The 12-month Student Work and Travel Pilot Program falls under the existing exchange visitor category. Under this visa category, international visitors experience and contribute to U.S. culture by participating in programs approved by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. The Student Work and Travel Pilot Program allows participants to combine work, and travel in the United States for up to 12 months.
Australian participants in the Student Work and Travel Pilot Program may work and travel in the U.S. for up to 12 months. The B-1/B-2 business and tourist visa allows short stays to conduct business meetings, attend conferences, visit family, or engage in other temporary business or tourist activities. B-1/B-2 visa holders may generally not work or study in the U.S., with only certain specific exceptions provided for under U.S. immigration regulations. For further information on B-1/B-2 visas, please click here.
The Student Work and Travel Pilot Program is based on the existing Exchange Visitor Program. In addition to the requirements for other exchange visa programs, participants traveling to the U.S. on the Student Work and Travel Pilot Program must also:
Unlike participants in other exchange visa programs, Student Work and Travel Program participants are not required to return home in time for the academic school year to begin.
As with all exchange visitor visas, you must obtain sponsorship from an exchange visitor program approved by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.
Sponsorship is a standard U.S. visa requirement for exchange visitor applicants. Participants must secure sponsorship from an approved exchange organization. The U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) has initially approved the following sponsoring organizations for the Student Work and Travel Pilot Program:
Further information on program sponsorship for the Student Work and Travel Pilot Program can be obtained by contacting the individual sponsors listed above. Additional information on exchange visitor programs is available on the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs Website.
The U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) has initially approved the following sponsors for the Student Work and Travel Pilot Program. More organizations may apply to become sponsors in the future. The most current information on program sponsorship can be found on the ECA website.
Designated sponsors of exchange programs are obligated to pre-arrange employment for at least 50 percent of their participants. For those participants for whom employment has not been pre-arranged, sponsors must:
Once you have obtained approval from a designated U.S. program sponsor, you may then apply for your visa at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate abroad. Evidence of your acceptance into a designated program is Form DS-2019, issued to you by the program sponsor. For comprehensive information on how to apply for a visa at U.S. Consulates in Australia, including the documents necessary to complete the application process, click here.
Individual sponsoring organizations set their administrative fees based on the nature and extent of the services included in the program. Please direct any inquires regarding program fees to the sponsoring organization you are considering.
For further details on fees, please see our page on fee information.
To be considered a bona fide post-secondary student, the potential participant must have completed his/her freshman (first) year of a post-high school program such as a Bachelor's degree program or other course which will lead to the issuance of a degree.
A recent graduate is an Australian citizen who has graduated from a post-secondary college/university in his or her home country within the last 12 months. The applicant must provide evidence of student status. For further guidance, please refer to the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs Website.
The requirements are that an Australian citizen wishing to travel to the United States must qualify as a student; that is, someone who is currently enrolled in a bona fide post-secondary course of study or who has completed/graduated from a bona fide post-secondary course of study within the last 12 months. Evidence to this effect must be provided.
Students attending a vocational school are not eligible to participate in the Student Work and Travel Program unless they can demonstrate that their study will ultimately lead to a degree from an accredited post-secondary institution.
For further guidance, please refer to the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs Website.
A valid U.S. visa allows a traveler to arrive at a port of entry in the United States any time during the validity of the visa. Permission to enter the United States, and the length of stay granted on each visit, is at the discretion of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), part of the Department of Homeland Security. The initial visa may be valid for up to twelve months from the date of issuance, and participants will generally be granted permission to remain in the United States for the entire duration of their status as a program participant. Participants will need to apply for new visas at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate overseas if they depart the United States after their initial visa expires and they wish to return to the United States.
Once you are in the United States you are responsible for maintaining the correct immigration status with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). For further information on changing to a different visa status once in the United States, you may visit the USCIS website at www.uscis.gov.
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Participants may accept a professional level position; however they may not be employed as domestic employees in U.S. households (E.g. child care, chauffeurs, gardeners, etc.); in positions requiring them to invest their own money for inventory (such as door-to-door sales); or in any employment involving any type of patient care (dentists, doctors, vets, nurses, physical therapists, etc.). Most participants typically work in non-skilled service positions at resorts, hotels, restaurants, and amusement parks. Summer internships in US businesses and other organizations (i.e., architecture, science research, graphic art/publishing and other media communication, advertising, computer software and electronics, and legal offices, etc.) are allowed.
Participants may not accept any position that may bring the Department or the Exchange Visitor Program into notoriety or disrepute or that would displace American workers. For more information please refer to the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs website.
If you are an American citizen wishing to travel to Australia on the Student Work and Travel Program, you can find more information on the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC) website. The DIAC website also contains information on other work, student, and holiday visas for Australia.
Last update: Tuesday, 24 March 2009 GMT+1100
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