- The CEAC portal serves as the primary online status tracker for U.S. consular visa applications.
- Status updates typically appear within one to two business days following a visa interview.
- Applicants must distinguish between USCIS for initial petitions and CEAC for final consular processing.
CEAC is the main online tool for checking most U.S. visa application statuses after submission. For many applicants, the update appears within 1-2 business days after an interview or other case action, and the result is usually clear: issued, refused, or in administrative processing. For visa journeys tied to DS-160 or DS-260, this is the place where the waiting often becomes visible.
U.S. visa cases move in stages. A nonimmigrant applicant files Form DS-160, while immigrant visa applicants use Form DS-260. Both groups may face document collection, biometrics, and an embassy or consulate interview. After that, the case shifts into processing, and the status usually appears in CEAC for Department of State cases. Some related petitions start with USCIS first, then transfer to the National Visa Center before reaching the consulate.
The online path from application to decision
The Department of State says CEAC is the primary status tracker for most consular visa cases. The official tracker is the CEAC Status Check page, and it asks for a case number or application ID, plus the embassy or consulate location. For immigrant visa cases, the CEAC IV portal is used for document uploads and case updates.
The basic sequence is simple. First, choose Nonimmigrant Visa (NIV) or Immigrant Visa (IV). Then enter the correct case details. NIV applicants use the DS-160 barcode, which starts with AA and is followed by 8 digits. IV applicants use the NVC case number. After the CAPTCHA, the result appears right away.
Status messages often change after the interview. A case marked Application Received means the online DS-160 data has entered the system but has not advanced to the interview stage. Ready means the case is open for fingerprints, documents, or an interview appointment. Administrative Processing means the consular post is doing extra review. Issued means the visa is in final processing. Refused means a consular officer has made a refusal decision.
221(g) cases sit inside that refusal or review category. They usually need extra evidence, such as financial records or employment verification. The embassy or consulate may ask for documents through its portal, and applicants often have up to 1 year to respond. In some cases, the status can show Refused during review before moving again.
USCIS tracking for petitions before consular processing
Not every visa journey starts in CEAC. If the process begins with a USCIS petition, the first stop is USCIS. That includes cases such as I-129F for fiancés, I-130 for family cases, and I-526E for some EB-5 filings. Once approved, the petition moves to the NVC and then into CEAC.
Applicants can check a USCIS case at the USCIS Case Status Online page using the 13-character receipt number. A myUSCIS account at my.uscis.gov gives access to case alerts, multiple filings, and some electronic submissions. In 2026, USCIS expanded digital tools, including online uploads for certain EB-5 responses and faster handling for linked cases. The agency also offers phone help at 1-800-375-5283 inside the United States and 212-620-3418 outside it.
VisaVerge.com reports that this split between USCIS and Department of State tools is one of the most common points of confusion for families and workers. The rule is straightforward: if USCIS owns the petition, check USCIS first. Once the file reaches the consulate stage, CEAC takes over.
What the status messages really mean in practice
For many applicants, the message matters more than the label.
- Administrative Processing means extra security or background checks. It is not a final denial.
- Issued means approval has been granted and the passport is usually close to return.
- Refused often means either INA 214(b) for nonimmigrant intent issues or 221(g) for missing documents.
- Ready for Pickup means the passport and visa are available through the courier or pickup site.
High-volume posts in India and Mexico often move more slowly than smaller posts. Some nonimmigrant cases take weeks to months after the interview. Immigrant cases depend on the monthly Visa Bulletin, which sets the cut-off dates for family-sponsored and employment-based categories.
Passport return, courier tracking, and delivery delays
Once a visa is Issued, the passport normally moves quickly. Most applicants track delivery through the embassy’s own system or through the courier service named by the post. Common delivery windows run 2-10 working days. If a passport has not arrived after 10 days, the embassy usually expects an email with the case number.
Applicants should also keep delivery details current. If an address changes, notify the right office quickly so the passport does not go to the wrong place. For some domestic USCIS matters, address updates go through USCIS tools. For consular cases, the embassy or the NVC needs the updated contact information.
When a case gets stuck
A case can stall after the interview, after document submission, or after a refusal notice. A short wait is normal. Applicants are usually told to wait 2 business days after an interview before checking again. If administrative processing lasts more than 60 days, the embassy often expects a follow-up email with the case number, passport number, and DS-160 or case ID.
For NVC-held immigrant cases, the contact point is the NVC phone line. For USCIS cases, the online account and the USCIS Contact Center remain the main tools. The monthly Visa Bulletin also matters for immigrant cases, because a current priority date is often the difference between movement and waiting.
Staying ready after approval
A visa approval is not the end of the process. Travelers still need to check the visa validity dates, carry the DS-160 confirmation or immigrant visa packet details, and enter the United States before expiration. Nonimmigrants must keep their status after arrival. Immigrants receive the green card process after entry. USCIS also expects address updates within 10 days after a move.
Applicants often gain the most by checking the right system at the right stage. CEAC tracks consular cases. USCIS tracks domestic petitions. DS-160 and DS-260 mark the start of the visa file, but the status journey depends on where the case sits now. Official information remains available through the U.S. Department of State visa information page, which remains the clearest public reference for applicants waiting on action.