selected in a future lottery while others are not.
Also note that the Diversity Visa program is periodically reviewed by the U.S. government and Congress, so quotas, security screening practices, or country eligibility could change in future years (no specific changes for DV-2027 were announced in the provided material).
Alternative immigration paths
Although DV-2025 is closed, those affected may still qualify for other U.S. immigration options depending on their circumstances:
- Family-based petitions
- Employment-based visas
- Humanitarian routes (where applicable)
However, for many without close U.S. relatives or specialized job offers, the Diversity Visa often remains the most realistic option—explaining why the DV-2025 closure is particularly painful in Sudan, Iran, and Cuba.
Key takeaways
- Deadline: September 30, 2025 — final cutoff for DV-2025 visas.
- No exceptions: The law allows no extensions, rollovers, or post-deadline issuances for DV-2025.
- Derivatives lost eligibility at the same time as principals if not completed by the deadline.
- Next chance: DV-2027 entries are expected in October–November 2025, but all entrants must submit new applications.
The legal reality is clear: no new diversity visas can be issued under DV-2025 after September 30, 2025, and those who did not secure visas or status by that date “derive no further benefit” from their selection. For hopeful migrants in Sudan, Iran, and Cuba, the focus shifts to the next lottery and the difficult question of whether their entry will be picked again.
DV-2025 closed on September 30, 2025; all unused diversity visa numbers expired with no legal extensions. Applicants who had not received visas or completed adjustment of status by the deadline—including many from Sudan, Iran, and Cuba—lost eligibility, including derivative family members. Administrative delays, embassy closures, and extra security checks could not be remedied after the fiscal-year cutoff. Prospective applicants must submit new entries for DV-2027, expected in October–November 2025; DV-2025 selections grant no priority in future lotteries.
